logo
episode-header-image
Sep 19
54m 31s

Glenn Martens: ‘Social Media Has Turned ...

THE BUSINESS OF FASHION
About this episode

Belgian designer Glenn Martens grew up in Bruges, studied in Antwerp and cut his teeth in Paris, where lean years taught him every role from pattern cutting to PR. At Y/Project, he turned constraints into modular, shape-shifting design. At Diesel, he reset the brand around its founding spirit of joy, cheekiness and denim, replacing muddled codes with a clear manifesto and democratic shows that speak to a global community. Now balancing Diesel with Maison Margiela, Martens argues that fashion should make people happy while resisting the dopamine churn of instant judgement.


“We are just consuming visuals and we don't really have the time to go deep into the clothes, the storytelling, the construction, where it comes from. It just needs to be like a hit. It gets a bit more superficial,” he shares with Imran Amed, BoF founder and CEO. “In 2025, a creative director has to be a socialite, has to be the king of social media and  there's so many more things that all my colleagues and I have to do outside of that runway. The beauty of fashion is it's a process and it's a build-up and it’s not happening in one show – this is happening in three, four, five shows. So we need to respect that and celebrate that.”


This week on The BoF Podcast, Amed sits down with Martens to talk about learning every job in the studio, rebuilding Diesel around its founding values, as well as the pressure and possibility of this high-stakes season.


Key Insights: 

  • Martens argues that the industry’s chase for quick hits has flattened nuance, yet he is determined to hold the line on depth and craft. “There is definitely a big part of me that loves to deep-dive into storytelling and construction, that likes to challenge construction and try to find new ways to create beauty and new ways to create clothes. I am very easily bored; I need to challenge myself. I love experimentation and that makes me happy.”


  • At Diesel, Martens began by reconnecting the house to its core DNA. “My biggest thing I did was resetting the whole thing and reminding everybody why Diesel was big in the first place. And I think that is something that is really important to never forget, that the success of a brand is the core reason why the brand is there and we should always connect to that and stay close to that.” He underscores the scale and breadth of the audience while keeping a unified voice. “We are so diverse in our markets, so we are basically talking to everybody. Every single person in the world could, in theory, be a Diesel person, but we do that with one message and with one collection.”


  • Martens is now continuing to turn the runway into a democratic platform that includes the wider community, not just the front row. “I think a fashion show for us is very important because it accelerates the awareness of the brand and the direction you want to go. [Diesel] is talking about democracy. It is at heart a lifestyle brand.” For Diesel’s Spring/Summer 2026 show next week, Martens is pushing shows into public space to meet people where they are. “The launch of that collection will be in the streets of Milan. It is going to be a three-and-a-half-hour egg hunt, showing the whole diversity of the town, and everybody can participate.”

 

Additional Resources:



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Up next
Nov 21
Prada Group CEO Andrea Guerra on Fixing the Luxury Business Model
<p>Over the last two years, demand for luxury fashion has softened as aspirational shoppers have pulled back and consumer fatigue has crept in. Yet, Prada Group has continued to grow, by prioritising brand DNA, employing disciplined curation and creating strong connections to&nbs ... Show More
25m 44s
Nov 19
Can Fashion Still Meet Its Climate Promises?
<p>As COP30 gets underway in Belém, a port city on the edge of the Brazilian rainforest, the mood is sober. A decade after the Paris Agreement was adopted internationally to limit global warming, many of the world’s largest fashion companies have fallen short on emissions cuts — ... Show More
30m 26s
Nov 14
Amber Valletta: ‘Do What You Love. Serve a Higher Purpose.’
<p>Amber Valletta grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spending time on her grandparents’ farm. Her childhood was defined by open fields, a freshwater creek and a simple rule from her mother: go outside and use your imagination.</p><br><p>At 15, a local modelling class set her on an unexp ... Show More
42m 22s
Recommended Episodes
Aug 2021
Inclusive, Purpose-Driven - the Future of Fashion According to Kenyan Designer Anyango Mpinga
<p>Everyone's talking about climate action and social change - but Fashion is still carrying on like it's 1999. The velvet rope! Exclusivity! Snobbery and barriers to entry that lock many young designers with new ideas, out. <strong>Fashion weeks </strong>alone are massive carbon ... Show More
39m 26s
May 2025
How Fashion Brands Build Community in 2025
As inflation bites and politics polarise, the fashion industry in 2025 is facing unprecedented pressure to hold onto its customers. Brands are looking to community as a deeper and more emotional form of engagement. But building true community takes more than buzzwords. In this ep ... Show More
22m 49s
Sep 29
Julie Wainwright: Getting Real Real About Building a Billion-Dollar Business
Julie Wainwright is the visionary founder and past CEO of The RealReal, the luxury resale giant that disrupted the fashion industry and redefined what it means to build a billion-dollar brand. In her new book, Time to Get Real: How I Built a Billion Dollar Business that Rocked th ... Show More
1h 16m
Dec 2020
Degendering Fashion - Alok Vaid-Menon
<p>Why does so much fashion still cling to strict men's and womenswear codes? Is the industry finally ready to shake off tired old binaries and embrace the trans and gender-nonconforming community? Or is Harry Styles' <em>Vogue</em> cover about as far as it goes?</p><p><strong>Fo ... Show More
46m 32s
Aug 14
She Quit Her Coveted Role at ELLE to Launch a Fashion Startup No One Thought Would Work
Kate Davidson Hudson was supposed to climb the career ladder every fashion girl dreamed of. Instead, she walked away and built a tech company from scratch. This week on SUPERWOMEN, I sit down with the founder and CEO of a shoppable AI closet platform, Vêtir, and a longtime force ... Show More
38m 25s
Mar 2020
Fashion Revolution's Carry Somers - What's in My Clothes?
<p>For 7 years, <strong>Fashion Revolution </strong>has been asking, #whomademyclothes? on a quest for greater transparency in fashion supply chains.</p><p>Now, they're asking <a href="https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/whatsinmyclothes/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_bl ... Show More
42m 35s
Dec 2024
Building a Sustainable Brand Through Media Success with Desiree Gaitan-Buchanan of Poplinen
🔗 Enroll in the Fashion Wholesale Masterclass: https://www.makegoodfashion.com/wholesalesuccessFind the free resources mentioned on this episode here----> https://www.makegoodfashion.com/free-fashion-resourcesToday, I’m excited to sit down with Desiree Gaitan-Buchanan, the found ... Show More
53m 13s
Aug 22
6 Marketing Insights from Fashion to B2B Brands with Kevin Branscum, Senior Director of Brand Marketing at Typeform | Ep. 342
What do Michael Kors, Blue Nile, and Typeform have in common? More than you’d think. Daniel’s OUT, Tamara’s IN. She’s joined by Kevin Branscum, a brand leader who’s worked across fashion, luxury, and B2B SaaS. Together, they explore why the best brands aren’t built on features or ... Show More
36m 1s
Jan 2025
Becoming Stylish Instead Of Trendy In 2025
<p>We’re chatting the 2025 fashion trends taking over, cool girl brands you need in your wardrobe and how to find your personal style with content creator, fashion lecturer &amp; former Vogue Digital Editor Joely Malcolm. We also talk the difference between trends &amp; micro tre ... Show More
32m 54s