Olivela’s Stacey Boyd: ‘No one is going to buy something simply because it does good’ – Glossy

Posted: May 18, 2022 at 1:44 am


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When founder and CEO Stacey Boyd set out to create her company, Olivela, she wanted to establish a luxury shopping platform with a philanthropic mission baked into the core business model. The 5-year-old company donates 20% of net proceeds from every purchase to the consumers charity of choice from Olivelas list of partners, at no cost to the consumer or brand partners.

There are three pillars we work in, Boyd said on the latest episode of the Glossy Podcast. Olivela focuses on womens empowerment, climate action and health and wellness. The name is Olive for olive trees, a symbol of growth and wisdom, and vela, which is Latin for the sails of the ship, with the idea that we help set people forward on the best path in life.

Purpose matters to [our customers], said Boyd. As we think about developing and creating the Olivela website, no one is going to buy something simply because it does good. Our customer is going to buy a bag because she loves the bag. Shes going to choose to buy it from Olivela versus somewhere else because of the good that it does and because she has a choice as a consumer.

Below are additional highlights from the conversation, which have been lightly edited for clarity.

Olivelas approach to curation

We have a more curated selection [than other luxury retail platforms]. Weve honed and refined the number of brands on our site. We sell ready-to-wear, shoes, handbags, [jewelry, accessories, home] and beauty. Beauty has been a big part of what our consumer has looked for, particularly over the course of the past few years. We have some pretty wonderful brands in [our beauty vertical], including Dr. Barbara Sturm, Vintners Daughter and Augustinus Bader. Our focus is on finding the brands we know our consumers will really love. We focus on these brands and tell their stories.

The power of pop-ups

We find, especially in a location like Nantucket, [pop-ups] are a wonderful way to acquire a VIP customer, those that we do a lot of personal shopping for in the luxury space. Pop-ups have been a wonderful way for us to get the word out on the brand and what it is we do. We have a great Instagram wall. Early on in our pop-up [journey], Jennifer Lawrence walked in and bought a classically Nantucket straw bag. There, on the wall, was: Thank you, Jennifer. You just sent a girl to school for 22 days. Everybody who buys something in our store has [access to] this Instagrammable wall, so its a great way for us to acquire new customers.

The future of luxury

I was talking with the chairman of LVMH, and we were talking about how the world is really stuck in 1832, Paris. Then, it was the cholera outbreak. All of the haves left Paris, while all of the have nots stayed. This wasnt something that lasted a number of months, it lasted years. The chairman thought the merging of the haves and the have nots is whats unique about Olivelas business model. Finding a way for those two [ideals] to live together and support one another is a really important part of luxury going forward. While [Olivela] might have been a little bit ahead of our time, youre seeing luxury brands thinking more about that and that being the beginning of how people are shifting and moving. Its very challenging times, and [the chairman] is right about this place the world is in. Its a scary place, in a lot of ways. There needs to be, especially given the income inequality at the heart of a lot of the unrest, this knitting together. There are a lot of different ways we can do it. Olivela is a very small example of one way businesses could think about that.

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Olivela's Stacey Boyd: 'No one is going to buy something simply because it does good' - Glossy

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May 18th, 2022 at 1:44 am




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