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Chaos and Covid: How Aidan Bartlett turned Designer Wardrobe around

Author
九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Sun, 9 Nov 2025, 9:59am
Photo / NZ Herald
Photo / NZ Herald

Chaos and Covid: How Aidan Bartlett turned Designer Wardrobe around

Author
九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Sun, 9 Nov 2025, 9:59am

Designer Wardrobe is well-regarded by Kiwis as the ultimate place to sell off their high-end pieces for extra cash - but the platform鈥檚 undergone a significant journey over the years.  

CEO Aidan Bartlett told Kerre Woodham on the Bosses Unfiltered podcast that Designer Wardrobe began on Facebook, where friend and business partner Donielle Brooke had to sell her clothes after falling ill with thyroid cancer.

鈥淪he had a huge love for fashion, so when you haven鈥檛 got income, you need to start liquidating things. And so, the most value that she had was in her wardrobe. So she started a Facebook group called Designer Wardrobe and she started listing her things.鈥

Over a decade later, the Facebook group designed for people to buy and sell fashion expanded out into a proper brand with its own community. Bartlett saw there was clear demand out there for a fashion-based online service designed to benefit buyers and sellers alike.

鈥淲e were growing as a business, but being New Zealand and being quite small, especially being venture-backed, there鈥檚 an expectation to really grow. And being very New Zealand-centric, we weren鈥檛 seeing enough growth to just be a pure-play marketplace - we had to look at where else could we grow.鈥

Designer Wardrobe also allows customers to rent high-end clothes - and Bartlett saw that this service had worked for similar platforms overseas. He revealed to Kerre that checking out other markets helped him figure out the next steps for the business. Designer Wardrobe鈥檚 investors were also interested in the rental idea, as it made good financial sense.

鈥淓ssentially, you could buy a dress for retail or even wholesale - by the time you鈥檝e rented it out six times, it had paid itself off. The economics made a lot of sense. We were typically renting out a dress between 12 and 20 times, so the vast majority of dresses were paying themselves off relatively quickly.鈥

The physical stores were a logical next step, with the first opening in Auckland鈥檚 Grafton in 2017. Customers could try on their clothes and have an outfit ready for an event without having to worry about deliveries and couriers. The famous Newmarket flagship store opened a few years after that in early 2020, which marked a difficult period for Designer Wardrobe.

鈥淭here were these whispers of lockdowns, we thought that was just propaganda, almost, at the time. And then school balls were also coming up, which is a super important part of our business at the time and everybody was talking about how school balls might be cancelled. We just said - no way. No way are schools going to allow the flagship event of the year to be closed down. It was really scary, just so many unknowns.鈥

The Covid-19 pandemic was difficult for many businesses, but Bartlett was determined to make it through the rough patch and make Designer Wardrobe work through the lockdowns and restrictions. People still had free time to go through their clothes and list things, but it was still a rocky experience, as the team had to work around unexpected cancellations brought about by more lockdowns. And Bartlett revealed the experience had taken its toll.

鈥淲e did end up having to make that really tough call to essentially turn the stores off. That was one of the hardest decisions we鈥檇 ever made - at that time, we just couldn鈥檛 see any consistency in how these lockdowns were folding out, so we decided to shut the stores down鈥.we essentially transferred our energy from stores and just made online as good as it can be.鈥

Designer Wardrobe鈥檚 had some tough years with the pandemic and the resulting economic downturn, but Bartlett revealed things have been looking up since the brand expanded across the Tasman and started utilising AI - and he鈥檚 confirmed there鈥檚 more milestones to come.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a lot of room to grow in New Zealand. The resale fashion category in New Zealand is worth roughly $700 (million) to a billion dollars a year and it鈥檚 still growing 15 percent roughly - and it鈥檚 the same in Australia, it鈥檚 the same as what you鈥檙e seeing globally. So we don鈥檛 feel like we鈥檝e hit the ceiling in New Zealand at all, we think there鈥檚 a lot of room to grow here. And also Australia, we鈥檙e seeing some green sprouts too. And that鈥檚 something we鈥檒l continue to nurture as well.鈥 

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