Fashion House Chanel Hires Unilever Consumer Goods Veteran as CEO

The logo of fashion house Chanel is seen on a store in Paris, France, June 18, 2020. (Reuters)
The logo of fashion house Chanel is seen on a store in Paris, France, June 18, 2020. (Reuters)
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Fashion House Chanel Hires Unilever Consumer Goods Veteran as CEO

The logo of fashion house Chanel is seen on a store in Paris, France, June 18, 2020. (Reuters)
The logo of fashion house Chanel is seen on a store in Paris, France, June 18, 2020. (Reuters)

French fashion house Chanel named Leena Nair, an executive from Unilever, as its new global CEO on Tuesday, picking a consumer goods veteran to run one of the world's biggest luxury goods groups.

Nair's career at Unilever spanned 30 years, most recently as the chief of human resources and a member of the company's executive committee.

A British national, born in India, Nair is a rare outsider at the helm of the tightly controlled family fashion house, known for its tweed suits, quilted handbags and No. 5 perfume.

The 52-year-old follows US businesswoman Maureen Chiquet, who came from a fashion background and was CEO of Chanel for nine years until early 2016.

French billionaire Alain Wertheimer, a 73-year-old who owns Chanel with his brother Gerard Wertheimer and had originally taken on the CEO job on a temporary basis, will move to the role of global executive chairman.

Chanel was founded in 1910 by fashion legend Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel as a hat boutique on rue Cambon in Paris and grew to become a byword for French chic.

The group said Nair, who at Unilever oversaw 150,000 people, would join at the end of January and be based in London. It added that the new appointments would ensure its "long-term success as a private company."

The recruitment of Nair, who rose through the ranks of Unilever having started out as a trainee on the factory floor, comes as the fashion industry is under pressure to show a more inclusive approach.

Under her watch Unilever achieved gender parity across global management, according to a Harper's Bazaar profile published last month, which also highlighted her commitment to pay the living wage across the supply chain.

Nair serves as a non-executive board member at BT and has previously served as non-executive director of the British government's business, energy and industrial strategy department.

Chanel has fiercely defended its independence and only began publishing financial results in 2018. It said in July it expects to increase sales by double digits this year compared with their 2019, pre-pandemic level of $12.3 billion.

Bernstein luxury goods analyst Luca Solca said Chanel was following a trend of attracting top executives from the consumer packaged goods industry.

"Unilever and P&G stand tall as management reservoirs for the relatively young luxury goods industry," he said, pointing to Antonio Belloni, general manager of LVMH and a former president of Procter & Gamble in Europe, and Estee Lauder head Fabrizio Freda, also a P&G veteran.



Burberry Announces Turnaround Plan as Sales Continue to Slide

FILED - 22 August 2018, England, London: A general view of the Burberry logo displayed on the facade of its store in New Bond Street. Photo: Yui Mok/PA Wire/dpa
FILED - 22 August 2018, England, London: A general view of the Burberry logo displayed on the facade of its store in New Bond Street. Photo: Yui Mok/PA Wire/dpa
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Burberry Announces Turnaround Plan as Sales Continue to Slide

FILED - 22 August 2018, England, London: A general view of the Burberry logo displayed on the facade of its store in New Bond Street. Photo: Yui Mok/PA Wire/dpa
FILED - 22 August 2018, England, London: A general view of the Burberry logo displayed on the facade of its store in New Bond Street. Photo: Yui Mok/PA Wire/dpa

Burberry's new CEO Joshua Schulman announced a turnaround strategy for the struggling British luxury brand on Thursday, as sales continued to slide in its second quarter.
Burberry suspended its dividend for 2025 and announced a 40 million pound ($50.73 million) cost savings program. According to Reuters, Schulman said the brand needed to focus back on outerwear and its core customer.
"Today, we are acting with urgency to course correct, stabilize the business and position Burberry for a return to sustainable, profitable growth," Schulman said in a statement.
Sales in Burberry's second quarter ending Sept. 28 fell at the same pace as the first, with revenue for the first half down 20% in constant currency.