Chloé appointed Valérie Leberichel as Chief Marketing Officer, the Richemont-owned French house confirmed this week. Leberichel arrives from 23 years at L'Oréal, most recently leading global marketing for Lancôme, where she oversaw campaigns across 150 markets and managed digital transformation budgets estimated above €200 million annually.
The hire follows creative director Chemena Kamali's first full collection cycle since her March 2024 appointment. Kamali, who spent 15 years at Chloé in previous stints, has steered the house back toward its archival bohemian codes—a departure from predecessor Gabriela Hearst's sustainability-forward positioning. Early retail response shows accessories velocity up 18-22 percent quarter-over-quarter in key European doors, according to wholesale partners who spoke on condition of anonymity. Ready-to-wear conversion rates remain below 2019 benchmarks, suggesting the creative reset has not yet translated to full-price apparel momentum.
Leberichel's mandate centers on rebuilding brand heat among 25-40-year-old consumers in North America and Greater China, where Chloé trails peers in unaided awareness. The house operates roughly 170 directly owned points of sale globally, compared to 300-plus for similarly positioned brands within Richemont's soft luxury portfolio. Marketing spend as a percentage of revenue has historically tracked 8-10 percent below category averages, per industry estimates—a gap Leberichel will need to close without eroding operating margins already compressed by wholesale model exposure.
The timing aligns with Richemont's broader push to professionalize management across its fashion and leather goods division, which delivered €3.7 billion in revenue for fiscal 2024 but lagged jewelry's 17.2 percent operating margin by 780 basis points. Chloé's contribution to that division sits near €500-600 million annually, though the house has not disclosed standalone financials since Richemont's 2017 acquisition from private equity. Leberichel reports directly to CEO Riccardo Bellini, who joined from Moncler 14 months ago with a remit to stabilize retail productivity and reduce promotional dependency in off-price channels.
Operators should monitor Chloé's media spend allocation shift over the next two quarters. L'Oréal Luxe teams under Leberichel's purview redirected 30-35 percent of traditional media budgets into owned content and influencer seeding programs between 2020-2023, a playbook applicable to fashion but requiring different velocity and creative cycles. Retail partners expect updated visual merchandising guidelines by early Q2 2025, with potential flagship redesigns in Paris and New York targeting fall 2025 reopenings. Wholesale accounts will watch whether Chloé tightens distribution—several mid-tier doors report the brand still ships to 140-plus wholesale partners in the U.S. alone, compared to 80-90 for tighter luxury competitors.
Richemont's next earnings disclosure lands mid-May 2025, when investors will parse fashion division commentary for signs of Chloé's trajectory under the new commercial leadership duo. The house has not launched a signature fragrance since 2020, leaving €100-150 million in annual beauty licensing revenue on the table compared to peers who command 12-18 percent royalty rates on prestige scent portfolios.