This summer, Lucky, the 14-year-old "magazine about shopping," made a surprising announcement: It was merging with e-commerce company BeachMint and spinning off from Condé Nast as an independent company. In addition to the existing print magazine, the new Lucky Group will include a website with a heavy e-commerce focus, set to launch early next year. The Lucky Group's president, former L'Oréal marketing executive Gillian Gorman Round, sat down with Adweek to talk about the marriage of magazines and online shopping, what she likes in an ad and Lucky's new direction.
Adweek: You were recently selected as a Clio Image Awards juror where you'll be choosing the year's best integrated campaign. What do you think makes for a successful integrated campaign?
Gillian Gorman Round: I think you have to start with what makes a really good campaign, which is some form of hook that you use to reach your target audience. Whether it's an outdoor campaign only or it's social and Web and print and TV, the starting point is the same. For me, what makes a good integrated campaign is a marketer understanding what each of the different mediums needs to do as a role within the campaign. Sometimes it's about deciding not to use a medium. I see some clients who want to do all things simultaneously, but my sensibility is that it's more about what's right for your brand, your message and your consumer.
It's often said that there's much less risk-taking in advertising, especially when it comes to fashion brands. Why do you think that is?
There are a lot of other factors and interests around board tables in some of these companies now, and so the ultimate owners might have less taste for risk. Also, many campaigns now have to be global campaigns, and what is acceptable in one culture versus another is very different. Brands are catering to the safest common denominator.
What are some of your favorite recent campaigns?
Thinking about the world of fashion, I love what Chanel's doing at the moment with their fashion and accessories campaigns. They are really mixing up their model choice--it's younger, it's funkier, but it's still so Chanel. The fact that they're juxtapositioning a model with pink hair and a nose ring and a bouclé jumper is very cool. I also love the Prada campaign with James McAvoy. He's not a traditional Hollywood heartthrob. He's an intelligent actor, and I think that the campaign reflects that, which is to his advantage and to the brand's advantage. Outside the world of fashion, the campaign that had me weeping was the Procter & Gamble "Thank You Moms" campaign. It made me think of P&G as not a conglomerate of different brands but as something with a soul. Emotion is a very useful tool in advertising.
This fall, Lucky officially spun off from Condé Nast. E-commerce will be a major focus of the new company, but when you look at magazines that have attempted to get into e-commerce, no one has really succeeded. Why do you think your strategy will be successful?
Many traditional media companies have attempted commerce. We did years back with My Lucky Shops, which was a big deal at the time. What I always say is this: You can really, truly only integrate commerce into your customer proposition if you are going to evolve your business model to completely integrate technology as a core functionality, and that is what we are doing. What makes us different is the fact that no [media company] has had this model where we control our own technology, we control our own data, and we're able to service the customer soup to nuts.
Lots of e-commerce companies, like Net-a-Porter and Shopbop, have been adding more editorial content. How will the content-commerce relationship be different at Lucky?
I'm a big fan of Net-a-Porter, and I have enormous respect for what they've done. They start with product, though. All of their content is engineered around their product. When I go to Net-a-Porter to look for a pair of skinny jeans, I'm not taking their editorial content and then shopping from that. They would like me to, but I don't. What will be different about us is that some people will come to Lucky and simply consume content. It'll be great entertainment content about what happened at Paris Fashion Week, great street style, Oscar de la Renta's best looks. But that is going to be absolutely woven among content that takes an editor's inspiration and lets the reader shop it. It's a totally seamless experience.
Will Lucky still be producing content that's not shoppable, like personal essays or interviews?
The magazine doesn't really change. The only thing that changes is that if you're seeing something like one of our franchises, like Editor's Picks or Lines We Love, you're going to be able to discover more about that product, that style, that editor, online. But we still want to and we still need to completely satisfy our print consumer who loves those witty essays about wearing all black or whatever it is. Print is the first-person equity of the brand. There's a reason why Net-a-Porter launched Porter or why One Kings Lane sends out a catalog every so often.
How have things changed for Lucky post-Condé Nast?
I like to think that we have the heft and the gravitas of Condé Nast, but we also have the spirit and the independence of a startup 2.0. Our biggest revenue stream is advertising, but the advertising market has changed, and it's going to continue to change. So the fact that we are our own company allows us to work in a different way with the advertising community. We own our own engineering, we own our own data. We will understand everything about our customer, which is incredibly powerful for our advertisers. But we have the best-in-class credentials of Condé Nast.