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When the lights finally dimmed at the 2025 Victorias Secret Fashion Show last night, the first thing guests saw was a gold light emanating from backstage. Model Jasmine Tookes, 9 months pregnant, opened the show in a gold macrame dress with drop pearls and a pearl and crystal wing in the shape of a clam shell. Art buffs might notice that the shell is a callback to Sandro Boticellis renaissance painting Birth of Venus, symbolizing sensuality, divine beauty, rebirth, and new beginnings. The cultural reference is a more elevated and considered nod to womanhood than the shows previous themes which have included Santas Helpers or delicious sweets. The lookand the showcertainly marked a new moment for Victorias Secret. And that was the intention of CEO Hillary Super, who said so in a note left at each seat. The show marked a new era of sexy, she wrote. Not one defined by a single look or mood, but by something deeper: the feeling of being truly comfortable and confident in your own skin. Victorias Secret is in dire need of a reset, and its new executive creative director Adam Selman delivered in this first time producing the mega-show. Selman, who joined Victorias Secret in April following three years as chief design officer at Rihannas rival lingerie brand Savage x Fenty, as well as running his own self-named label and Adam Selman Sport (ASS), If you cant tell by his sport label, Selman is not especially self-serious, but he is astute and forward-thinking, and his design and styling sensibilities deftly balance sophistication and fun. (The 2012 VS fashion show look and crystal naked dress he designed for Rihanna at the 2014 CFDA awards are ones for the history books.) Selmans goal was to bring capital-F fashion back to the Victorias Secret Fashion show, and in the process give the Victorias Secret brand a cultural revamp. In the week leading up to the show, he told me that the pressure was setting in. I’ve realized in the past few days that I’m the one person who oversees the whole thing. He pulled it off. The 2025 Victorias Secret show was so well-executed it may have outpaced the current authority of the actual brand and product. But Selman still has his work cut out for him. Everyone knows Victorias Secret. Following years of design and cultural irrelevance, not to mention self-inflicted business challenges including a toxic work culture and entrenched misogyny, and hundreds of store closures over the past five years, its been a long time since tastemakers have cared. Rihanna performs at Victoria’s Secret’s 2012 runway show. [Photo: Fairchild Archive/Penske Media/Getty Images] A new era for an old mall brand Selman isnt the only one tasked with trying. Victorias Secret has undergone nearly complete creative and brand marketing leadership changes since last years show. Super, who joined from Savage x Fenty just before the show last year, is still in. But Sarah Sylvester, executive vice president of brand marketing for Victorias Secret, who we spoke to about this event last year, is out. Earlier this year, the company made a slew of new exec-level appointments, mostly women: Anne Stephenson, its chief merchandising officer, as president; Ali Dillon, former president of Alex Mill as president of Pink, Amy Kocourek as president of beauty (formerly chief merchandising officer at Kendra Scott), and Selman as ECD in April. In May, the company also hired Elizabeth Press as its CMO, who formerly held the role at Anthropologie. Rihanna at the 2014 CFDA fashion awards. [Photo: Jamie McCarthy/WireImageGetty Images] These hires, and the companys renewed focus on its fashion show, are in service of what Victorias Secret calls its new path to potential growth strategy. It wants to build on its 4% Q2 comparable sales growth, reestablish Victorias Secret as an authority in bras, rebuild Pink as a distinct brand, and grow its beauty business. Brand awareness is incredibly high for this brand, Preis tells me about the objective of the fashion show. It’s more about brand relevance and brand consideration for the audience that doesn’t currently shop with us. (The company will also closely track show metrics like site visits, impressions, and social engagement, Preis says.) Candice Swanepoel, Adriana Lima, Joan Smalls, Bella Hadid, Angel Reese, Jasmine Tookes, Alex Consani, Gigi Hadid, Yasmin Wijnaldum, Alessandra Ambrosio at the 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show held at Steiner Studios on October 15, 2025 in New York, New York. [Photo: Gibert Flores/Variety/Getty Images] A FASHION FANTASY WORLD Selmans overall vision for the show was to elevate it by applying the creative direction one might have as the head of a fashion maison, not a languishing mall brand. For this years show, he crafted the narrative around an overall story arc (the theme is day to night), rather than the disparate themed sections that anchored previous shows. The show’s so big, the expectations are big, the personalities within it’s big, so I wanted to come up with a simple idea, says Selman. When I came into the brand, one of the first things I kept hearing on repeat was that Victoria’s Secret is unique in that we are the first thing she puts on and the last thing she takes off and I love that sort of sentiment. So I took that idea and I’m doing the context of day to night with the show. Gigi Hadid [Photo: Taylor Hill/WireImage/Getty Images] The golden first chapter that focused on the brands nudes and was opened by a radiant Tookes, was followed by a hot peony pink Bombshell, chapter. But you wouldnt know it without looking at the run of show. A circular stage emerged down the runway and showgirls with pink feather fans danced over from the aisle. Then, model Gigi Hadid emerged in an oversized peony opera coat, quickly followed by Irina Shank in a crystal fan headpiece and Paloma Elsesser in pink peony petal wings. The pre-show comments, at least on Victorias Secrets owned channels, called for long-standing brand icons: big hair, more glitter, and the return of models like Adriana Lima. (People want a little fantasy and theres no better brand to do that, says Preis.) This section brought all that, but not in a way youd expect. It was a sparkling glamorous, Ziegfeld-fantasy-inspired morning. Adriana Lima [Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images/Victoria’s Secret] That’s our first collection, or the first section of the show, and how that could come to life in a more fashion forward, thoughtful way? he asks. The show chapters arc toward dusk and bring in other moods and brand codes. The Pink halftime show was an exception and a weak chapter overall; with jean jackets, layered bikinis and black sweatpants that didnt communicate a new point of view. Hot pursuit opened with a grainy black and red interstitial mimicking old movie reviews and washed the runway in scarlet red, along with a slew of provocatively sexy custom designs, including a custom crystal backless minidress and g-string worn by model Amelia Gray and custom chrome angel wings worn by model Alex Consani. Magic hour followed, and brought outfits in gradient pinks, mandarins, and lilacs; followed by a black lace and crystal sparke in “black tie. Each chapter, by the way, links up with a fragrancea play for its emerging beauty lines [Photo: Victorias Secret] Renewed brand heritage Like many resurgent brands, the strategy is to shed what isnt working and leverage the cultural cachet of the brand heritage that does work. The trick is to reinterpret it in a new way that can reestablish contemporary relevance in the current market. The term fashion-forward came up again and again as a way this show would be new and more relevant. People complained last year that the garments looked cheap; the look of the clothes and styling were a night and day difference this year. If you know my work, it’s all centered around playfulness and color and expression, so that’s a big theme, he says. Referencing the shows of high-end designer brands, Selman says he sought to elevate the experience and integrate codes that stem from the brands history throughout each chapter of the show, and nod to whats happening in culture more broadly. I’m trying to think about the world that we’re building beyond just the show here, he says. One such example: Selman says hes showing how Victorias Secret can tap into current fashion trends through lingerie styling in the show; a fantasy with real-world applications. Naked dressing is so in right now, and showing our customer how to wear the product in a maybe a more fashion-forward way that resonates with fashion and culture outside of just the show is another focus. [Screenshots: Victoria’s Secret/TikTok] With a run time of about 40 minutes (about four times longer than a maison show), 72 looks, and 45 million of digital viewers, he brought the spectacle. Along wih a team of experts, Selman directed promo, motion design, event production, set design, model casting, curated front row seating, cast musical guests, and the looks themselves, down to the giant crystal earrings. Joan Smalls [Photo: Gilbert Flores/Variety/Getty Images] Selman worked with artisans in Paris and Italy to create the jeweled wings model wear on stage; its own lofty design challenge. Selman crafted remarkable reinterpretations of wings as headpieces, too, like the golden headpiece Joan Smalls wore in the opener, gracing her head like a dainty set of Apollo’s wings, or Precious Lees peony petal and crystal headpiece or Anok Yais stunning pink fringe and pearl headpiece in the bombshell segment. Today more than ever before, retail, if it’s going to be successful, there has to be an entertainment factor, says Preis. Victoria’s Secret created this incredible experience, right? says Selman. It is the biggest fashion show in the world and so there’s so much rich history and so much joy around it too. We have ravenous fans around those events, so I think it’s about owning it and really leaning into what we’re good at. Fans seem to want the fun and the spectacle of it all. Angel Reese [Photo: Victorias Secret] Pleasure, but not to please everyone The Victorias Secret show is a glitter bomb of frothy pleasure, but its not out to please everyone. It’s fun when it’s real, says Selman. Everything feels so phony right now. The more real that you can give peoplethat’s when things will really come to life. I think we can’t be everything to everyone. Precious Lee [Photo: Taylor Hill/WireImage/Getty Images] Selman says his show is for anyone who wants to be a part of itbut its ok if thats not you. I want everyone to see themselves in this brand. I want everyone to see themselves in the show and the power that we can provide; the power that lingerie can provide. If you see yourself in it, we welcome you. And if you don’t see yourself in it, that’s cool too. We still welcome you. Iris Law [Photo: Taylor Hill/WireImage/Getty Images] Brands rarely can make everyone their customer; in fact, its a fools errand to tryas long as your core audience buys in. The G-string-thin fine line for Victorias Secret however, is whether it can truly capture whats historically sellable about the heritage brandthe glitz, glamour, and sex appealwhile shedding the historically bad associations: getting women to buy into sex thats embodied through the male gaze and packaged us up as campy Christmas gifts, candy, or calendar girls. I want to look hot, and for me personally, that and taste are not mutually exclusive qualities. What does sexy mean in the future? asks Preis. There’s not just one definition. It’s really how it makes one feel and makes one feel good about themselves. We can and we should own that position. We already are known for that, and that’s something that we should continue on with.
Category:
E-Commerce
When my teenage son developed mysterious symptoms, I followed the same path anyone else would: I put his health in the hands of a team of medical professionals. Multiple myeloma is a rare blood cancer. It is so uncommon in 17-year-olds that it doesnt appear on diagnostic checklists. Despite having no clear starting point to work from, my sons doctors worked their way to an accurate diagnosis through a process of trial and error, bouncing ideas off each other and testing and discarding hypotheses until they could tell us what was wrong. The process felt inefficient and uncertain at a time when I wanted fast answers and cast-iron guarantees. But this messy and distinctively human approach saved my sons life. AI promises to improve processes like this, replacing the fallible and unpredictable human mind with the analytic power of trained and tested algorithms. As someone who helps organizations implement AI technology, I know just how much potential it has to make processes and workflows more efficient. But before we start replacing human judgment at scale, we need to think carefully about the hidden costs that can come with productivity gains. A recent study in The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology presented some sobering findings for AI maximalists. Physicians who spent several months working with AI support in diagnostic roles showed a significant decline in unassisted performance when the technology was withdrawn. This kind of deskilling effect isnt unique to either medicine or AI. We have known for years that extensive GPS use leads to a decline in spatial memory and that easy access to information reduces our ability to recall facts (the so-called Google effect). {"blockType":"mv-promo-block","data":{"imageDesktopUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/creator-faisalhoque.png","imageMobileUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/faisal-hoque.png","eyebrow":"","headline":"Ready to thrive at the intersection of business, technology, and humanity?","dek":"Faisal Hoques books, podcast, and his companies give leaders the frameworks and platforms to align purpose, people, process, and techturning disruption into meaningful, lasting progress.","ctaText":"Learn More","ctaUrl":"https:\/\/faisalhoque.com","theme":{"bg":"#02263c","text":"#ffffff","eyebrow":"#9aa2aa","buttonBg":"#ffffff","buttonText":"#000000"},"imageDesktopId":91420512,"imageMobileId":91420514}} Most people are willing to accept these cognitive losses in exchange for convenience. And that is a trade-off that individuals need to decide for themselves. But when it comes to organizations and institutions, things are more complex. The first concerns that leap to mind are worries about losing access to our AI tools after outsourcing our skills to them. What if the system crashes or performance drops off? While this is a real problem, it is nothing new. We can design backup solutions where necessary, just as we always have with technology. But there is another set of problems that cannot be resolved simply by putting guardrails in place. Human skill sets are important not just because they let us act on those skills, but also because they let managers and decision-makers understand and supervise what is happening on the frontlines. If physicians lose their diagnostic chops, who will validate or audit the output of the algorithms? Who will notice that the edge casesthe patients with statistically implausible diseasesare not being diagnosed correctly? And, perhaps most importantly, who will take responsibility for the algorithmic judgments, whether they are right or wrong? For most organizations, maintaining public trust is a core part of their relationship with society. Just as we wont eat in a restaurant if we dont trust the kitchen to deliver safe food, so we avoid products and services that we believe may harm us. Without accountability, trust is impossible. As an IBM training manual put it nearly 50 years ago: A computer can never be held accountable, therefore a computer must never make a management decision. The same principle holds true for AI. Without a clear accountability trail that leads to a human decision-maker, it becomes impossible to hold anyone responsible for any harms that arise from the AIs behavior. And this accountability deficit can destroy the legitimacy of an institution. We can see these dynamics at work in the U.K.s 2020 exam grading debacle. At the height of the COVID pandemic, with normal exams cancelled, the U.K. government used an algorithm to assign grades. The algorithm imported biases and systematically favored children from wealthy backgrounds. But even if it had worked perfectly, something critical would still have been missing: institutions that can justify their decisions to those affected by them. Nobody will be satisfied by an algorithmic explanation for a result that might have lifelong effects. Ultimately, the government reversed course, replacing the AI judgment with assessments made by each students teachers. What this means for your organization The challenge isnt whether to use AIits how to implement it without creating dangerous dependencies. Here are specific actions leaders, managers, and teams can take: Implement AI rotation schedules: Ensure that teams rotate periodically from AI-assisted work to manual work to maintain core competencies. Create skill preservation protocols: Document which human capabilities are mission-critical and cannot be outsourced. Establish accountability chains: Specify which decisions require human sign-off. Institute analog days: Schedule regular sessions where teams solve problems without AI tools. Design edge case challenges: Create exercises focusing on unusual scenarios AI might miss. Maintain decision logs: Create institutional memory of the value and role of human judgment by documenting when and why you override AI recommendations. Practice explanation exercises: Regularly require team members to explain AI outputs in plain languageIf they cant explain it, they shouldnt rely on it. Rotate expertise roles: Ensure multiple people can perform critical tasks without AI support, preventing single points of failure. Warning signs your organization is too AI-dependent Watch for these red flags that indicate dangerous levels of depndency: Teams cant explain AI recommendations Acceptance of AI results without validation has become the norm Staff miss errors or outliers that the AI overlooks Employees express anxiety about performing tasks without AI assistance Simple decisions that once took seconds now require AI consultation If you spot any of these signs, you need to intervene to restore human capability. The path forward My sons cancer was successfully diagnosed thanks to structured redundancy in his care team. Multiple specialists approached the same problem through different lenses. The bone specialist saw what the blood specialist missed. The resident asked the naive question that made the senior doctor reconsider. This kind of overlap can look like inefficiency at times, but if we dont work to retain it, we lose something vital. We should not shy away from the advantages AI can offer when it comes to analytical speed and pattern-recognition. But at the same time, it is essential that we shield the decision-making process from being overwritten by a single algorithmic voice. We must keep humans in the loop both because they can look beyond statistical likelihood and because they can be held accountable for their final decisions. Yes, maintaining human capabilities alongside AI will be expensive. Training tracks that preserve human skills, AI-off drills, and rigorous human audits all cost money. But they preserve the institutional muscle memory that holds the whole edifice up. The cost of losing the human perspective is one we cannot afford to bear. {"blockType":"mv-promo-block","data":{"imageDesktopUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/creator-faisalhoque.png","imageMobileUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/faisal-hoque.png","eyebrow":"","headline":"Ready to thrive at the intersection of business, technology, and humanity?","dek":"Faisal Hoques books, podcast, and his companies give leaders the frameworks and platforms to align purpose, people, process, and techturning disruption into meaningful, lasting progress.","ctaText":"Learn More","ctaUrl":"https:\/\/faisalhoque.com","theme":{"bg":"#02263c","text":"#ffffff","eyebrow":"#9aa2aa","buttonBg":"#ffffff","buttonText":"#000000"},"imageDesktopId":91420512,"imageMobileId":91420514}}
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E-Commerce
During a recent New York Fashion Week, a wood-paneled boutique popped up in SoHo next to Louis Vuitton and Bottega Veneta. On the racks were tailored, wide-leg jeans and simple black Henley dresses that signaled understated elegance. But unlike those of neighboring boutiques, the clothes werent from a storied European maison de couture. They were some of the newest collections from Scoop and Free Assembly, two brands led by Brandon Maxwell, creative director at the House of Walmart. The pop-upwhich featured items priced between $8 and $75was part of the Bentonville, Arkansasbased retailers strategy to get its products in front of urban shoppers who might not be familiar with its growing array of fashion-forward budget brands. The SoHo stint was just one of the ways chief merchant Latriece Watkins a 25-year veteran of the company who joined the C-suite in 2023is positioning Walmart to appeal to a broader spectrum of shoppers. Our goal is to refresh and elevate all of our fashion brands, Watkins says. Were only 10% of the way there. For six decades, Walmart has been the go-to retailer for rural, lower-income Americans. But at a time of inflation and economic uncertainty, Americans of all backgrounds are more budget conscious. Prices have gone up for three years, says Mickey Chadha, a retail analyst at Moodys. Even the wealthy are looking to save money, and theyre gravitating toward Walmart. This presents the retailer with the opportunity to win over more affluent consumers, snagging them from competitors like Target and Amazon. Watkins has been introducing higher-end brands, like Apple, Sonos, and Nikes Air Jordan, both into stores and on Walmart.com. Her team is also developing and refreshing private labels that look premium but are inexpensive, with a focus on growth areas, such as apparel. In addition to working with Maxwell to reimagine the Scoop and Free Assembly lines, Walmart relaunched No Boundaries last year. The 30-year-old fashion brand, which generates $2 billion a year, has been updated to appeal to the tastes of Gen Z, with prices under $15. This July, the company unveiled Weekend Academy, a new trendy label for tweens. Watkins is also targeting Walmarts grocery business, which makes up 60% of its sales. Last April, the company launched Bettergoods, its first new private-label food brand in two decades; the line of 400 attractively packaged globally inspired food items has quickly lured new customers into stores. Theyre already among the fastest-moving items we sell, Watkins says. The strategy is working: While roughly 45% of Walmarts customers earn less than $50,000 a year and only 7% earn more than $100,000, the companys share of high-income customers is expanding. In the first half of 2024, households earning more than $200,000 drove growth in the grocery business, making up 8% of customers. And in the third quarter of 2024, customers who earn more than $100,000 accounted for 75% of Walmarts gains in market share, a trend that continued in 2025. Now, Watkinss challenge is to continue winning over deeper-pocketed customers while keeping the budget-conscious ones happy. We have a core customer we will never alienate, she says. But we now have an opportunity to delight them with merchandise that goes beyond the essentials. The typical Walmart store looks nothing like its swanky New York pop-up. Under fluorescent lights, youll find aisles stacked with 120,000 products, from cereal to apples to sneakers to candles. Watkinss team of merchants selects every one of these goods. Just as importantly, theyre responsible for how much each item costs. As merchants, we take a ton of responsibility for the prices customers see, Watkins says. Price has always been Walmarts critical advantage. When Sam Walton founded the company in 1962, he had the radical idea of selling products as cheaply as possible when the conventional wisdom among retailers was to charge the highest price the customer was willing to pay. Waltons approach meant lower margins, so he focused on selling in volume, creating vast stores in small, rural towns underserved by other retailers. By pursuing this approachthe most successful in retail historyWalmart has become the largest company in the world by revenue, to the tune of $681 billion in 2024. It has 10,750 stores in 19 countries. In the United States, its 4,605 stores are within 10 miles of 90% of the population. And since Walmarts prices remain 10% to 25% lower than those of its competitors, it often serves as the primary retailer for low-income families in nonmetropolitan areas, according to research by the Analysis Group. Watkins has no intention of changing this. Were going to keep serving the customer who has trusted us for years, she says. Yet Watkins believes her team has an opportunity to serve a wider demographic by adding more products to the assortment. Walmarts merchants track the tastes of higher-income consumers and bring in premium brands that will appeal to them. In recent years, thats included Oxo kitchenware, DeLonghi coffee makers, and La Roche-Posay skincare. Walmart pores over its store data, selectively placing these higher-end products in areas with higher incomes. All of them also appear on Walmarts website, which includes half a billion items. Its a formula thats working, says Chadha. Walmart is growing year over year by gaining customers on the high end without losing customers on the low end. But adding upscale brands can only take a retailer so far. The way to turn someone into a regular Walmart customer is to get them hooked on products they cant get elsewherewhich is why Watkins is so focused on bolstering the companys private labels. We want to have an assortment of items that customers want to repeat-purchase, says Watkins. If you make an item people love, they will come back for it again and again. Of Walmarts 90 house brands, 22 generate upwards of a billion dollars in annual revenue, including Wonder Nation kids clothing, Ozark Trail outdoor gear, and Onn electronics, which includes TVs and tablets. These brands have historically focused on no-frills essentials. But to appeal to richer customers, Watkins is rolling out in-house brands that focus on quality and design. The move is straight out of Targets playbook at a time when the Minneapolis-based retailer is flagging. Over the past two decades, while Walmart was serving rural, working-class Americans, Target was capturing trendy urbanites by focusing on good design. Target partnered with high-end designers to create cheaper versions of their products and launched private labels that mimicked the popular new brands on the market. But over the last year, Targets sales have declined amid operational challenges and boycotts from consumers over its reversal on DEI initiatives. This has given Walmart an opportunity to win over some of Targets waffling shoppers. Bettergoods is Walmarts first big play to steal Targets thunder. After researching food trends, Watkinss team noticed that Walmarts customers were looking for more global flavors, plant-based ingredients, and foods that cater to dietary restrictions. Our food business is so large that we have insight into everything thats happening in the food industry, she says. It was clear that the customer profile was changing. In response, the company developed Bettergoods specialty grocery items, including macarons, gochujang sauce, and mushroom umami seasoning, that wouldnt be out of place at a pricier retailer. Even so, 70% of Bettergoods products cost less than $5. While other Walmart food brands have a budget aesthetic, Bettergoods has a custom typeface and multicolor packaging that looks as good as in-house brands at Target and Whole Foods. This postioning is paying off. So far, 60% of people who buy the brand have never previously purchased from Walmarts private labels, and their repurchase rate is 40%. Bettergoods also introduces shoppers to other Walmart offerings. Walmart is succeeding at picking up a share of the wealthy consumers basket, says Sucharita Kodali, a retail analyst at Forrester. If they start shopping at Walmart for food, they may pick up tablecloths, bug sprays, and socks. To help build knowledge of its house brands outside the store, Walmart has recently created an influencer network to showcase its private labels on social media, and last fall, it embarked on a 29-city Style Tour in a blue camper van that let people shop items from 15 of its fashion labels. Weve been able to expose our assortment to people who dont have stores as close to them but can access these products the same or next day by shopping online, Watkins says. Our differentiator is our ability to serve customers in multiple ways, all at the same time. Thanks to Watkinss merchandising strategy, more high-income consumers are now online-only Walmart shoppersan important step in helping Walmart catch up to Amazons e-commerce dominance. Over the last decade, Walmart has invested in its website, from launching a third-party marketplace to improving delivery speeds to offering a Prime-like membership program called Walmart+. At $100 billion, Walmarts online sales are significantly smaller than Amazons $480 billion, but they are growing twice as fastby 20% in 2024, compared to Amazons 11% sales growth. Last year, Walmart dispatched 6.5 billion items via same- or next-day delivery. The e-commerce capabilities of Walmart and Amazon are head-to-head at this point, says Chadha. Walmarts advantage is that it has a significant store footprint, which they can integrate into their e-commerce by turning them into distribution centers. In some cases, Watkins says wealthy consumers order from Walmarts website in order to shop the budget retailer discreetly, but she believes elevating product design and quality will help change peoples perceptions. I received a note from someone who said she got so many compliments on a dress she wore to her friends wedding. No one knew it was from Walmart, she says. Were focused on being a place where people feel so good about their purchases, they want to tell their friends about it.
Category:
E-Commerce
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