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J. Crew CEO confesses the 'very big mistake' that sent the company spiraling

Hayley Peterson   

J. Crew CEO confesses the 'very big mistake' that sent the company spiraling
Retail2 min read
Mickey Drexler

AP/Seth Wenig

J. Crew CEO Mickey Drexler says one huge mistake sent the company's sales into a years-long decline.

J. Crew CEO Mickey Drexler says one huge mistake sent the company's sales into a years-long decline.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Drexler, 72, said the retailer jacked up its prices at a time when customers were becoming increasingly cost-conscious.

"We gave a perception of being a higher-priced company than we were - in our catalog, online and in our general presentation," Drexler told the Journal. "Very big mistake."

At the height of the Great Recession in 2008, J. Crew unveiled a higher-priced line, called J. Crew Collection.

The line, spearheaded by recently-departed head designer Jenna Lyons, debuted with a store on Madison Avenue in New York City featuring items such as a $3,000 jacket "with French sequins in various shades of tortoiseshell hand-sewn into silk chiffon," the now-defunct magazine Portfolio wrote at the time.

The higher prices alienated customers at a time when most Americans were strapped for cash and increasingly shopping at discount stores.

"We became a little too elitist in our attitude," Drexler told the Journal.

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J. Crew

In December, J. Crew was selling a number of its Collection items at staggering discounts of up to 70% off.

The website now features a pared-down selection of Collection items, and many of the items are under $200.

In the past, Drexler has also attributed the company's losses to a number of fashion misses.

J. Crew's total sales fell 6% to $2 billion last year and same-store sales dropped 8% following a decrease of 10% the prior year.

The company has more than $2 billion of debt and less than $150 million in cash.

Drexler is now trying to turn business around by putting a big emphasis on lowering prices and becoming a more "approachable" brand, he said.

"We're getting back to being who we are - much more comfortable, approachable, democratic and friendly," he told the Journal.

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