Gen Z designers made it big on this app. Now They're graduating.

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, March 28, 2024


Gen Z designers made it big on this app. Now They're graduating.
Jessica Pons, whose That Valley Girl store on Depop has 30,000 followers, cuts a pattern at her home studio in Los Angeles, July 15, 2022. Depop, a social shopping app, was a springboard for many young designers during the pandemic, but some are now taking their success elsewhere. Jessica Pons/The New York Times.

by Kalley Huang



NEW YORK, NY.- When Shirley Tang started selling handmade clothing in 2020, she knew just where to do so online: Depop, an app at the forefront of social shopping.

Tang, 22, began offering $100 to $200 hand-draped mesh and woven tops and skirts in her Depop shop, where her following grew to 24,000. Customers, most of them around her age, traded messages and commentary on the app about her creations as her store caught the attention of magazines and Grammy-winning artists, including SZA and Kali Uchis. Her business surged.

But, this year, Tang began focusing on selling her clothing brand, ORIENS, exclusively on her website. Depop’s popularity had led her to make the same items again and again, she said, hemming her in creatively. And she was tired of the app charging a 10% commission on every item sold.

“I wanted that independent establishment, even if it meant losing out on a little bit of new people who were going to be organically finding my pieces on Depop,” said Tang, a rising senior at the Parsons School of Design. “To me, that was a worthy sacrifice.”

The onset of the pandemic led Depop to become a springboard for hundreds of millennial and Gen Z designers, including Fancì Club, whose corsets have been worn by celebrities like Olivia Rodrigo, and Gogo Graham, whose designs have moved to the runways of New York Fashion Week. With its Instagram-like interface, through which people can upload and caption photos, follow and message one another and discover curated items, Depop turned into a go-to fashion marketplace among teenage and 20-something shoppers.

But, like other online shopping businesses that boomed over the past two years, Depop is now confronting the downside of its pandemic-fueled success. Dozens of the creators it helped establish, such as Tang, have started taking the brands they built through the app to other platforms like Instagram and TikTok — or are leaving the app altogether to establish their own online stores.

That is creating difficulties for Depop as it tries to hang on to a young — and notoriously fickle — audience. Having the most sought-after and buzziest designers is crucial to retaining users and growing their number. Younger shoppers are generally less loyal to brands and platforms than older shoppers are, according to market researchers.

Peter Semple, chief brand officer at Depop, which the e-commerce website Etsy bought last year for $1.6 billion, said the pandemic “has certainly driven the scale of our business.” The question regarding the app’s users, he said, has become, “How do we remain interesting and present to them so they continue to be part of the Depop ecosystem?”

Semple added that sellers leaving Depop was nothing new and that their successes often inspired new designers to join the app. He cited Emma Rogue, a seller of secondhand clothing who turned her Depop shop into a brick-and-mortar vintage store. “We then have to be more interesting for the next group of people we want to cultivate,” he said.

Depop said it had 30 million registered users last year, up from 13 million in 2019. About 90% of its active users are under the age of 26. Its revenue more than doubled to $70 million in 2020 from a year earlier. The app declined to share more recent figures; Etsy doesn’t separately disclose Depop’s financial information.

Depop was founded in 2011 by Simon Beckerman, an entrepreneur, as a website where anybody could sell anything. (He is no longer involved with the app.) It soon built a reputation for selling used clothing, with influencers like Italian fashion blogger Chiara Ferragni letting followers into their closets by starting Depop shops. By 2015, Semple said, Depop was benefiting from Gen Z coming online and was building its platform to be more interactive.

In 2018, Depop homed in on becoming a fashion marketplace and discouraged sellers from offering items other than clothing. Since then, the app has ingrained itself in Gen Z culture, with promoters such as Megan Thee Stallion, YouTuber Emma Chamberlain and model Winnie Harlow. Sellers like Bella McFadden, who resold clothing from thrift stores on Depop and now runs a stand-alone company and a YouTube channel, became social media influencers and tastemakers in their own right.

After the pandemic hit, more buyers gravitated to online shopping destinations like Depop, helping the app double its users and revenue in a year. That success attracted more sellers, who provide their date of birth, billing address and PayPal account information to set up shop on the app.




But, over time, some Depop sellers began looking to grow their businesses beyond the app. Brianna Lopez, 25, from Winnetka, California, said she struggled to connect with the customers of her Depop shop, That Valley Girl. Last year, she joined Instagram.

On Depop, most of her interactions with customers happened only when they wanted to buy something, Lopez said. But on Instagram, she said, she could share more personal moments from her life through features like Stories — which people use to post photos and videos that disappear after 24 hours — so “people get a feel of who I am and who they’re buying from.”

Lopez still spends more time on Depop, where she has 30,000 followers, compared with fewer than 1,000 on Instagram. Her bestselling item, a $58 mesh halter top with embroidered flowers, went viral on Depop this year, winning her shop adulation from customers in comments and reviews.

Other Gen Z designers are spending far less time on their Depop store these days. Desireé Zavala, 23, from Caguas, Puerto Rico, branched out to Instagram last year after sales for her Depop shop, Conscious Brat, sagged. (The shop’s name is a nod to Bratz dolls.)

Zavala said she now preferred Instagram, where tools such as Reels, which allows users to create short video montages, have let her ask customers for feedback, show off outfits and tease new items. She said she was not able to communicate with customers that way on Depop.

Depop “looks like social media, but it doesn’t feel like social media to me because I don’t feel like I can connect with anyone there, so it’s just strictly business,” she said.

Zavala has about 14,000 followers on both Instagram and Depop. While 90% of her sales come from Depop, her Instagram feed is livelier. She recently posted a photo of a red-and-black lace camisole, captioned “hOT GotH SumMer,” earning about 3,000 likes on Instagram and just 100 likes on Depop.

“you would actually kill in this,” an Instagram user commented on the post, tagging a friend.

“stawwwwppp I want it,” the friend replied.

Rhi Dancey, 28, a clothing designer in London, has almost shifted fully away from Depop to focus on her own online store. A stylist who was out of work at the beginning of the pandemic, she began her eponymous business on Depop in March 2020 and amassed 36,000 followers. She also grew the business on Instagram, where she has 50,000 followers.

But, by late 2020, she was turning away from Depop and establishing her own website. Although she still sells her mesh tops, dresses and lingerie on Depop, she now gets one order on Depop for every 10 orders on her website.

Dancey said she was also building her brand beyond Depop through in-person events, as pandemic restrictions have loosened. This month, she hosted a pop-up store in Berlin, collaborating with other artists and designers.

“I still have the Depop shop because I don’t see the harm in having it,” Dancey said. But “for me to maybe invest more energy into it again, there would need to be some rethinking of how to do things now that the world is changing.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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