Category Development Hugo Boss AG · Premium Footwear
Hugo Boss

Doubling a global icon’s
footwear business in three years.

The Hugo Boss footwear division was in active revenue decline. By correcting a pricing product-market-fit, building a replenishment basics business, and forging elite retail partnerships, I turned a failing category into a top-10 national brand.

Hugo Boss lifestyle photography
The Results
Revenue Growth
32.24%
3-Year CAGR
#4
Dress Shoe Ranking (National)
+16%
EBITDA Improvement
The Situation

A category killer hiding in plain sight.

Hugo Boss is a globally dominant fashion and lifestyle brand, primarily known for beautifully crafted suits, shirts, and ties. While tailored clothing was growing strongly, the footwear division was underperforming and in active revenue decline when I joined.

The footwear category lacked strategic focus — no basics business, no replenishment model, and a product roadmap completely disconnected from the business roadmap. The brand had the equity to win. It just didn’t have the strategy.

The Approach

Pricing first. Then build the empire.

The core flaw was a pricing product-market-fit: dress shoes at $250 MSRP against $795 suits, when European suit buyers expect a 4:1 ratio. Repositioning entry basics at $195 immediately unlocked customer traction.

With the pricing corrected, I built the full assortment: a replenishment dress shoe business (grew to 60% of revenue at 48% gross margin), a fashion sneaker and dress-casual collection, and a good-better-best pricing spine. I then forged elite partnerships with Nordstrom, Bloomingdale’s, Saks Fifth Avenue, and select Macy’s.

The Results

2× revenue. #4 dress shoe nationally.

2× revenue growth in three years from an actively declining base — 32.24% CAGR
Dress shoes grew to 60% of business at 48% gross margins through a replenishment basics model
#4 nationally in dress shoes — from no standing to category killer in Nordstrom, Bloomingdale’s, Saks, and Macy’s
+16% EBITDA improvement driven by pricing correction, premium basics, and elite retail placement
The Pricing Diagnosis

A single number was killing sell-through.

European luxury suit buyers expect a consistent 4:1 ratio between their suit and their footwear. At $795 for an entry Hugo Boss suit, that means shoes should anchor at approximately $199.

The division was priced at $250 — not an enormous difference in absolute terms, but a fundamental misalignment with the buying logic of the core customer. Fixing it unlocked the category.

The Pricing Math
$795
Hugo Boss Suit
Entry MSRP
÷4
$199
Expected Shoe
Price Point
vs.
$250
Actual Price
Being Charged
Repositioning to $195 MSRP immediately unlocked customer traction and surging sell-throughs across all accounts.
Anton Magnani
Anton Magnani
SVP, Shoes & Accessories
Hugo Boss AG
In Their Words
“We were able to implement ambitious growth plans in a tough marketplace and shift strategies to meet demanding new goals — always with a positive attitude and building bridges. Jeremiah is a serious and trustworthy person, which I like to work with.”
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