Gucci’s Parent Company Rejects Notion Of Sales Dip Following "Blackface Fiasco"


Kering’s CFO refuses to believe the “blackface fiasco” will affect their sales.

The analytics community is a contortionist bunch – but as far as Gucci’s growth rates are concerned, market insiders believe the blackface debacle may have caused to lose out the momentum the brand had built up in 2018. According to Business Fashion the brand’s growth rate is up 20% from this time last year – but those figures don’t account for the freefall the brand may have taken in the final months 2018.

Gucci's Parent Company Rejects Notion Of Sales Dip Following "Blackface Fiasco"

Stefano Montesi – Corbis/Getty s

Evidently, Gucci’s initial growth rate in 2018 was strong enough to see it forward. The rejuvenated interest in the brand can be explained by two factors: first, the rousing endorsements coming from the hip-hop community (oops), and secondly, the changes incurred by Alessandro Michele, who was appointed Gucci’s creative director for the new-look future.

When asked to comment on Business Fashion’s market research, Kering’s CFO Jean-Marc Duplaix did more than reject the notion a downturn – he plainly refused to believe that a PR disaster that magnitude would ever their overall sales mark. The jury’s still out on the accuracy these findings, but I’d be surprised, to say the least, if there wasn’t some truth to Business Fashion’s caveat. What do you think?