Normcore? So last year. String bikinis? Most definitely over.
Even interest in skinny jeans may be waning, if six billion fashion-related queries by Google users are any indication of this year’s most popular trends.
Instead,
consumers are Googling tulle skirts, midi skirts, palazzo pants and
jogger pants, according to the company, which plans to start issuing
fashion trend reports based on user searches twice a year. The new trend
aggregations are part of the company’s bid to become a bigger player in
e-commerce and fashion beyond its product search engine or advertising
platform.
In its inaugural report, Google distinguishes between “sustained growth” trends, like tulle skirts and jogger pants; flash-in-the-pan obsessions like emoji shirts and kale sweatshirts;
and “seasonal growth” trends, or styles that have come back stronger
every spring, like white jumpsuits. It makes similar distinctions among
sustained declines (peplum dresses), seasonal ones (skinny jeans) and
fads that are probably over and done (scarf vests).
Lisa
Green, who heads Google’s fashion and luxury team, said the company had
begun working with major retailers, including Calvin Klein, to help
them incorporate real-time Google search data into fashion planning and
forecasting. “Fast fashion” companies, for example, can take a trend
identified by Google and run with it, Ms. Green said.
“We’re
interested in being powerful digital consultants for our brands, not
just somebody they can talk to about what ads they can buy online,” she
said. “They can say, ‘Google has identified this as a trend, and we have
six weeks to get this out on the racks.’ ”
Google’s
foray into the fashion world is part of a scramble to define, inform
and tap into how people search online for everything they can buy, be it
clothes or jewelry, groceries or furniture.
The
search giant has long experimented with e-commerce through services
like Google Shopping, which lets shoppers compare prices among different
vendors, and the recently introduced Shopping Express, which lets users
make grocery purchases from local retail stores and receive them on the
same day or the next one. But the company’s e-commerce business trails
behind Amazon or Alibaba, the established go-to sites for a plethora of
products, and in fashion, Yoox and Net-a-Porter are about to merge and flex their muscles as a luxury retailing powerhouse.
For
Google, product search is increasingly important for its mainstay
business of selling ads alongside search results, including fashion
search results.
The
company is hardly the first to deploy data to predict what might be a
hot trend this season. IBM, for example, analyzes posts on blogs, social
media and news sites to gauge “social sentiment” in a variety of brand
categories, including fashion and retailing.
In one early experiment in 2013, IBM declared that “steampunk”
— an industrial aesthetic inspired by 19th-century Britain — was set to
“bubble up, and take hold, of the retail industry.” That prediction has
played out to a certain extent, judging from the popularity of
“industrial” or “salvaged” furniture, for example, or body trainers and
corsets.
Spotify,
the music-streaming service, also offers free analytics to artists to
help them gauge the popularity of their music or estimate how much they
can earn from new tunes.
“People
tend to make trend predictions based on a very limited number of
observations, and that’s very hit and miss,” said Trevor Davis, a
consumer products expert who led the project at IBM. “The ability to
detect trends very early on before they really become noticeable, and to
follow them, is invaluable.”
Just
how much more accurate or useful Google’s search data on fashion will
be has yet to be seen, Mr. Davis said. One obvious weakness is that
Google’s data encompasses all searches that appear related to apparel,
regardless of whether the person searching actually bought something, or
even intended to buy something. A search for “tulle skirt,”
conceivably, could signal a shopper looking for an item on sale or a
baffled fashion novice looking for a definition of it.
Asked
by Google to assess its data analysis, Ellen Sideri, founder of ESP
Trendlab, a forecasting agency, said that the data’s value lay in its
focus on what real people were interested in from across the country.
“The hardest thing to explain is that a trend doesn’t come from one place,” Ms. Sideri said. “Every trend is multifaceted.”
For
now, Google says it will share this database free to retailers and
trend-followers in the hopes of winning partners and clout in the
fashion arena. And Google promises not to match up its search data with
customer data from retailers to target ads at individuals.
Ms.
Green of Google said the sheer volume of its data — six billion data
points — meant any patterns Google detected were a significant indicator
of trend awareness and eventual purchasing behavior.
INstock,
a data tool from the fashion trend forecaster WGSN, takes another
approach to predicting trends. It analyzes fashion trends from pricing
and inventory data on more than 40 million products daily across 12,000
brands in the United States and a handful of other markets. Styles
picked up by a growing number of retailers signal a trend, and
out-of-stock items likely demonstrate high demand, while heavy discounts
raise a red flag.
Some
current trends identified by INstock overlap with Google’s. Jumpsuits
are in this season “as an elegant, yet edgy, alternative to the party
dress,” with inventory offered by retailers growing by 12 percent
between September and January compared with a year earlier, according to
Loree Lash-Valencia, a vice president at WGSN. On the other hand, her
data had not yet picked up substantial interest in tulle skirts.
While
predicting trends remains difficult, accurate forecasting has become
vitally important as fast fashion speeds up product cycles, Ms.
Lash-Valencia said. Misreading trends can result in millions of dollars
lost either from marking down inventory that does not sell, or not
stocking enough of styles that do, she said.
“In
our industry, there’s been a push to go faster and faster, and that’s
one reason everyone is having problems: No one has time to plan,” she
said. “Instinct’s no longer enough. Data can’t replace every merchant,
but there’s such accurate data available now — you really need to use
it.”
Ms.
Green said the Google search data helped to unearth fashion-forward hot
spots that had escaped the industry’s attention. “The industry might
subscribe to certain perspectives, but our search data allows us to see
what people really want to buy,” she said. “And our data shows that it’s
not just that every trend starts in New York or L.A. and everyone else
catches on.”
A
geographical breakdown of Google’s data shows, for example, a flash of
search activity for white jumpsuits in May 2013, and for palazzo pants
in August of that year, in Jackson, Miss. Both styles then spread
nationally. And “tulle skirt” surged in popularity as a search term in
October 2013 around Salt Lake City, Utah, before that trend also spiked
elsewhere.
While Google said it had no idea why that was the case, a little digging turned up possible clues.
Jason Bolin,
a stylist in Jackson, held a series of local fashion shows for the 2013
spring and summer seasons that featured both jumpsuits and palazzo
pants — and “everyone here went crazy for them afterwards,” according to
Monique Pruitt, who has run Fashion Week Mississippi, a series of fashion events that feature local and Southern designers, since 2012.
The
jumpsuit trend further took off in late 2014 when Solange Knowles, the
sister of the singer Beyoncé and a fashion icon in the South, was
spotted heading to her New Orleans wedding in a striking Stéphane Rolland pantsuit. They were also frequently seen on Kim Kardashian. (Ms. Kardashian also most likely spawned another rising trend identified by Google, the waist trainer.)
Mr. Bolin, who sells his styles online, said he was unsurprised by the Google data and lauded his region’s sense of style.
“Jackson’s
a very boutique-y place,” he said. “We even have a fashion week,” he
said. “It might be because there’s not a lot else to do. But we’re on
trend with the world, believe it or not.”
The
tulle skirt trend, for its part, most definitely came from a craze for
fairy-style skirts that has swept weddings and baby showers across Utah
in the past few years, said Sherene McClellan and Deanna Sorenson, who
run their Tulle Skirt Shop on the Etsy marketplace from the tiny town of Mount Pleasant, Utah.
The
sisters initially set up shop in September 2013 selling corsets and
other period costumes, but soon found that demand for their handmade
tulle skirts far exceeded that for other products. Last April, they
decided to focus on the skirts, and have sent out about 700 of them
since then, they said.
“Boy,
we do weddings and babies,” Ms. McClellan said. “I think the trend
comes from our girls going for sweet and romantic, rather than sultry
and sexy,” she said.
“We are such a tiny rural area, and the fact that we might be a trendsetter for anything cracks me up.”

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