Abstract:
The principle of ‘story’ finds residence in many areas of the brand. This includes areas
pertinent, but not solely limited to, brand heritage, brand identity, brand personality, brand
story, brand aesthetics, and brand history. Marketers constantly work towards persuading
consumers to be part of the brand evolution, which is understood as the most basic
principle of storytelling—taking the consumer on a journey. Covid-19 has intensified the
need for restoration as the local fashion industry and many others experienced much
turbulence. Local and international businesses were thrown off balance. This emerged as
an opportunity for innovative entrepreneurial fashion design brands to forge out unique
niche segments and present contemporary collections inspired by meaningful stories and
aesthetic designs. The possibility to move South Africa into a new fashion renaissance
exists. Contemporary, entrepreneurial fashion designers can produce aesthetic-branded
goods which communicate a distinctly South African story.
The discussion on the zeitgeist of fashion, design, and fashion brand communication
where entrepreneur fashion designers are emerging in many locations in South Africa, is
prompting questions of viability and survival. The subject of storytelling and aesthetics
has been explored through different angles. This study examined the entrepreneurial
marketing and brand storytelling activities that South African entrepreneur designers
undertake and further explored the brand aesthetics tactics used. However, the fashion
studies’ approach to how ready-to-wear fashion design brands communicate stories
anchored in brand-relevant content, which discusses fashion entrepreneurial storytelling
strategies from entrepreneurial fashion design enterprises, proves scant.
The study profiled 14 South African entrepreneur designer fashion brands – using semistructured
in-depth interviews. Interacting with participants included face-to-face
meetings, telephonic conversations, and a single written response. This study was
exploratory. The results, as generated from the thematic analysis, indicated seven
themes. The seven themes that emerged were: fashion brands storytelling techniques;
brand aesthetics tactics – a positive aesthetic response; entrepreneurial social media
marketing channels – online presence; entrepreneurial marketing activities; narrative
behind a story; colour symbolism; and South African entrepreneurial fashion brands in
iv
Covid-19 times: understanding the impact of Covid-19 on local entrepreneurial fashion
design enterprises. This research intends to make the following contributions to literature
in South African fashion brand communication scholarship. First, expanding the concept
of fashion entrepreneurial marketing from the context of South African entrepreneur
fashion design brands. The exploration of fashion entrepreneurial marketing through
practical business models proves mandatory for the success of a contemporary fashion
brand. It is important for fashion marketers to build on this practice in keeping fashion
brands relevant. Second, to create a better understanding in the brand-oriented vs
business-oriented fashion entrepreneurship typology within the creative fashion industry
of South Africa. Third, expanding the knowledge base of fashion practitioners, marketing
agencies and Fashion Designers. Many studies hold contrasting convictions in seeing the
brand as a business; or seeing the business as a brand; or even seeing them as one
entity. This ‘unclear’ typology proves interesting to look into within the discipline of fashion
design and fashion marketing as a whole.