Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

Looky Looky: LIV Part 3

LIZ: Given that today the general public is a lot more environmentally aware, how important do you think it is to stock eco friendly products?


JOANNA: We’ve tried various things, we’ve always had organic towels and sheets available, we have an organic babies clothing line. They are not always my best sellers, but I like to have them there on offer, but I think that at this point in time I am not sure how on board the consumer really is. I know there’s a core of people who are hard core organic and maybe we just don’t get them yet. Mass population wise, we did a huge organic launch last year of robes, towels and sheeting, if it sold it was because consumers liked the look of it, the eco friendly aspect was not always a selling feature.


But don’t forget that Au lit where we launched all this, everything is European cotton, made in Canada, our cotton product is as environmentally sound as one that has been called organic. Our mill in Italy has been on that wagon for 20 years, so it’s like you’re really pulling hairs. I think people care more when it comes to things like their children’s toys and clothes, we carry an organic kid’s clothing line, I have a five month old so I like that it’s organic and made in Toronto.


LIZ: What sort of business experience and or lesson have you learned from watching and working with your mother?

JOANNA: Well everything, I started working for her when I was 13. Here in Toronto it was how to make a bed, that whole Au lit look was all my mom, selling, product knowledge, the buying. The only thing I would say that is mine and I’ve have to do on my own is the clothing. I think with buying its safe to say you have an instinct for it or not, and my mom definitely does and I think it’s fair to say that I do as well. So I think I get it from her. I admire her vision, she’s never been afraid to try anything. She’s so fearless.


LIZ: What can customers expect to see in the future from LIV? Any new product lines, trends?

JOANNA: For spring we are turning the entire back half of the store into a huge loungewear department, with a the pj vibe but some sexier. Expanding on loungewear and the basics in a range of prices and styles. The styles coming for spring, I am calling it sexy and sloppy, because everything is loose, off the shoulder, we have the jegging, and it’s denim but is as comfortable as a legging. Brand new bedding line, love seats that are slip covered in the fabrics that match the bedding. Everything in bedding is natural linen washed look, it’s tying in sexy sloppy. Casual luxury, everything is high end and quality, but washed and a little ruffled.


LIZ: What would you say is the difference from Montréal to Toronto as far as consumers are concerned?

JOANNA: Don’t forget my neighbourhood is North Toronto, I’m sure on Queen Street they are probably more like a Montréal shopper, but I think in Montréal they are a little more adventurous, a little more individual. In Toronto the trends are gangbusters, a lot of that is because of the designer and they have set styles, what’s amazing about that is that if you connect with Toronto consumers, you can really have amazing collections, it can be amazing we never had that in Montréal where people would go crazy for one particular style and it would be a blazing hit. Whereas in Toronto you have that potential they are very discerning. Montréal-ers are a little more quirky, but this is just my experience in North Toronto. Montréal-ers are much more willing to put their money in social activities, they love to go out, eat out. Torontonians are nesters, they love their homes, and they love putting their heart into their homes.





Looky Looky: LIV Part 2

LIZ: How important is creating a unique shopping experience for your customers through engaging all of their senses?

JOANNA: We had Au Lit for a few years, and we knew if we were going to open a second store it would be not just a linen store, we didn’t need to do the same thing twice. If we were going to do it, it would be the sort of store we had been seeing in Europe for years which did show a full lifestyle. One of our favourite stores is in Paris and it’s actually a house, and you go through it every room has things for sale, they don’t have clothing but they have loungewear. A store like LIV had been on our horizon for many years, so we knew if we were going to do this, the space had to be big, had to have the right vibe and this store with the wood floors and the high ceilings, it was just the perfect location and the perfect timing. But in terms of the layout we change the layout all the time, you can come back next season and it won’t have the same layout. We always change it to be exciting and current, and it will always be a fusion of clothing and home décor everywhere.



LIZ: Do you feel that there is anything lacking in retail shops these days?

JOANNA: Yes! For me it’s always about the experience, I just feel like in this day and age, not just because of the recession but also just because of the level retail has taken in Europe and New York and in LA. I don’t know if you are familiar with ABC carpets for instance in New York, but it’s one of the most astonishing retail spaces I’ve ever been to, maybe for me in the world... it’s my favourite, and the level of not just merchandising, product, but everything the whole experience is of such high calibre that for me it just doesn’t really cut it anymore to go into a generic store, be treated with indifference.



One of the biggest things for us was of course we wanted to create a beautiful space, but I so want everyone to have an experience. So for me I want the bathroom to be beautiful, my change rooms are stunning and they are quirky. My staff knows that the most important thing is the warmth and the vibe and the welcoming, and bending over backwards. There are so many stores in this city where the service is mediocre at best. You either feel like you’re being attacked or ignored and somewhere in the middle you have a great experience and beyond that for me I want LIV to be a store that you come in and feel good about yourself. We offer clients a latte or an espresso, when I say multisensory it’s not that you just walk in and say “pretty store” it’s that someone greets you, it smells nice, for me it’s that experience but that also the product is amazing. You have to have phenomenal products but that backed up with the experience, and I think you have something pretty amazing and that’s been the goal.



LIZ: What era are you heavily influenced by in home décor and in fashion?

JOANNA: Home décor, it’s hard to say era, but I would have to say influence would definitely be more country, and I think the Swedish influence has been huge on both Californian and French style so when we are buying from France and California, which are two key places we buy from, even though they come from France or California, it’s very Swedish, everything grey, all Swedish, the distressed, for me the influence is less an era. However I have to say I adore art deco, the 20’s.

For clothing it’s whatever’s hot, right now the 80’s are huge, and the leggings.



stay tuned for part 3...

Looky Looky

Here it is Part 1 of my sit down interview with LIV owner Joanna Goodman, hope you all enjoy and I hope you are all enjoying the new year!

LIZ: What was your inspiration to start a store like LIV that creates a fusion of fashion and home décor?

JOANNA: A lot of ideas come to us in our travels; from places like Europe and cities like New York. Something we had seen for years of combining not just home décor but accessories. I think it’s a natural evolution that a multi product store would get popular. It’s often called a lifestyle store, and I think its time has come; it’s really more than beyond just one stop shopping. Essentially the goal is that you come in and it’s a feast for the eyes. Fashion and home influence each other, they always have. As long as I’ve been buying linens the colours that are hot always come from the fashion runways, so to me it was so logical that they would be intertwined and together in one space.



LIZ: How important is it to you to stock Canadian brands and lines, you mention on your site that you travel to Europe and the U.S a lot?

JOANNA: It is very important. We carry a lot of Canadian designers. Jewellery, clothing, Snowflake is a Toronto designer that I adore, Kirsch from Vancouver; we do a lot of Canadian. Home décor is a little tougher, because the look we carry is very European, typically they come from France, but we manufacture all of the linens in Montréal, so we bring in the fabric and then everything is made in Canada.




LIZ: What is the process of buying and stocking for your store, do you follow what is trendy at any given moment or do you get what you like and hope it sells?

JOANNA: When I am in Europe you see what’s new, they are showing, whether it’s a colour or a style of furniture or it’s the clothing they are showing what’s new. Similarly when I am in New York or Vegas at a clothing show they are also showing what’s new, so I’m really calling from the newest trends and then I really do go by what I love, I have to, because when you are buying this many different departments, I have to be able to hone in, and for as long as my mom and I have been buying for the linen store we have a policy that we both have to love it, agree we love it, go... oh my god, and I really use that even for the clothing now. If I just can’t stand it but it’s super hot, which has happened, I have had to forego it, and typically when I don’t it doesn’t really work, because for the most part clients are very like minded, you know I am the client in a lot of ways I am the demographic. So if it’s just something I would never put on in a million years, even though it’s hot, I’ve got to leave that to the other stores.




Stay tuned for part 2 tomorrow...

UP TO YOU

Recently I had the great opportunity to visit and interview shop owner Dimitra Doufekas of  UP TO YOU a  Toronto concept shop , whose goal is to fascinate unlike any other shop. She works with her brother Bill to create a uniquely voyeuristic shopping experience, their store is staged like a loft complete with a bed, a living room and a kicthen. I sat down on a rainy Wednesday with the lovely and articulate Dimitra to talk shop.


THE INTERVIEW:

LIZ: UP TO YOU is a store that caters to the client and likewise the buyer, essentially leaving the choice “up to them” about what they buy, and what you stock. What was the motivation to start a uniquely voyeuristic shopping experience?


DIMITRA: The motivation came about 5 years ago when I was in Europe and I was just walking around shops and I saw so many great designers that I had never seen before, they were independent designers doing really great things, they were mixing an aesthetic and an idea together, and I had never seen that done in Toronto so what I wanted to do ( what both of us wanted to do) was to create a different type of shopping experience, one that allowed people to almost travel around the world and shop, because you’ll see almost all of our products are from around the world. What we really wanted to do is to bring something to Toronto that hadn’t been done before, and the voyeuristic experience just followed, you know I haven’t been to a lot of stores where you feel as though somebody lives here, customers always ask “do you guys live here?” No that would be a little distracting…


LIZ: And it would be really hard to have to throw all the stuff off the bed, so neatly displayed, and make it up again every morning! We are talking worse than throw pillows here!


DIMITRA: yeah I know! But a lot of people think we live here, it just kind of has that homey feeling.


LIZ: You mention Europe, where exactly in Europe did you find inspiration, was there a certain country?


DIMITRA: I’d say specifically it was London, they are a little wild over there, and they take a straight forward idea and make it new and you ask yourself, how didn’t I think of that? That’s what all of their products are and I love that, they skew something that you think is normal and give a cool twist to it, so everything I saw in London was wild, and that’s where we first started to get a lot of the products from.


LIZ: You are Canadian retailers in a very U.S. influenced sales market, how important is carrying local Canadian merchandise to you?


DIMITRA: Well unfortunately we don’t have a lot or Canadian yet, because I just don’t want to carry a lot of the same stuff that other stores do. I notice when walking through different design shops, you typically see them carrying the same thing, everybody has the same supplier, and we try and steer away from that, so bringing Canadian is something we have to do very strategically, and it is something that we are looking into now, we just didn’t start off that way.


LIZ: What are some of your favourite things about Toronto and why was it important for you to have a shop in Toronto? What makes Torontonian buyers unique?


DIMITRA: What I like about Toronto is that it is very multicultural, you have a lot of different people with different backgrounds all together, and it’s not like the states which are considered a melting pot, instead here it’s more of a mosaic, that’s what I learned in Canadian popular culture!


LIZ: me too! (Laughs)


DIMITRA: Yeah that’s what I like about it; the products that we sell because they come from around the world and so do most Torontonians, that people can appreciate them, because everybody is from different areas around the world.


LIZ: You are a brother and sister team, do you work well together? What are some of the pros and cons of working with family? Is there one of you that is more business savvy and one that handles the visual aspects , or do you both contribute equally? Do you both dabble in a little bit of the two?


DIMITRA: Actually we work really well together, we excel in different areas, so when we come together choosing products or dealing with customers, all of our weaknesses and strengths kind of work together, so we are always bouncing off of each other. That said, okay we do have days where I am punching him in the side because he’s being a pain, but actually he’s my best friend so it’s cool to be able to work with your best friend everyday. As you get older you tend to see that you shift away from your family, so it’s nice to be able to come here and reconnect everyday and then kind of go our separate ways. We both contribute in our own way to both of those areas, I am more of the computer, website person, and my brother is really good with products, dealing with customers. So it’s always a give and take.


LIZ: You were previously a teacher, how did you find yourself in the world of retail sales? You renew your certification each year; does this mean you would ever go back?


DIMITRA: I used to work at the GAP as a kid, so I did that, but like I said I went to Europe and that was before I started teacher’s college and when I went there I thought “I like this!” but at the same time I'll become a teacher, see how that works, so I went to school for a year, and I just really didn’t like it, but I thought I’ll try it out a couple of years and become a teacher with the TDSB. I did grade 5 and 6 but in the back of my mind it’s not something that made me really happy or excited and while I was a teacher, at night I would do a business plan, contact designers, so I was pretty much moonlighting. So retail is something I’ve always done and in seeing these designers, it seemed like a perfect fit and something that made me happy. The reason I renew every year is because it’s something I did work hard for and even though I won’t go back, I still want that card, it’s the satisfaction of, I worked really hard that year, it wasn’t fun it was very stressful and I did it. The card is like my trophy.


LIZ: okay so no plans to go back?


DIMITRA: No, actually the funny thing is I was asked to be a lecturer at the explorer design show that was here, so I did that and then they asked me to go to Ryerson and lecture, so I was still teaching but in a different way.


LIZ: I guess in a way that you probably prefer.


DIMITRA: yeah.


LIZ: What are some of your favourite products that you carry, and what would you say are your most popular?


DIMITRA: It’s sort of like picking your favourite child…I like the smoking mitten, it was actually featured on Jay Leno, it has a little metal eyelet so you put your cigarette in, so when you are outside you don’t have to worry about your hands.


LIZ: Neat, but I don’t smoke,


DIMITRA: I don’t smoke either, but I own this product, I love it! It’s one of my favourites, but I don’t smoke. I have it on my coffee table, its art; it’s such a smart idea. So this has to be the most popular item we have right now. I also love these drip hooks…and another favourite of mine are the “clever covers”. Let’s say you’re reading people magazine, and you don’t want people to see what you are reading, or let’s say you are a guy and you are reading something… it makes it look like you are reading advanced quantum physics. I was asked by someone, “do you understand it?” and I said “yeah I do”, but it was really people magazine under the cover. It’s just really funny; there is a Japanese one too. The quirky things are some of my favourite, I like the whipped rings too; they just came into the store a little while ago.


LIZ: What is the process of stocking your store with merchandise, as I read that you do not follow trends? Do you buy what you like, or do you try and incorporate key trends and also what you like? A bit of both maybe?


DIMITRA: No we don’t follow any trends, like you said; we make them. The way we pick things, first is what we like. Sometimes my brother will like something that maybe I’m not a fan of, or vice versa, but then upon thinking about it more, we are always thinking about the aesthetic and the idea and the way it comes together, that's how we choose our products, it's not if it's stylish at the moment. What I have noticed is that a lot of our products, we’ll choose them and then six months later they become popular, the internet people will start talking about them, I think we're always a step ahead when it comes to choosing our products and creating our own trends.


LIZ: You mention on your site that the products you carry have a strong “buzz” about them and often your products are ahead of the trends in North America. You stock things that will often garner attention or trend status years later here in Canada. Have you always had a knack for picking up on the trends, or does the fact that you resource most of your stock from Europe play a roll, as they are usually ahead of the times? Do you believe this is what sets UP TO YOU apart from other Canadian shops?


DIMITRA: I think we do have a knack for that, even things I purchased before I opened the store, for example I had the first iPod in Toronto, I bought it right away. I think I've always had that knack of being a little ahead of other people and I think that translates well to the store.


LIZ: What type of shopping experience do you like to create for customers; the shop is set up like a loft apartment, how intentional was that? How important are the senses to you when shopping? Is your approach to stimulate our tactile and visual sensibilities?


DIMITRA: The experience is very laid back, we are not really pushy. People can sit down, we chat about design, it's very much look around. We have the product information and stories printed right next to the products so you can read it on your own time, you don’t have to feel like we are always behind you explaining what everything is. A lot of the products they are quirky and people don't know what they are so those stories always help guide them, so for that reason the experience is very laid back, and it makes sense to be laid back because we are set up like an apartment. I never liked walking into a store and having five people look at me like they are going to jump at any moment. When people are choosing products I want to be honest with them, this doesn’t work for you or this doesn’t look good on you, because I know that I have bought a lot of things and sometimes sales people have not always been honest, so we try and cater to the customer in a very laid back way.


LIZ: Any regrets, or rather would you change anything about how you got to this point, and how UP TO YOU has been established?


DIMITRA: were are pleased with how everything has worked out, if there was something… I maybe would have not bought as much clothing as we did at the beginning, because we thought concept store, we should sell clothing and home accessories. But that also showed us that a lot of people were not into the clothing and it also pushed us into the direction that we are just going to do personal accessories, so in the end it did work out for the best. It showed us what we excel in.


LIZ: Last, any parting advice for entrepreneurs, wanting to get into the business of retail sales?


DIMITRA: If I had to give advice, well do you watch Madmen?


LIZ: yeah I do.


DIMITRA: Okay well I have to quote Donald Draper: “Your success is dependent on you standing out and not fitting in”, so that’s what I would tell people, stand out, make sure that you are creating a buzz about yourself and that you are doing something that you love, but is also different, don’t try and be like everybody else. I am just tired of waking into these generic stores one after the other, you have to find your niche, find what’s special about you and the products you want to sell.
































Whipped rings


The notorious "clever covers"










Random Questions:

This is a little thing I like to do and I once saw done on a Canadian late night CBC show called “The Hour”, where you ask guests random questions and they have to answer with the first thing that comes to mind:

1. Have you ever or will you ever wear crocs? No

2. Nerds or Jocks? Nerds

3. Who is the smartest person you know? My brother

4. PETA, saving the world or just a little crazy? Crazy

5. Granny smith or McIntosh? McIntosh

6. Spiderman, Superman or Batman? Spiderman

7. Christmas or Halloween? Christmas

8. What was your last meal? Crispy cream doughnut

9. Planes, trains or automobiles? Automobiles

10. Biggest case of buyer’s remorse? iPod nano ( the camera one)

11. Fictional character you’d like to marry? Darcy in Pride and Prejudice

12. Jeopardy or wheel of fortune? Wheel of fortune

13. Deal or no deal? No deal

14. Best hangover remedy? Quiet dark room

15. Tribal tattoos, hot or not? Not

16. First thing you ever stole? Hotel soaps and shower cap from the MGM Grand

17. Prince William or Harry? Harry

18. Clowns, funny or scary? Scary

UP TO YOU is located at 1483 Queen Street East, Canada , tel: 416-778-6487 do yourself a favour and check them out, they also have an online shop