Cart
Close
No products in the cart.
Blog / The Authority: Our Fashion Editor At Large Dives Deep Into Our Rebrand & The Impact Advisor. Will Have On The Fashion Industry

The Authority: Our Fashion Editor At Large Dives Deep Into Our Rebrand & The Impact Advisor. Will Have On The Fashion Industry

Photography: Jaz BSnappin

Toxicity in the fashion industry is something I do not tolerate and try to change so that others feel more comfortable finding their footing in our field. But in doing so, and specifically with this situation – I couldn’t speak out the way I wanted. It was taking a toll on my already fragile mental state and in order to get back to the better version of myself, the happy version, I had to leave it alone. This was something that was supposed to be fun, and to help our team collectively and individually step into roles we wanted to have and grow as professionals. But instead, it was a complete shit show.

Drama wasn’t our only obstacle. Point blank, we were broke. Media is an expensive business and in the early stages of development everything came out of our own pockets because you guessed it – we weren’t generating a profit yet. So any costs you could think of (photographer fees, shipping materials for magazines, rental equipment fees, location rental fees, etc) all paid for out of our incomes (for the ones who gifted us services and bartered to developed partnerships – we appreciate you all more than we can express). When PinkMuse was established I just got into fashion education and was still trying to recoup the money I wasn’t making from the job I lost during COVID. On the outside looking in I was one of the fashion IT girls of St. Louis, but in all reality, I was struggling just like everyone else. So to be a struggling creative while trying to fund a business you so desperately believe in with no money is a catch-22, the worst one.

Drama plus being broke started up a cycle I know we all go through being in this industry, at least once. I found myself falling out of love with fashion and I wasn’t bouncing back to my “why” as quickly as I’ve done in the past. Quite frankly – I had contemplated just saying “fuck it all” and going to work from home for an insurance company, or some type of call center job. Less headache, less frustration, more sanity, and peace of mind. But in my heart of hearts – I knew I wouldn’t be happy and would most likely self-sabotage in order to make my way back to fashion (any job I’ve quit has most likely been because of that). I think the biggest obstacle we faced was wanting to be perfect presenting when no one asked us to. So when things didn’t go well my anxiety forced me to retreat and then try to people please to make up for the mistakes or just normal hiccups small businesses go thorough. It became a heavy mountain sitting on my shoulders that didn’t go away, and it seemed easier to just shelf the magazine and not have to deal with it all.

The decision was made to shelf the magazine shortly after our 6th issue with numerous printing hiccups and just an overall distaste of everything we’ve dealt with. I was disappointed in the direction our business was going, the lack of progress we’ve made, and our efforts didn’t feel authentic. I was over it. I had a pity party and had my moments of pouting, bitching, and feeling sad but decided this was going to be fixed. I knew this idea was needed, but didn’t know how to fix the shaky foundation of it all. Then one morning I had a call from someone who is now our content editor (with over 10 years in the game from a media and publishing perspective). I flat out told him “hey, these are the issues we’ve faced, this is where we are, but I still feel like there’s something there with this magazine idea but I just don’t know what it is”. He says “why don’t you turn it into a fashion business journal?”. Genius. That’s the only word to describe it, him, and how his mind works. It made perfect sense and all the lightbulbs in my head flickered on in the brightest watt possible. Probably a day went by and I had the foundation fixed, was ready to execute, and the answer was right in front of my face as it’s been an issue I’ve talked about time and time again, and stemmed from the root of PinkMuse and other businesses I started. That problem is in the current fashion, PR, & media landscape there is the lack of an authority brand that solely reports on news, business insights, trends, and relevant stories that matter to the Black fashion community, told by the Black fashion community. The purpose felt more intentional and that we were going to fill in this big gap for creatives just like us.

The last thing before we were ready to pull the trigger was finding a name, and if you know me – thinking of business names pisses me off. However, the word “Advisor” was in my head for about 6 months, and I had pocketed it because I simply didn’t know what I was supposed to do with it. I originally wanted to use the name or the term“Fashion Advisor” for a podcast channel that would host my personal podcast as well as other content from fashion creatives but now with this new idea, it rolled straight off the tongue and possessed the feeling and aura of authority that really represented the brand.

Throughout this journey of starting a magazine, failing at the original concept, and reattempting – I had to relearn my confidence and felt myself constantly reminding myself “You’re a visionary and you’re meant to do amazing things, don’t like anyone take that away from you” – and interchangeably rapping very loudly “Yeah Glo” on repeat (the whole song is a bop and a word). Shit is going to be hard, and what’s meant to be won’t be easy to start – but Advisor. is something our entire team knows will change how the industry sees and celebrates Black fashion creatives. I’m not sure if we’re the first, and we probably won’t be the last, but damn it we’re the authority – and we’re ready to show the industry just that.

Share this post
ak@advisormag.co

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Looking for the latest issue?
Subscribe.

I’m sharing exactly what’s going on with the basement design project
right now and what’s happening next.

Related Posts

Previous
Next
Subscribe