Strategy presentation · prepared June 2026  ·  yibri.co.uk

Campaign Room · Confidential

The 90-day plan to make every order an outfit

Objective — lift orders with 2+ items Persona — HENRY creative professionals, women 28–45 Market — London → NYC / Toronto Based on — live site, catalog & social audit, 11 June 2026
Primary KPI — Multi-Item Orders
0%
Target share of orders with 2+ items · vs. baseline to be instrumented in Week 1
Average Order Value
£0
Realistic 2-piece basket: £350–£500 at modal price ~£225–245
Instagram Engagement
0.0%
From 0.55% today → 1.5%+ (benchmark 1.5–3%)
Followers — @yibri_official
0
From 2,5744,000 via Collab posts + events

Part One

Four phases, ninety days

Sequenced so paid spend only begins after merchandising and organic content have proven the creative. Nothing in Phase 0 costs ad budget.

Phase 0 · Weeks 1–2

Instrument

  • Baseline Shopify AOV, repeat rate & multi-item %
  • IG / TikTok native analytics + GA4
  • Merchandising fixes shipped (see Levers)
  • Archive Sale gate replaces deep markdowns
Phase 1 · Weeks 2–6

Organic Engine

  • "One piece, two ways" reversibility reels
  • Founder-led storytelling (CSM/RCA, vibri)
  • Pinterest SEO — board per look
  • Email flows: welcome, abandoned cart, cross-sell
Phase 2 · Weeks 4–10

Seeding & Community

  • 15–20 quiet-luxury creators gifted 2-piece looks
  • Quarterly pop-up cadence + email capture at the rail
  • Styling evening at inNEOSS to activate the stockist
  • Press: ES Magazine, Sheerluxe, Who What Wear UK
Phase 3 · Weeks 6–12

Paid Amplification

  • Meta Advantage+: retargeting → lookalikes of multi-item buyers
  • Creative = reversibility video + two-piece carousels
  • Pinterest ads + Google Shopping & branded search
  • Geo: London first, then NYC / Toronto

Part Two

The economics of a two-piece basket

~102 products across five tiers. The architecture already supports outfit-building — entry pieces pair naturally with hero pieces. The campaign simply makes the pairing explicit.

Price Architecture · range per tier (£)

Where the wardrobe sits

Entry accessories£22 – £85
Mid accessories£125 – £197
Core tops & knit£78 – £245
Bottoms & dresses£165 – £365
Outerwear — hero£325 – £572

Bars positioned on a £0–£572 scale. Modal price ~£225–245 → free-shipping threshold set at £300, just above a single-item order: the single most reliable multi-item lever.

Budget Shape · at £3–5k/month media + activation

Where the money goes

50%
20%
20%
10%
  • Paid social (Meta, Pinterest, Google)
  • Influencer gifting & affiliates
  • Pop-ups & events
  • Content production

Paid spend is gated behind organic proof (Phase 3 starts Week 6 at the earliest). Discounting is replaced by an email-gated Archive Sale — 12+ lines are currently on deep markdown (e.g. £325→£160), which dilutes luxury positioning.

Market context: UK luxury fashion ≈ $20B (2025) → ~$30B by 2035; 68% of UK luxury consumers prioritise sustainability — YIBRI's longevity story maps directly onto this.

Part Three

The Instagram turnaround

Live audit of @yibri_official, 11 June 2026: 273 posts · 2,574 followers · 3,010 following · ~0.55% engagement. The content voice is genuinely good — reach and mechanics are the bottleneck, and both are fixable for free.

Audit Findings → Fixes

What we found, what we change

FindingTodayFixStatus
No path to shop No website link in bio; zero IG-attributed sessions Bio link (shop / pop-up / stockists / newsletter); sharpen bio to "Sculptural, timeless womenswear · designed in London · CSM/RCA founder · Stocked at inNEOSS N1" Week 1
No shopping tags 0 product posts tagged with prices Enable Instagram Shopping; tag every product post — target 100% Week 1
Follow ratio Following 3,010 > followers 2,574 — reads follow-for-follow Reduce following in batches to well under follower count; luxury houses follow few Weeks 1–4
Weak first lines Poetic captions with no hook, no CTA, no prices Line 1 = hook · keep the poetic middle · end with product + price + CTA · fixed hashtag system (4 brand + 4–6 discovery tags) Ongoing
Partner posts outperform Partner-tagged posts already beat solo posts (22–23 vs 6–11 likes) Make them Collab posts with pop-up hosts, stockists, photographers, @srfi_tmu — lands in both feeds; cheapest reach multiplier available. ≥2/month Amplify
Feed mix Third-party event flyers break the grid; product storytelling weakest ~60% Reels ("one piece, two ways", styling ×3, studio BTS, founder design notes); YIBRI-branded event template; every pop-up becomes countdown → live → recap → "what sold out" Weeks 2–6
Live opportunity Gathered Hands Summer Market, Clapton — 13–14 June Full story coverage with location tags + email capture at the rail This week

Repurposing rule: every reel → TikTok; every editorial image → Pinterest pin with keyworded description (@yibristudio is the highest-intent platform at this price point).

Part Four

Who buys two pieces

Three concentric audiences. The campaign optimises for the first, banks the second, and nurtures the third into the first.

Primary Target

The Creative Professional

HENRY · Women 28–45 · London/SE + NYC/Toronto

£70k–£130k household income; design, architecture, media, law, tech. Buys outfits, not items — bodysuit + trousers, dress + scarf. Found via quiet-luxury and capsule-wardrobe content, Dover Street Market/COS-to-luxury upgraders, gallery audiences.

£350–500Expected order value

The Established Minimalist

Women 40–60 · Higher net worth

Invests in hero outerwear (£448–572 coats) plus accessories in a single purchase. Reached through wholesale (inNEOSS, Garmentory), press features and trunk shows rather than feeds.

£572Top single-piece spend

The Aspirational Entrant

24–32 · Pipeline

Enters at £22–85 accessories or the Archive Sale. Nurtured by email — welcome flow, brand story, bestsellers — toward a first full-price apparel purchase.

£22–85Entry point

Part Five

Five levers, zero ad spend

Merchandising changes shipped in the first fortnight — the highest-leverage moves in the entire plan, all before a pound of media is bought.

1 Free UK shipping at £300 Just above the modal single-item price (~£225–245) — the most reliable multi-item lever in DTC. Shipping margin only
2 "Complete the look" on every PDP Bodysuit → trousers, dress → scarf, coat → tote. Cross-sells the outfit the piece was designed with. Zero spend
3 Tiered gift-with-purchase Free makeup bag (COGS-cheap at £22 retail) at £350+; wool bucket hat at £500+. Rewards the basket, not the discount. Low COGS
4 Shoppable "Looks" bundles Styled 2–3 piece outfits sold as bundles with a modest 5–8% incentive — replaces deep markdowns. 5–8% bundle margin
5 "Archive Sale" — email-gated Renames and gates clearance to protect full-price positioning while clearing slow lines, and grows the list as it does. Builds the list

The Proposal

Every number here came from looking, not guessing

This plan was built from a live audit of the store, the catalog's price architecture, the stockist network, the press footprint, and a post-by-post read of the Instagram account — then sequenced so the free fixes come first and paid spend only follows proof. That is how we would manage YIBRI's marketing: instrument, fix the mechanics, amplify what the data says is already working.

The first fortnight costs nothing but ships the five highest-leverage changes the brand can make.

Read the full report — research, examples & playbooks →

25–30%Target share of orders with 2+ items
£350+Target average order value
0.55% → 1.5%+Instagram engagement, 90 days
5 leversShipped before any ad spend