Please visit our sponsors

Rolclub does not endorse ads. Please see our disclaimer.
Results 1 to 2 of 2
  1. #1
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Posts
    1
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts

    Post A small business man A Conversation with Savile Row Tailor Richard Anderson

    Richard Anderson trained the old-fashioned way before hanging out his own shingle on Savile Row, where he's introducing a new generation of customers to the bespoke suit


    London's Savile Row is famous for its independent tailoring shops that have been selling bespoke men's clothing along the short street since 1623. But in an era of outsourcing, e-tail, and mass production, these storied operations, which rely on skilled artisans to make their costly suits by hand, seem to belong to a different world.
    It's a world Richard Anderson knows well. At 17 he became an apprentice at famed tailor Henry Huntsman & Sons, a fixture on the Row. For the first three months, Anderson says, he did nothing but arrange lays on fabric, eventually becoming the Row's youngest master cutter. He recalls tailors who had been at Huntsman for 30 to 40 years, including one who was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire for his work for the Queen. Anderson was fascinated by the fact that each tailor had a specific role, affixing either collars or sleeves or doing nothing but cut trousers.
    After 25 years at Huntsman and convinced there was still a market for quality custom-tailored suits, Anderson in 2001 opened his eponymous shop at 13 Savile Row, with the idea of carrying on the old techniques with a modern twist. Today he says his 22-employee business is profitable, with revenue around £1 million ($1.65 million) and clients including Simon Cowell and Benicio del Toro. He recently published Bespoke: Savile Row Ripped and Smoothed (Simon & Schuster; September 2009), which has been described as a kind of Kitchen Confidential set in the world of tailoring. Anderson, 44, spoke to BusinessWeek Staff Writer Stacy Perman. Edited excerpts of their conversation follow.
    In today's world, does bespoke tailoring still have appeal as a career choice?
    Actually there has been quite a strong swing back with young kids going into the trade. We're now seen as fashionable. The BBC did a documentary, and it portrayed [Savile Row] in a really good light. A lot of the kids are sort of seeing the trade and apprenticing as a good way go. Tuition fees to go to university are exorbitant, [so] this holds good appeal.
    What made you decide to start your own company?
    Basically [Henry Huntsman & Sons] had been taken over. New management came on board, and it really was a signal to me. I was still at a young age. I felt that I had gone as far as I could at the time and thought I could take all that I had learned and put it in a fresh new setting.
    What did you bring to your own house that set you apart from the other more established Savile Row firms?
    When we moved into No. 13, the clientele had changed a little bit. We wanted to mirror what we learned at Huntsman in terms of quality, customer service, and the tradition of teaching young people, but put it into a mod context. We had younger customers, and we didn't want them to feel intimidated by the surroundings of a traditional shop. But we also didn't want to upset our older clientele. We created an inviting clean, white, bright, modern shop. We put the workshops in the center so customers could see us working and not hidden away in the basement like many of the shops.
    We were a new name on the Row that experimented with slightly different, modern fabrics, and vibrant, brighter colors. We experimented with cotton and velvet, and we did big polo overcoats in check tweed. In a way it was more fashionable than some.
    When you first opened you put an ad in The Wall Street Journal announcing that you would be traveling to the U.S. to receive clients in 11 cities, and you came back with £75,000 ($123,948) in orders. This was a winning strategy—what was your thinking?
    There is a kind of gentleman's agreement that if you leave a shop you don't go ring up all your clients and bring them on.









































































    -----------------
    pomme d'or recettes

  2. Sponsored Links
  3. #2
    Member duplication's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    30
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts

    Default

    Here is how to start without a website but it also works
    if you have a website, twitter or a facebook account.

    Write articles with great keywords. First find a digital
    product online, they are all over the net(make sure you
    get the affiliate link so you can post it in your articles. Find
    one that has a 50% or greater commission or just send
    them to your website, twitter or facebook accounts to get
    more friends or website sales. You see facebook and
    twitter are really just your personal websites.

    I found that using a lot of good keywords in my articles is
    what gets them read. Of course you need a good keyword
    tool to find the good keywords. This is what makes a reader
    want to read your articles. Use the keywords in first line of
    the article and in the title. Then find other related keywords for
    the text of your article. Then sumbit your article to newsletters,
    article directories and other places (submit to free article
    submitter). You will be selling products online within a day once
    the directories post your article. If it is for a product that people
    want you will make a ton of sales. See video below to get started
    on the right foot. The good thing about this you wont even need
    a website because you will be selling other peoples products.

  4. Sponsored Links

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Share |