Buying women’s swimwear, whether your customer is looking for a one piece swimsuit or a bikini, could be the one thing that hovers darkly over her as summertime or a vacation draws near. Many refuse to shop for women’s swimsuits (especially women’s plus size swimwear) resorting to just a t-shirt and shorts, or avoiding pool or beach time completely. Trying on a two piece swimsuit in a store is just too scary for some, and ordering online is just too risky for others. As a business owner offering women's swimwear you can make a big difference in the shopping experience for many of your customers by considering the following:
Know your women's swimwear customer (and know that this is every woman)
Just because your women's swimwear is made for ladies with great bodies, doesn't mean it should be made for one body type. The same goes for any target consumer for a swimwear producer. Women's plus size swimwear isn't just for women with large chests, and it isn't just for women who want to cover everything up. Does your target consumer have to be tan? Does she have the option to hide a lot or to bare almost all, no matter what her body type? Is age a factor?
I recommend: Use different body types in your advertising. Create a system for finding the right fit for your two piece swimsuit
and your one piece swimsuit, much like a bra sales team does. Check out the models for, say
American Apparel and
Roxy by Quicksilver, and compare them to those used by, say,
Diesel or
Luli Fama. Which seems friendlier? Sometimes the trade-off of sex selling your product is that women don't feel they can pull off the amount of sexiness implied. Some brands, like
Speedo, have almost gotten rid of models altogether.
Make a splash by pairing other unique products to go with your women's swim apparel
Your accessories and original/name brand/designer/discount swimwear is what makes your products personal. Now you need to make that personality effervesce by creating solid relationships with your buyers, manufacturers, designers, sellers, and customers. Add a one of a kind product, like locally made skin care or original vintage designer women's beachwear.
I recommend: Buy wholesale only. This sounds obvious, but too many online stores have gone under trying to resell almost cheap clothing, so it needs to be repeated. Look around town for local manufacturers, and online for factory locations or wholesale
eBay sellers. Usually, contacting a store directly works, or try checking sell-offers on sites like
TradeKey.
Create something new in women's swimwear from something classic
Women's swim apparel might be one of the least changed areas in fashion since the invention of the bikini. But trends do change, and when they do in women's bathing suits, the change can potentially be devastating. Don't be the last one pushing high waists when boy cut shorts are back. Necklines will plunge and rise, bottoms and bellies will hide and emerge, and even love handles will try to peek out subtly from a one piece swimsuit. Because of the natural limitations of the swimsuit, swimwear distributors and swimwear manufacturers have to pay even closer attention to minute details. Keyholes, multiple straps, beads, and sheen are important, as well as cut and coverage.
I recommend: Look at a top designer to find out what a women’s swimwear wholesaler will end up wanting. Of course, the most popular designers of today will depend on what day it is, but you can rely on magazines like
W,
ZooZoom and
Elle, or, for the younger girls,
Vice and
Teen Vogue, to keep a finger on the womens beachwear pulse.
To stay afloat with women's beachwear and swim apparel, you must accessorize
Every good bathing suit brand, store, wholesaler, distributor, manufacturer and carrier has a way of making their women's swim apparel stand out. Can you smell like the designer while you're on the beach? Is there a towel covered in label logos that you can sell with the matching bikinis? Would your customers want to collect charms that attach to, or sunglasses that go with, your store's women's swimsuits? One thing to beware of in this area again is overwhelming a shopper. I've gone into women's beachwear outlets that reek of coconut oil, and stores that have more saris, wraps, and tanning oils than swimsuits... and have immediately turned around and walked out.
I recommend: Pick a setting that reflects the people in your community. If that is online, it is completely up to you, considering that online means anyone. If it is in Chicago or Long Island, however, perhaps sailboats will sell more women’s swimsuits and accessories than palm trees will. Also, consider the economy. Can your customers afford to buy custom swimwear, like those made by
Ashley Paige or
Exelnt Designs? Or, would you be able to sell much in the way of extras, like parasols from
Lace-Parasols, kaftans from
Topshop, or sunglasses from
Bluefly or
Ray-Ban?