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We are always combing the internet to find information that will help independent fashion designers promote themselves and their brands. Crosby of PR Couture is a wealth of valuable information. Make sure to add her blog to your daily reads if you own your own label or are thinking about it. Being a fashion designer is so much more than just drawing pretty pictures. We will talk more about all of that later. Today your job is to learn at least one new thing about how you can streamline your PR to make it more effective for you and your company.
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FindFashionRep.com just might be what you are looking for. We are always combing the internet looking for ways to help independent fashion designers. Today we popped over to Fashionably Marketing.me to see what Macala has been up to and found this golden little nugget of information. If a rep is what you have been looking for to help you get your product in front of buyers check out the website. It just may be the online tool you have been waiting for. Read the full article here.
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We want to thank everyone who has helped us put together a soiree in such a short time to welcome our fashion PR friend Crosby Noricks of PR Couture to NYC. If you want to join us the invite and RSVP are here.
As you know there will be 30 lovely goodie bags at the door for the first 30 guests to arrive. We so appreciate the companies that help sponsor the event and donated.
Check out some fabulous items to make these bags irresistible…

MadGabs lip balm

This issue of Wired Magazine

Isabella Grace Originals Jewelry

EDUN Gift Certificate
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Burt’s Bees Lip Gloss

Charlotte Russe Gift Certificate

Smashing Darling Tees
Big thank you to Kerry Bannigan at Nolcha for helping us out with the venue by opening the doors to the Nolcha Retail space.
and….
Market Publique will be there with yummy cupcakes
last but not least, Thank You

Crosby of PR Couture for coming all this way so we could throw this little soiree.
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Fashion Meet Up NYC
A Fashion PR Meet Up – not to be missed.
Join us for a great networking opportunity to meet fashion industry leaders, shop and mingle.
Smashing Darling hosts a rare NYC visit by PR Couture maven, Crosby Noricks, at the Nolcha Retail space.
We look forward to collectively bringing all of our darling fans together for one night, in one room, and basking in the conversation.
Put on your most smashing, or dashing, and join all of us as we continue to put independent and emerging fashion first.
Goody bags to the first 30 arrivals, and 25% off selected Nolcha designers for the evening!
Click here to RSVP. Enter Code 412.
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Dream Cartel, a brand new fashion PR firm based out of Los Angeles, is holding an online casting call for all fashion designers looking for representation. Dream Cartel will provide media relations, social media branding, and buzz marketing to 3 designers that will be chosen. One lucky winner out of those 3 will receive free PR services for 6 months — yep, completely gratis!
If you’re interested, you will need to submit your information including your name, contact number, email, and a link to your online portfolio to casting@dreamcartel.com. A short digital video telling us why you should be picked wouldn’t hurt either! Deadline for entries is Friday, May 15th, 2009. Good luck!
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Have you thought about your story lately? You know the one. It’s the one that your a customer can’t wait to tell her friends when they ask her where she got the unbelievable [fill in the blank] she is wearing. It is that little nugget of information that makes her feel like she knows you personally and has for years, and maybe she has. It is this personal connection to you that makes it easy for people to pass along via word of mouth all that you are and what you are about because it just innately rolls off their tongues. This word of mouth builds credibility in the eyes of new fans because they have heard the story from someone they trust. Making sure you let people know your story is the single most important thing you can do for yourself, your company, and your brand.
This post was sparked by Seth Godin after I read his post, The Difference Between PR and Publicity. It made me think about our community and how personal our businesses are to us. How personal the story is because it really is, our story, our journey about how we arrived here, in this moment. The lifetime, to this point, we have spent learning and honing our skills, the years we have spent watching and absorbing the world’s inspirations, everything we have ever processed in our minds affects the outcome of each and every one of our designs.
It is inspiring for me to think about my story, and all the opportunities I have to share that story. This is a great time to make sure it is a clear, consistent story. Everyday, I learn something new or something I have heard a million times, finally, sinks in.
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I think today is a good day to check in, see where your business is at. Think about how you are spending your day, and how you can make the time being spent on Marketing/PR more efficient and effective. PR Couture is where I recommend you start. Crosby Noricks, the blog’s creator has an amazing amount of information and tips that can really help even if you are a small fashion company doing everything on your own.
Here are a few posts I recommend reading, but dig around and see what else you uncover. Leave a comment with a link if there is one you want to share.
Fashion PR/Social Media: 5 TwitTips for a Successful TwitPitch
Stay In Fashion: The How’s and Why’s of Choosing a PR Agency in 2009
Show Me The Pretty: Fashion PR with Madras 641
Top 10 DIY Fashion PR Tips for Emerging Designers
The Balancing Act: Tips for Building Fashion PR/Blogger Relationships
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Where do you fit in if not in the tents during fashion week in NYC? Fashion happens all over the city from lofts off the park to galleries downtown and warehouses in Brooklyn. Emerging designers need support, and we are here to tell you it exists. The Darlings happily walked into an elevator cushioned with red leather up to the loft of the Bryant Park Hotel for a little Krel TO-GO during NY Fashion Week. The event: EXPOSE NY. Our host, Matt Meyerson. Learn the knitty gritty about his event below, and check out his blog for an inside look: http://plopculture.blogspot.com

Darlings: How and why did you decide to start Expose, and what is your main goal?
Matt: I used to work at one of the largest entertainment PR firms in the world, where I started and ran their product placement division. I created a specialty in fashion where I placed product in a ton of TV shows, films, music videos, on celebs, in magazines, on websites, etc. After almost 4 years I decided it was time to move on to work on my own ventures but didn’t want to throw away years of great relationships that I built. People have always tried to get access to my fashion database and Expose was a natural extension of what I had been doing at my last job and a way for people to pay to have access to my friends in the business.
Expose is the first trade event gear specifically toward the media. Select buyers are welcome but the showcase is targeted toward the marketing side of the fashion business. My goal with Expose is to enable brands that wouldn’t normally have a presence at Fashion Week due to lack of funds a chance to get face time during the busiest time of the season. I work hard to bring in only top tier collections and designers in hopes that there are amazing new “finds and discoveries” at my show. Last show we had breakout collections from the likes of Jerome C. Rousseau (who was chosen to be part of Gen Art’s Fresh Faces in Fashion right after Expose), House of Bastion and Yeojin Bae. The Fall ’09 showcase saw amazing work from soon-to-be-known designers Marc Marmel Luggage, ic! berlin, Serpico and gr. dano.
In the end, I really want Expose to be an add on to every major Fashion Week around the world. I want to give emerging, and deserving, designers in all categories a chance to capture the attention from the media. Brands have to realize just how important marketing and PR are to making and maintaining a successful collection. You could have great product and a top notch sales team but if you aren’t getting press and being seen on top celebs, it will be difficult to translate amazing pieces into consistent sales.
Darlings: What advice would you give to an indie/emerging designer trying to land their first bits of print press?
Matt: I am going to piss off a lot of people in the fashion PR business but contrary to popular belief doing PR/product placement is not brain surgery. Before I worked at my last job, I was not in that line of business, and over 4 years I built a reputation for being one of the best in the business. PR is all about who you know and about creating long term relationships. The internet has made information readily available, from who is on the masthead to every magazine to who reps the top celebs. Use the internet as a resource to find outlets and celebs that match your brand image. Don’t miss-pitch people. If you have an avant garde and edgy style, Oprah Magazine is probably not worth pitching. Find what is right for you and be bold and go after it. The internet is also a great place to instantaneously get word out about your brand. Hit up the thousands of blogs, online magazines and fashion websites for coverage. Have lookbooks READY.
Here is one more little hint…celebs love getting free stuff. Study celebs you like and what they wear. Getting the right person to wear your stuff can literally break your brand. I have done it tons of times for small emerging brands.
Darlings: How important do you think it is for a designer to have a strong online presence?
Matt: VERY. I am a huge proponent of the Web as a tool to promote. The internet is worldwide and it gives your fans and future fans a chance to get information on your designs instantaneously. It is the new paradigm and I would suggest spending a lot of time stoking the internet fire and getting word out about your brand.
Have a great website as well. This is your virtual brand image and if you invest in a great, albeit simple if need be, site that can really provide a nice showcase for potential customers.
Darlings: For your event, when it comes to acceptance criteria for a designer, how do blog posts measure up against traditional print media? Do you see this changing as print media starts to fade, and online magazines grow stronger?
Matt: Blog posts are huge. For Expose, we look at 3 things for a brand to be accepted. We look at the designs themselves, where the product sells and what press they have gotten. For me personally, if JCReport, Omiru, Style.com or WhoWhatWear has covered you I am more interested than if a major print pub has covered you. The internet mavens search for new and hot while print stays safe and often goes with those spending money on ads within their books. Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE print…but it is a dying animal. I have been prognosticating this for years on my blog.
Darlings: Would Expose accept a designer who sells only online?
Matt: This would have to depend on the designer, but most likely not. I still believe in the old paradigm of walking into a store and trying on a garment to see if it fits properly. Too many people by clothing based on labels and I just can’t adhere to that practice. I see so many people wearing items they just shouldn’t but are because it is “designer.” I believe in a mix of online and in store. This keeps the retailers honest and prices competitive but gives the consumer an opportunity to actually see, feel and try on the item.
Darlings: If designers showing at Expose must already have press coverage to be accepted, how does being a part of Expose benefit them? Can you share some success stories with us?
Matt: Often press happens serendipitously. Someone stumbles on your designs or your sister’s cousin went to school with the editor at magazine X. However, consistent press coverage is 100% reliant on building long term relationships with decision makers. Expose enables designers to literally meet these people face to face and bond with them in a way they wouldn’t get to by cold calling or email pitching.
Success stories? I would say hits with GenArt’s Fresh Faces in Fashion, Italian Vogue, Interview, Paper, JCReport, Zink!, Life and Style, MSNBC, etc. are pretty good bi-products of my show. To be honest, if Expose alumni don’t follow up with me to let me know of their successes it is hard for me to track if they are taking the tools they get from doing my showcase and applying them. That is the beauty of Expose for me. I am no longer responsible for the chase…I just bring people together and leave it up to them to make gold from thread.
http://www.expose-ny.com for more info
http://plopculture.blogspot.com for an inside look
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We love it when we come across articles that help emerging designers navigate through any of the many things that come into play when designing or promoting their lines. Yesterday while perusing twitter, trying to catch up on what all of our friends are up to we saw PR Couture tweet: Top 10 DIY Fashion PR Tips for Emerging Designers. We clicked right on through to find a guest post by Polina Raygorodskaya of Polina Fashion. In this post Polina stresses many important points such as thinking outside the box, the power of the follow up and staying fresh. We love her #1 point and couldn’t agree more with it … be your own biggest fan. There is loads of useful information in this article. We hope you find the time to read it.
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