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Mike Jeffries' difficult history with Abercrombie


Mike Jeffries' difficult history with Abercrombie

Millennials: You'll remember visiting Abercrombie & Fitch in the late '90s and early 2000s. Loud, blaring music, perfume so strong it was hard to think straight, and posters of half-naked men were all part of the experience – and the desire to feel “cool.”

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Mike Jeffries, the former CEO of Abercrombie, was behind this vision. And on Tuesday, he and his partner Matthew Smith were arrested in Florida in connection with sex trafficking charges, a federal indictment says. The duo, along with one of their associates, James Jacobson, are alleged to have run an international sex trafficking and prostitution ring from 2008 to 2015, allegedly paying for secret sex with potentially dozens of men, including 15 unnamed victims.

The official charges have been a long time coming. Last year, BBC released a documentary about Jeffries' shady practices. The BBC The investigation revealed that Jeffries and Smith allegedly used an intermediary to find men to participate in the sex events. Multiple attendees at the events reported that Jeffries and Smith allegedly engaged in sexual activity with or “instructed” approximately four men to have sex with each other at these events BBC. Jeffries' personal staff wore Abercrombie uniforms and supervised the activity, the allegations say. At the end of the event, staff presented participants with envelopes containing thousands of dollars in cash.

Large Abercrombie & Fitch sign with a man's bare torso

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The middleman “made it clear to me that if I didn't let him perform oral sex on me, I wouldn't meet with Abercrombie & Fitch or Mike Jeffries,” said David Bradberry, who met Jacobson in 2010, when he was 23 BBC. An agent posing as a model recruiter introduced Bradberry to Jacobson, who described himself as a gatekeeper to the “owners” of Abercrombie and Fitch, according to the newspaper BBC Investigation.

The federal indictment contained similar allegations and more.

Jeffries' shady past with Abercrombie

According to an interview with salonJeffries wanted to make the 130-year-old retailer the fashion brand for teenage clothing of the time, and he succeeded – although not without causing displeasure among many people. His interview sums up his marketing approach pretty well: it's all about “cool” people.

“The companies that are in trouble try to target everyone: young, old, fat, thin. But then you go totally vanilla,” Jeffries said salon. “You don’t alienate anyone, but you don’t excite anyone either.”

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By 2006, Abercrombie & Fitch's earnings had increased for 52 consecutive quarters, with annual profits of more than $2 billion. In addition, the company had opened hundreds of new brick-and-mortar stores and launched three new labels, including Hollister.

“But the marketing approach that made A&F a financial success also made it an HR and PR nightmare,” he says NPR. Abercrombie's marketing approach sparked a backlash from women through mock ads and a boycott call from the American Decency Association. Black, Latino and Asian American employees filed a class action lawsuit against the company in 2004, alleging that minority applicants were discouraged from applying.

In the early 2010s, Abercrombie began a financial decline due to age discrimination and lawsuits over hiring practices, as well as Jeffries' 2006 interview with Jeffries salon was re-circulated and went viral. In 2013, Jeffries was named the worst CEO of the year by TheStreet's Herb Greenberg. Additionally, CNBC's Jim Cramer named him to his “Wall of Shame.”

“Since its early IPO in 1996, Abercrombie has barely beaten the S&P 500. “It has underperformed the index dramatically over the last one, three and five years,” Greenberg wrote in 2013. “Last year in particular was an abomination, prompting activist firm Engaged Capital to call for its ouster.”

By 2014, same-store sales fell for 11 consecutive quarters and two of its subsidiary brands, Ruehl No.925 and Gilly Hicks, closed just a few years after launch. By this time, teenagers were also embracing Abercrombie's style and the mall era was coming to an end. And in 2016, Abercrombie was named the most hated retailer by the American Customer Satisfaction Index due to its hypersexualized marketing and controversy.

Abercrombie's second wind

But after distancing itself from Jeffries, Abercrombie is making a major comeback after posting its best first quarter results in the company's history this year. Abercrombie reported net sales of $1 billion, up 22% from 2023. Last year, annual sales were $5 billion.

Shoppers in Abercrombie & Fitch's store in 2023

YUKI IWAMURA/AFP-Getty Images

This was an epic comeback for the brand. CEO Fran Horowitz took the helm in 2017, revamping stores and inventory, expanding sizes and introducing clothing for different lifestyles.

“We have moved from a place of adaptation to a place of belonging,” Horowitz said in a 2022 speech at the fifth annual American Innovation Conference at Fordham University’s Gabelli School of Business.

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