Pages

Saturday, March 05, 2022

How to Buy good rustic taste

 Courtesy of Eye of 👁 the Collectors 😇


Non-Fiction

Get Rich or Lie Trying — how the influencer industry really works

Symeon Brown takes a critical look at the hustle of the social media economy

An online influencer is someone with a large social media following who uses their internet celebrity — or “clout”, in the parlance — to make money. This usually involves advertising a product or service. It’s essentially a kind of outsourced marketing, but for many in the Gen Z cohort the work holds a glamour akin to pop stardom. 

Conservative estimates suggest there are upwards of 3.5mn people engaged in such activity; according to the German data firm Statista, the influencer market was worth $13.8bn in 2021. In Get Rich or Lie Trying, Symeon Brown takes a critical look at this and other forms of online “hustle”. 

The US clothing retailer Fashion Nova cultivates a legion of “micro-famous brand ambassadors” — photogenic women who receive free clothes in return for modelling them on their Instagram accounts. The Istanbul-based surgery provider Clinichub deploys a similar strategy, offering free implants to some women in return for enthusiastic social media posts. These Instagrammers, Brown writes, are “providing the company with free labour as promo girls, giving the brand edited adverts they did not have to pay for”.

This blithe ‘can do’ spirit is a recurring theme in the pages of Brown’s book. It can all too easily lapse into delusion

Another type of internet celebrity earns an income by performing on a freelance basis for online streaming platforms that generate revenue through advertising. Brown travels to Los Angeles and interviews a Cameroonian migrant who starred on the now-defunct Cx Network, a popular live-streaming platform where American users paid to racially abuse him. He maintains: “I’d still rather do this than work a 9-5 somewhere.”


A woman who went viral after performing a sex act on a robot on the same platform is similarly sanguine about the online abuse she subsequently received: “If you don’t have haters you ain’t poppin’.”

This blithe “can do” spirit is a recurring theme in the pages of Brown’s book. It can all too easily lapse into delusion. One of Brown’s interviewees, a self-styled marketing influencer who has achieved negligible success despite many years of striving, invokes Malcolm Gladwell’s theory that one becomes an expert in a given field by clocking up 10,000 hours’ experience, remarking — without irony — that she has frittered away almost that many hours in her endeavours and is therefore “getting close to expert status”. The pathos is gut-wrenching.

The author reserves particular scorn for influencers who, as he sees it, have piggybacked on good causes for their own ends. He is withering about Chidera Eggerue, who rose to prominence through her #SaggyBoobsMatter body-positivity campaign before embarking on a career as a motivational speaker, peddling an “incoherent mix of . . . gender conservatism, professional narcissism, consumerism and hyper-individualism wrapped in feminist packaging”; “in faking or forcing expertise she does not have, Chidera embodies the emptiness of the social media economy.”


Elsewhere in the book, Brown interviews aspiring traders who were hoodwinked into joining pyramid schemes, and a woman who sells racy photos of herself via the OnlyFans website. In truth, these various economic actors — the Instagram celebrity, the self-help guru, the wannabe trader and the digital sex worker — have relatively little in common other than having been enabled by the internet. Strictly speaking, they are disparate phenomena. 

Brown is a reporter with Channel 4 News and the register here is indeed reminiscent of a TV news exposé. His interview-centric approach, which foregrounds human stories over statistics, yields some telling psychological insights into the hopes and aspirations of wannabe influencers: they are united, above all, by an intense desire to get ahead in a world of limited opportunities. It’s a shame, however, that the all-important monetary dimension is only lightly adumbrated. A thoroughgoing deep dive into the economics of the influencer industry remains overdue.

Get Rich or Lie Trying: Ambition and Deceit in the New Influencer Economyby Symeon Brown, Atlantic Books £16.99, 304 pages



Interiors on a plate: rise of the online homeware curators

Designers who create off-the-shelf ‘looks’ at all price points are

rapidly gaining traction on social media

Sitting at home during lockdown in January 2021, with a newborn baby, Laura Jackson was, like many others, scrolling on her phone looking for homewares. After hours of searching, she found a rug, a ceramic mug and a tasteful print, all from different sellers on different websites, and started wondering if there was a quicker way to buy. 
She realised there were luxury fashion ecommerce platforms “where a whole team of buyers think about every single product to bring their customers the best of the different brands out there,” she says. “I wanted to create a beautiful, well-curated marketplace for homewares.” 
Known to her 153,000 Instagram followers for her love of interiors, Jackson is regularly contacted on social media about where to buy items, from lampshades to serving platters as well as working on collections for high-street brands including Habitat, where a co-collaboration with the brand and her friend Alice Levine sold out in three hours.
 “I know I’m really good at finding brands, recommending them and essentially selling them; I love the discovery,” she says. Along with her brother-in-law Daniel Crow, formerly a senior buyer at the online lifestyle brand END, she launched Glassette in November 2021, with about 120 brands ranging in price from £7 striped candles to a £3,100 embroidered daybed. “In a noisy marketplace, we extract the best and offer a level of curation,” she says. 
The choice is now so overwhelming, you can go down a lampshade rabbit hole that lasts for hours She is one of a number of figures from fashion and social media using their following and aesthetic to curate and sell homewares from obscure sources around the world — a service previously only available to those with a budget for an interior designer. 
Their new popularity is because “there is such a thing as too much choice,” according to Kate Watson-Smyth, founder of the curated shopping platform Design Storey. Lucinda Chambers, former fashion director of British Vogue and co-founder of lifestyle etailer Collagerie, agrees: “The choice is now so overwhelming, you can have 10 tabs open on your computer and go down a lampshade rabbit hole that lasts for hours”.


Meanwhile, fashion buyer Pauline Vincent launched her digital homewares platform La Romaine Editions last June because, despite the online choice, “I was still wondering where I could find the homeware I actually wanted to buy.”



Part of the broad appeal of the online curators is their mix of high-low price points: it is something the fashion world is comfortable with, but has been slower to catch on in interiors.
 At Collagerie, where fashion picks include £965 Bea Bongiasca floral earrings, a £48.95 denim jumpsuit and New Balance trainers, customers can also buy a £4.99 H&M soap dish and a £1,210 pouffe. 
On Design Storey there are £6 shaker pegs from Etsy, while La Romaine Editions features a €300 mouthblown glass candlestick by the designer Boris de Beijer and a set of four hand-painted plates priced at a more accessible €72. Lisa White, director of lifestyle and interiors at the trend forecasters WGSN, says this grouping of cheaper objects with luxury items makes them seem “relevant and desirable no matter what they cost.” 
It is, White says, the air of curation by a trusted tastemaker that gives the items credence. While their tastes and the types of buyers they appeal to differ, what the curators have in common are large social media followings and a desirable aesthetic consumers want to emulate. 
“Customers are looking for people-led brands,” Crow says. Chambers agrees: “We saw that there was a particular need for a trusted authority that could see everything that’s out there, and bring a really curated, tasteful edit.” 
As such, the curators’ backstories are important; consumers want to know the person behind the brand. While Chambers’ co-founder Serena Hood also came from Vogue, the two of them together bringing an established following, Watson-Smyth has run the Mad About The House blog and podcast for many years and has 273,000 Instagram followers.

Jackson is known as a television presenter, but also for running a supper club, co-authoring a cookbook, and more recently, for her love of interiors on social media. She uses her east London home as a backdrop for her purchases and work by British craftspeople. The decorative artist Tess Newall, for example, painted a bespoke mural in her daughter’s nursery; furniture maker Fred Rigby designed their dining table.

Just as she has done for her home, Jackson has a hand in designing some of the ranges on Glassette, suggesting new colourways or shapes. Similarly, La Romaine Editions and Design Storey work with makers to design exclusive limited run collections for their audiences, adding an air of exclusivity to their curatorial role. 
A collaboration between Glassette and small brand The Vintage List before Christmas sold out a 220-unit run of glasses in under a fortnight. “There is an appetite for that limited edition drop,” Crow says. “It creates an energy and speed to purchase.” 
The fact that customers are racing to buy limited-edition glasses reflects our growing interest in homewares. Globally, the homewares market grew about 5 per cent during 2016-21 to a current market value of about $175bn, according to market research firm Fact. MR. That is set to rise further to more than $200bn by 2023, it estimates. 
In the UK, consumers will spend an estimated £14.2bn on homewares this year, according to analytics company GlobalData, up from £11bn in 2015. Chambers has also seen a shift in consumer focus from fashion to interiors. It doesn’t surprise her: “taste runs across everything from the clothes you wear to the way you decorate your home,” she says. To meet demand — and the drop in fashion sales during the pandemic — a number of fashion brands pivoted into the sector.
 The designer Henry Holland switched clothes for ceramics; historic British department store Fenwicks launched its first in-house homeware brand last November, and online fashion retailer Matches.com has seen its homeware category grow 35 per cent for SS22.

Along with a swell of new kitchen-table businesses, it has created an increasingly crowded retail environment, but one that allows the curator model to thrive. Glassette has not only attracted customers, but also investors, raising £1.2mn in its first seed-funding round. Increased interest in homewares has boosted sales turnover at Collagerie 600 per cent since the first lockdown, totalling £3.12mn since launch, according to Hood.
 Of course, the model of curating what we buy is not new: department stores have been around for more than a century, and independent bricks and mortar stores do the same. Vincent says she was inspired by the “multi-brand concept” at stores such as her former employer, Galeries Lafayette.
 But the way we shop has changed: 63 per cent of UK consumers bought their homewares online in March 2021, according to YouGov, up from 48 per cent in March 2020. Yet, for Vincent, a fashion sensibility was exactly what was missing from the way interior products were being presented online.
 “I saw there was already a white minimalist style, and also a bohemian style, but there was something missing — something more contemporary and inspired by fashion,” she says. Vincent edits her selection of products (mostly French designers and makers) around a theme, such as flowers, to encourage her customers to pair pieces together, something White of WSGN says, “brings meaning to the objects by telling visual stories”. 
The fashion world’s mix of high-low price points has been slower to catch on in interiors This storytelling is how the online curators lure customers to the virtual checkout. 
As well as engaging their audience through highly stylised Instagram feeds, the online stores are presented like glossy magazines, with interviews with designers and other tastemakers from different disciplines, such as the digital entrepreneur Abisola Omole talking on Glassette about how to create a comfortable home, while designer Tory Burch selects her favourite products over on Collagerie. Interior designer Sophie Ashby launched an online retail platform, Sister, in October 2020. 
Her quarterly digital journal, which reaches more than 2,000 subscribers and features interviews, recipes and early access to new products, seeks to engage her audience, as well as, she says, “curate and contextualise” items such a s £60 marble eggs or a £1,850 bouclé swivel chair.

For Jackson, a keen storyteller, featuring a wide range of brands, collaborations and influencers serves to broaden the appeal and reach. She particularly wants to target more men — perhaps with a future collaboration with a technical outdoor-apparel brand. 
“There has traditionally been a type of person who is ‘into’ interiors,” she says. “One of the reasons we started Glassette was to target audiences that fashion and homewares traditionally have ignored. That way, we can continue to grow.” 
Follow @FTProperty on Twitter or @ft_houseandhome on Instagram to find out about our latest stories first