Why Some Retailers are Ignoring the Internet
4/29/202625 min
For years, the fashion industry operated under the assumption that digital scale was the right path. However, the "growth-at-all-costs" model is currently fracturing as luxury giants grapple with soaring customer acquisition costs and a logistical crisis fueled by high return rates. In response, a quiet counter-culture is emerging, with stores like Ven. Space and Dot Reeder thriving by intentionally limiting their digital footprints.
In this episode, executive editor Brian Baskin and senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young discuss with BoF correspondent Austin Kim how these analogue retailers are using hyper-local intimacy and intelligent curation to build a more resilient business model that values brand equity over infinite reach.
Key Insights:
- The Rejection of Digital Friction: Store owners like Chris Green of Ven. Space are intentionally limiting their digital footprints to avoid the "grind" of high customer acquisition costs. Austin Kim notes that for these owners, "these small businesses are people doing what they love and what they don't love is e-commerce and they have no interest in it".
- The "Sit and Fit" Financial Advantage: Analyst Simeon Siegel posits that the in-store customer is the superior economic unit because they absorb the costs of fulfillment. As Kim explains, "In the store, the customer takes the pair of jeans off the rack, walks it over to the cash register, and then takes it home to themselves," whereas online, a brand must pay for picking, packaging, and the high probability of returns.
- Product Curation as a Moat: Success for these boutiques relies on a "mythic" assortment of brands that creates a level of trust an algorithm cannot replicate. Kim highlights that the draw is the owner's perspective: "Chris Green is almost like a Mr. Rogers if he wore Dries van Noten ... that perspective is exactly what I think customers connect with".
- Analogue Marketing and the "Third Space": To cut through digital exhaustion, retailers like Outline are pivoting to high-quality print catalogs. Co-founder Margaret Austin describes e-commerce as "unsexy," preferring a strategy where receiving something at your door acts as "an amazing strategy" to cut through the noise of social media.
- The Scalability Paradox: The "secret sauce" of these stores is often the owner-operator’s deep local roots, which is difficult for corporate entities to mimic. Kim warns that "you lose the soul of a business really quickly as you scale, especially on e-commerce," because you begin buying for an international audience rather than maintaining a specific, connected perspective.
Additional Resources:
- Meet the Retailers Succeeding by Ignoring the Internet | BoF
- The State of Fashion 2026: When the Rules Change | BoF
- The BoF Podcast | Pete Nordstrom on the Enduring Power of Retail’s ‘Best Mousetrap’
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Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsSheena Butler-Young· Host0:00
[upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to The Debrief from The Business of Fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular BoF professional stories with the correspondents who created them. I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young.
Brian Baskin· Host0:19
And I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. If you're in New York and looking to discover the next great Japanese menswear brand or the latest quiet luxury offerings from The Row, Vend Space is a must visit. And I mean that literally. Chris Green's two-year-old store in Carroll Gardens' online presence is minimal. Its website is a simple list of brands with no e-commerce, and its social media consists of an infrequently updated Instagram account.
Sheena Butler-Young· Host0:46
Vend Space is one of a growing number of stores rejecting the idea that online shopping is the future of fashion retail. They see a curated, friendly, in-person experience as the key to success. Their customers would agree. And the strategy's getting more attention after the high-profile struggles of luxury e-commerce sites like Net-a-Porter and SSENSE.
Brian Baskin· Host1:06
With us to discuss is BoF's Austin Kim, who spoke with Green and other store owners who say, "E-commerce, who needs it?" Austin, welcome to The Debrief.
Austin Kim· Guest1:14
Hi, Sheena. Hi, Brian. I'm excited to be here.
Sheena Butler-Young· Host1:17
So Austin, you actually just joined BoF, and this is your first story, so congrats on that.
Austin Kim· Guest1:22
Thank you.
Sheena Butler-Young· Host1:23
So why don't we start with how you came across this idea? Certainly you weren't scrolling TikTok and discovered stores that are not