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Are Viral Microtrends Losing Their Cool? | The Debrief

From ‘Tomato Girl’ to ‘Quiet Luxury,’ microtrends once swept social media and helped shape retail strategies but Gen-Z consumers are now craving more substantial and lasting styles.
Viral microtrends
(BoF Team)
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Background:

Viral microtrends, the fleeting aesthetics popularised on platforms like TikTok, have defined recent fashion moments for young consumers. From the playful “Cottagecore” to the fleeting “Mob Wife”, these trends have rapidly cycled through social media feeds and retail shelves. Post-pandemic experimentation drove this cycle, however, the once-accelerating churn of microtrends is beginning to slow, as Gen-Z shoppers seek authenticity, durability and individuality in their fashion choices.

On this episode of The Debrief, senior editorial associate Joan Kennedy joins senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young to talk about what’s behind the slowdown in microtrends and what this shift means for retailers and brands.

Key Insights:

  • Microtrends gained momentum post-pandemic when young consumers had extra savings, more leisure time, and a desire to explore various identities through fashion. However, the novelty and playful experimentation eventually led to consumer fatigue. Kennedy explains, “Young shoppers are really looking to grasp onto something solid right now,” noting an increased awareness that many trends felt “goofy” or even “fake.” She adds, “people are talking more than ever about just this viral churn and how wasteful it is.”
  • Young consumers increasingly align their fashion choices with specific cultural events, creating marketing opportunities for retailers. “This whole sense of ‘what I am doing is how I’m dressing’ has become very popular among young shoppers,” Kennedy explains, highlighting opportunities around events like the Barbie movie and Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter tour.
  • Retailers can better predict long-lasting trends by monitoring multi-season appeal and connections beyond social media. Kennedy cites Revolve’s chief merchandising officer, Divya Mathur, who recommends looking for trends that “span multiple seasons” and have relevance across social media, runway, and pop culture. Kennedy advises retailers to “lean into more evergreen, identity-based marketing,” and rethink “what virality looks like” as consumer engagement evolves. “With a lot of these trends, something goes viral and a brand gets a tonne of sales. But let’s take a step back as that might shift and brands have to be ready for that.”

Additional Resources:

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