Macyâs is looking to address gaps with its menswear customers by launching a new private label aimed at contemporary males shoppers.
On Thursday, the retailer unveiled âMode of One,â a menswear line spanning styles from relaxed suiting to casual streetwear offerings, such as graphic T-shirts and baseball jerseys, and ranging in price from $25 to $160. Macyâs designed it based on research it conducted among its 25 to 40-year-old customers and is aiming it towards an evolving menswear shopper whoâs also tightening their wallet.
âHeâs really someone whoâs a modern contemporary guy who wants to embrace a bolder and more expressive style,â said Macyâs SVP of private brand strategy, Emily Erusha-Hilleque. âSo we doubled down on statement-making designs and really anchored the brand into those principles and values that are centred around individuality.â
Mode of One aligns with Macyâs efforts to reinvigorate its menâs business. On the companyâs earnings call in August, Macyâs chief executive Tony Spring said it was âaddressing the weaknesses in menâs apparelâ and that contemporary styles were âa bright spotâ for its menâs business.
It also fits into the retailerâs strategy to scale private labels to 25 percent of sales by 2025, up from 15 percent in 2023. The company has been phasing out older private labels to usher in new ones, dropping womenâs ready-to-wear brands such as Charter Club and Karen Scott while introducing lines like sleepwear label State of Day and relaunching kids brand Epic Threads. Currently there are 26 private labels in Macyâs portfolio, with Mode of One arriving shortly after the launch of Macyâs newest womenâs line, On 34th, which debuted in July 2023.
âIt was less about saying goodbye to some brands and more about saying hello to whatâs new, fresh and relevant,â said Sam Archibald, Macyâs general business manager of apparel.
Erusha-Hilleque added that those brands âneeded to be put in a modern context as it relates to connection to culture and what customers care about now.â
Mode of One doesnât just offer trendy products but also refreshed menswear marketing that follows the playbook of buzzy brands like Aimé Leon Dore. The looks were styled by Ouigi Theodore, founder of menswear label The Brooklyn Circus. Ambassadors tapped for its social-first campaign include Knicks basketball players Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart, the viral Atlanta-based barber VicBlends and James Beard Award-winning chef Kwame Onwuachi.
Archibald says Macyâs is also addressing younger male shoppers by reintroducing Nike into its product assortment as the sneaker giant leans back towards wholesale after a radical direct-to-consumer shift and expanding its business with brands like Fanatics, Hugo Boss and Karl Lagerfeld.
But will Macyâs push into contemporary menswear translate on the sales floor? Jeff Sward, co-founder of the consultancy Merchandising Metrics, says Mode of Oneâs diverse and large product assortment could blur out the brandâs larger story, which he believes drives private labels today more than replicating trendy products.
âThereâs no real compelling story being told like there is with On 34th,â said Sward. âTodayâs market demands that retailers do private label, but they have to execute it like a real live brand. Macyâs can do it and has done it before, but they need to up their game a little bit with the menâs efforts for sure.â
The restructuring of Macyâs private-label business comes at a critical moment when the company is shuttering 150 stores by 2026 as a part of its âA Bold New Chapterâ turnaround plan. Despite a tough macro-economic environment, Erusha-Hilleque doesnât think the private label business has really changed since her time at Target, a private-label trailblazer where she worked as the design director of ready-to-wear from 2017 to 2022.
âMy philosophy around building successful private brands is the same. You have to build brands that are customer centric and human-centred,â said Erusha-Hilleque. âIf they can see themselves in the brand that youâre creating, you will continue to win.â