Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Advertising
- Bookkeeping
- Branding
- Careers
- Careers Employment
- Change Management
- Communication
- Corporate
- Customer Service
- Entrepreneurialism
- Ethics
- Financing
- Franchise
- Fundraising
- Human Resources
- Management
- Marketing
- Marketing Direct
- Negotiation
- Networking
- Outsourcing
- Partnerships
- PR
- Presentation
- Public Relations
- Resumes Cover Letters
- Sales
- Sales Management
- Sales Teleselling
- Sales Training
- Small Business
- Strategic Planning
- Team Building
- Top7 or 10 Tips
- Venture Capital
- Workplace Communication
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Becoming a Fashion Designer
Submitted: 2008-06-15 22:30:49
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
It seems like everyone is jumping on the designer bandwagon these days. And why not? The fashion industry is sexy - fashion shows, parties, celebrities, recognition, and even fame go along with a career in fashion.
Now herein lies the question: do you go to design school or go straight to starting a business? Not all fashion designers go the traditional route to design school, instead drawing on an entrepreneurial spirit, some "designers" turn their head for business into a thriving fashion enterprise.
Ralph Lauren is an example of a fashion designer who bypassed the sewing machine and headed straight for the marketplace. Which path you take depends on your personal motivation. If you love sewing and pattern making, the traditional route is going to bring the most satisfaction. If you love the fashion world but don't have the patience for needle and thread, a career in the fast-paced and exciting fashion biz is still possible ... read on.
So you want to go out on your own, what's first?
You've always admired fashion designers and their ability to design trendy, unique and wearable fashions season after season, as if by magic. But it's not magic; it's a business. And to succeed in business, nobody is an island (meaning that everyone needs a little help to accomplish his or her dreams). And it's not all glitz and glamour. Being a fashion designer means you have to actually run a business.
Before you print up those business cards, ask yourself if you're prepared to roll up your sleeves and tackle the not-so fun aspects of fashion.
At first, running a fashion business could mean fulfilling orders yourself (i.e., packing boxes until the wee hours of the morning), steaming clothes repeatedly during fashion shows, and bookkeeping. You could spend only a small percentage of your time actually designing; instead you're networking, schmoozing and negotiating with suppliers and vendors.
If you're planning to take the direct-to-consumer path, you'll have to create a website and maintain it (and most likely have to pay someone to handle these tasks), get a merchant account to process credit card transactions and manage charge back cycles. If you're not interested in learning what these things mean, then you may decide to work for a large fashion house to learn the ropes.
But if you have the endurance and enough friends with skills or services you can trade for, you could go out on your own and succeed. Today is the age of entrepreneurship, why shouldn't you get a piece of the pie?
The fashion biz: a reality check
Exciting industries are rife with competition-some that will fade away and others that will give you a run for your money. You have to compete against the big names out there and trendy emerging designers fresh out of the best design schools or veterans of big fashion houses-not to mention all the celebrities popping up with their own labels.
Running your own fashion biz may require you to reach out to suppliers and potential customers all over the world, which means you better be organized. Are you prepared to coordinate the procurement of raw materials like fabric, trim and hardware, so that your manufacturer gets what they need at the right time to deliver a finished product on deadline?
Think of yourself as a business person first and a fashion designer second. If your fashion business fails, you're the one that suffers. Always keep the business aspect in the forefront of your mind. Some people find this prospect exhilarating, while others can't think of anything more horrifying. Still interested in starting your own fashion business?
I'm not a designer, can I still work in the fashion industry?
Yes ... and no. If you have the design vision, you can pay people to take your idea and turn it into a tangible pattern or design. This is sort of like what a creative director does. If this fits your situation, then you'd better have the business chops to get your business off the ground and you'd better have a solid Core Value Proposition.
What this means is that you must have a strong business proposal and offer a product that's valuable and in demand. That doesn't mean you have to sell high-end couture clothing to rich people. Clothiers H&M and Zara focus on fast ready-to-wear fashion at affordable pricepoints.
There is more than one path to becoming a fashion designer. You can learn to sew and go to design school to learn the ins-and-outs of the business. But not everyone learns to draw patterns and stitch together garments. The keys to succeeding in the fashion business are creativity, a good business sense and determination.
Stay tuned for more advice on becoming a fashion designer.
Amy Covington is a fashion writer with a penchant for silk scarves and luxury handbags. Amy maintains three blogs for Belisi Fashions, a luxury accessories brand, specializing in silk ties, pocket squares, and cuff links. On her women's fashion blog, readers get a regular dose of fashion, health and lifestyle articles, product reviews and commentary.Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Careers Employment category
- SAP based BPO solutions - By: Jacob Christopher
Sap's entrance in the Business process outsourcing market has created a revolution in the outsourcing industry. SAP is useful to many BPO companies like ACS, EDS and IBM. - Employer Secrets Revealed: Vital Traits Employers Are Yearning For - By: Terry Jones
When employers consider applicants for employment, there are actually two different sets of skills that they must assess. - Sales vacancies and digging a little deeper - By: John Bult
I've done a lot of things but I still consider myself a salesman at heart. Sales people are notoriously optimistic, perhaps even viewing the world through rose tinted glasses. When you are looking at sales vacancies to determine your future, it's time to take them off! - How to Make Your Mark in Medical Sales - By: John Bult
Planning your way in the medical sales industry entails certain challenges that you won't find anywhere else. For starters, you will be representing a company which expects you to sell a product to a group of people who probably know more about it than you do, and they are a very scrutinizing group composed of medical experts, who most of the time knows the profession inside out. - Searching Online For Catering Vacancies - By: John Bult
Are you looking for Catering Vacancies online? Well if you are, there's no doubt that you are not the only one who is doing so. - Medical Sales - 6 Ways to Increase Your Call Rate - By: John Bult
You may not like it, but pharmaceutical companies who employ people for medical sales to sell to Gp's measure call rate. In some cases, they are a little obsessed with it as a measure for success. Regardless of whether or not we are in agreement with this, many of you will indeed have to strive for the highest number of calls you can. - Moving on Into Management in Sales Jobs - By: John Bult
The sales jobs market is becoming more and more respected with each day that goes by. This always hasn't been the case, with so many negative characters being created by the media for sales people. Nowadays though sales jobs are very sought by people from all sorts of backgrounds. - Top SEO tips for recruitment agencies - By: John Bult
Recruitment agencies are increasingly turning to their own websites as a source of new candidates. To achieve any kind of meaningful web presence recruitment agencies need to invest in search engine optimisation to achieve rankings. This can be fraught with difficulties in a market that is ever more competitive and so the costs of gaining top rankings will keep going up. - Nurse, Turned Flight Instruction School Owner/Pilot Extraordinaire - By: James O. Armstrong
On a recent Sunday afternoon, this writer caught up with a successful woman business owner, whose flight instruction and general aviation business is physically located at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California. But, how did Evelyn A. Carlson, a Nursing Instructor at St. John College in Cleveland, Ohio ultimately emerge as a partner in a Learn to Fly business on the West Coast and become a pilot extraordinaire. Here's the story. - Four tips on how to score retail jobs - By: Brittany Kerfoot
Flexible scheduling, employee discounts, a fun work environment-these are just some of the things retail establishments typically offer their workers, so it's no wonder retail is one of the most popular industries around.
