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"Mood Ring Garter Belts by Subscription"
Description
One of these things is not like the other: Arby's x Birchbox, $88 rental products from Urban Outfitters and a prediction of Kohl's having a potential suitor. Listen now!
Show Notes:
Main Takeaways:
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Urban Outfitters has a new rental-subscription service, but will GenZ even care?
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23andMe teams up with Airbnb to help consumers with their travel plans: is this super creepy, or genius?
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Amazon wants to create wearables that can sense emotions, just in case they don't have enough consumer data.
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Dress Barn closes 650 stores because shuttering stores is what all the cool kids are doing according to Coresight.
Urban Outfitters: Will Their Rental-Subscription Appeal to GenZ?
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Some background: Urban Outfitters was originally a retail store called Free People and was renamed Urban Outfitters in 1976, and it used to be the coolest kid on the block for hippy-esque fashion.
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And now, Urban Outfitters, probably to get it's mojo back, has launched a rental-subscription service (Nuuly) for $88 for up to six items per month.
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According to Kaleigh Moore writing for Forbes, Nuuly (which Phillip challenges Brian to spell) will function as it's own brand spearheaded by Urban Outfitters current Cheif Digital officer David Hayne.
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Here's a question though, will Urban Outfitters target market for this service be able to resist ruining the clothes?
Airbnb Teams Up With 23andMe For a Heritage Based Travel Collab:
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Phillip asks Brian what his preferred travel booking method would look like?
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Airbnb and 23andMe, are teaming up to recommend their customer heritage destinations based on countries of origin, which is not at all going to end in a PR disaster.
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Phillip says that the idea of 23andMe and AirBnB sharing the data they've collected with a third party is the creepy aspect, but ads that we've all probably signed those rights away in the fine print anyway.
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Brian says that collaboration commerce is going to be an increasing trend in retail.
Amazon Wants to Know All Your Feelings All The Time:
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So Amazon, being Amazon wants to create wearable products that can sense users emotions: because they don't have enough consumer data.
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For right now, this is just a patent filing, not an official product (which doesn't make it any less creepy)
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Is the future of retail mood-ring reminiscent clothing?
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There already is a dress that claims to change colors with the wearer's mood, and it's kind of awesome.
Store Closings Aren't Stopping Soon: Boring Retail is Dying:
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Coresight is predicting 12K store closings in 2019, which is double that of this time last year.
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Dress Barn is closing all 650 of its stores, to which Brian says, "who cares?"
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Phillip makes a point
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