M.M. LaFleur’s CEO on the brand’s evolution and relaunching a store fleet

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“We wanted to put ourselves in front of more people.” 

That’s what CEO Sarah LaFleur said of M.M. LaFleur’s opening in Union Station four years ago. It would turn out to be an incredibly ill-timed decision, with the concept opening inse a train station just weeks before the COVID-19 pandemic shattered physical retail plans across the globe. But the brand still wants to put itself in front of more people — and is doing so with a new store in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown neighborhood that opened May 8, as well as a few more on the horizon.

“We opened in Union Station like six weeks before the pandemic — and they were the six greatest weeks of that store,” LaFleur said in a recent interview reflecting on the period.

M.M. LaFleur ended up closing all of its stores in 2020, with a slow reopening process since then. Now, the retailer — known for its workwear — lists seven locations on its website, most of which opened this year, including the recently opened store in Georgetown and another that opened a few weeks later in Philadelphia. The Georgetown location, a few minutes walk from the main M Street drag, is across from Maman, a cafe M.M. LaFleur has partnered with before in New York. It joins another store in D.C., on K Street, which was the first to reopen and is more closely located to one of its key demographics — people who work in corporate offices.

“That location has done phenomenally for us. There are a lot of professional women who stop by during their lunch break or right after work, even in between meetings, so that location’s actually been very good for us,” LaFleur said of the K Street store. “We were like, ‘OK, D.C.’s grown so nicely, we could probably support another location. Where does it make most sense?’”

‘We don’t really have the luxury of locations not working’

Georgetown stood out as a spot where many of the brand’s customers in Maryland and Northwest D.C. like to shop, but M Street “didn’t feel quite right,” according to LaFleur. Georgetown’s main drag features a plethora of name-brand stores and up-and-coming retailers, including Glossier, Skims, Patagonia, Allbirds, Free People, Warby Parker and more.

A white store with yellow trim, with the words "M.M. LaFleur" painted in black.

M.M. LaFleur chose to open on Georgetown’s Wisconsin Avenue, instead of M Street, because it felt like a better fit for the brand.

Courtesy of M.M. LaFleur

 

“It’s heavily trafficked, but it didn’t actually necessarily feel like it was our traffic. There was a lot of tourist traffic, and obviously some Georgetown University traffic, but I was like, ‘This is not quite right.’ And then when we walked down Wisconsin, I was like, ‘Ah, this feels much better,’” LaFleur said about the road that runs perpendicular to M Street. “And, I mean, we’re still very much underdogs. It’s not like we’ve got hundreds of thousands of dollars to just drop on a new store opening. So we were also really opportunistic about what we could find.”

So far, the store has performed well. Katie Twidwell, vice president of sales and operations at M.M. LaFleur, told Retail Dive via email that the store saw double the expected sales in its first month in business. M.M. LaFleur is thoughtful about where it opens stores, for the most part only opening once there’s a certain level of e-commerce presence in a given city. And most of its stores are four-wall profitable, according to LaFleur.

“We don’t really have the luxury of locations not working,” LaFleur said. “L.A. we know, online, we don’t have as many customers as San Francisco. So even though I know L.A. is a big market and probably would be a good opportunity, we can’t just open a store there and consider it a loss leader … We can’t have it be a top-of-funnel strategy, like it has to return money to the business fairly quickly. So I guess that is the conservative approach here, but I think the one we feel comfortable with.”


“Warby Parker is a fabulous brand, but I don’t think of it as a brand-driven consumer goods company. I think at the end of the day, it’s quite utilitarian and fashion doesn’t have the same luxury.”

Sarah LaFleur

CEO of M.M. LaFleur


The brand is planning one more opening this year, in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, and likely “a few more” next year, according to LaFleur. But even long term, LaFleur envisions a U.S. footprint of only about 20 to 25 stores. That’s low compared to some other DTC brands, but that might not be a bad thing.

“A lot of DTC companies look at Warby Parker and they say, ‘They opened stores and that’s been really successful for them, so we should go and follow the same playbook.’ And like, Warby Parker is a fabulous brand, but I don’t think of it as a brand-driven consumer goods company. I think at the end of the day, it’s quite utilitarian and fashion doesn’t have the same luxury,” LaFleur said. “I just think the number of stores that you can open before you might see that kind of slower return is lower.”

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