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Michael Preysman, who has spent the last year working on an electrolyte brand called Drink Magna, steps back into the world of fashion to address what happened in his own words, and reveal what he plans to do about it.
When it was announced that ultra-fast-fashion brand Shein had acquired Everlane, the clothing company I founded in 2011, I quickly realized that the most viral thing I've ever done was something I didn’t even do.
When I started Everlane in 2011, I was 25 years old and had the fortune of growing it to a significant size with an amazing group of people. We built something really meaningful, deeply rooted in an idea which challenged companies that had zero transparency and zero understanding of where their products were made. They make the product mostly in China, ship it to Italy, do the final steps in Italy, and say “Made in Italy.” It was completely dishonest.
I grew up on the West Coast in Northern California, which is the epitome of democratization, and I felt we could use the internet to bring that level of democratization to the most basic product: a white t-shirt. It struck a chord, and we were able to move from the t-shirt into a full set of beautiful merchandise. It was always about selling quality and the simplicity of that, while focusing on the story of sustainability and transparency. Around 2015, we had carried ourselves pretty far as a novel concept, and then we invested in design, bringing on our first true creative director. For those five years, the brand catapulted.
During the pandemic, though, shifts in the market and attitudes toward sustainability changed the business. We saw it in the data. Everlane was about sustainability, but it was also about transparency as a whole, and I think people still cared about that. But Everlane's challenge was a lack of product-market fit. By 2021 I knew it was time to transition to a new CEO while I remained on the board. But after Andrea O’Donnell, who was CEO from 2021-2024, left, my involvement didn’t make as much of an impact and I decided it was the right time to step away entirely. At that time, I didn’t see the company heading in a way that reflected the original vision. It’s like parents with their children; sometimes you can’t tell them what to do.
On May 22, when the Shein deal finalized it was a shock; I found out 20 minutes before. I knew nothing about it, and I felt very disappointed. The idea that this would happen wasn’t something I ever imagined. They’re the opposite of what I wanted. It’s clearly ironic, and in some ways, it’s sort of like life is stranger than fiction. I felt let down by Everlane, but also like I let people down. I knew that what we built at Everlane came from a lot of heart and soul and created a movement. And yet at the same time, it felt like that movement had sort of dissipated in its own way. But then, seeing the kind of visceral [negative] reactions people had to this news gives some hope that many people still care. I realize Everlane gave people the idea that companies could do better. We weren’t perfect, and there were times when we definitely made mistakes, but that’s part of being human.
Today, the customer is looking for that hope again. The world has changed, and we’re in a period where capitalism is in full force. There isn’t quite the balance between capitalism and equity, and between capitalism and creativity.
I really believe it’s possible to be transparent, sustainable, and run a good business. The part about Everlane that wasn’t working was not the sustainability part. It was that the product wasn’t landing or resonating in the way that it needed to and was not marketed in the way that it needed to be. And that’s that.
Now, it’s a little strange to see that it’s forever gone away into a different world. It’s one thing when it’s run by investors and a new management team, but it’s another when it’s owned by somebody else entirely. Over the weekend, after I let the news marinate, I sat there, I meditated, and I thought, ‘You know, what would be radical?’ What if we try to find a new way to do something like this again, but not as a company in the same way, but perhaps more of an experiment, a project, and see what comes of it.
So after learning this news, I decided to start over with stillradical.com, launching today. We’re bringing back the vision of Everlane but with a new take that meets the moment. The consumer today still wants honesty.
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