『RetailCraft 61: "Open Doors" - in conversation with Shannon Osman of Footasylum』のカバーアート

RetailCraft 61: "Open Doors" - in conversation with Shannon Osman of Footasylum

RetailCraft 61: "Open Doors" - in conversation with Shannon Osman of Footasylum

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This episode is for retail operators who believe that the store estate is an asset, and that the people running it are the brand. Ian Jindal chat with Shannon Osman, Head of Retail at Footasylum, who has built her career from shop floor to leadership and brings a practitioner's clarity to questions that often get buried in strategy decks: how do you actually recruit, retain and develop a predominantly Gen Z workforce at scale? The conversation covers Footasylum's distinctive hiring model, its social-first content machine, the Locked In franchise, and a franchise expansion into the Middle East — all through the lens of a retailer that has won Retail Employer of the Year while opening stores, not closing them.Key themesRethinking recruitment from first principles: Footasylum scrapped the CV-led process and replaced it with group in-store interviews. No CV submission, just availability, knockout questions, and a live group exercise. The best candidate on the day gets the job, eliminating unconscious bias and filtering for exactly the communication skills the role demands.Retention as proof of concept: Staff turnover dropped from 107% to 75% after the new recruitment model was introduced. Seasonal hires - historically the hardest to retain - are now routinely offered permanent roles at the end of peak. The data follows the culture, not the other way around.Progression without a title change: Shannon is direct that promotion is not the only form of progression. Recommending a book, setting personal goals alongside professional ones, giving people a voice in operational decisions - these are the mechanisms Footasylum uses to keep people invested. The goal-setting process (two work goals, one personal) runs from February, reviewed quarterly, owned by the individual.Communication at scale: With almost 70 stores and around 1,300 staff, Footasylum adopted Zipline as its internal communications platform - chosen because it looks and behaves like social media. Execution and readership rates are tracked, but the rationale was engagement, not surveillance. The platform was used to run a company-wide vote for Store Manager of the Year, generating 1,300 responses.Social as a commercial engine: 1.2 billion organic views across social media last year, up 35% year-on-year. Footasylum sits in the top 5% of TikTok users globally, alongside the BBC and Sky Sports. Its Locked In series - influencers and content creators in a house format, competing and generating content — drives 200,000 additional app downloads per run and feeds directly into in-store footfall and on-site conversion.Middle East expansion via franchise: Footasylum has signed a franchise agreement to enter the Gulf region. Shannon visited the Mall of Emirates, Mall of Dubai and Dubai Hills ahead of the announcement. The market's appetite for elevated retail experience - and the presence of a significant UK expat base - makes it a credible fit for the brand's positioning, which sits above the mass market without claiming luxury.⠀What you'll learnWhy removing CVs from the hiring process can improve both the quality of hire and long-term retention and how to structure a group interview that actually tests for the right things.How to build a communication infrastructure that reaches every layer of a large store estate, not just the management tier.What "progression" looks like when you can't always offer a title or a salary uplift and why that matters for a Gen Z workforce.How a content-first social strategy translates directly into measurable commercial outcomes: app downloads, footfall, and omnichannel conversion.How to approach franchise expansion into a culturally distinct market while preserving brand DNA and why the right partner matters more than the right playbook.Why listening to store managers is not just good culture but good operations: some of Footasylum's most efficient decisions in the last 18 months have come from the shop floor up.⠀Chapter structureIntroduction — Who Footasylum is, its 20-year history, near-70 store estate, and core Gen Z/Alpha consumerThe store in 2025 — Why physical retail still matters, and what it means to have Gen Z staff serving Gen Z customersRethinking recruitment — The CV-free group interview model and the results it has producedGrowth and expansion — New UK stores (including Merthyr Tydfil), and the Middle East franchise dealRetention and culture — Retail Employer of the Year, goal-setting, and the meaning of progressionCommunication at scale — Zipline, why it works, and how it changes the relationship between head office and the shop floorLocked In and the social engine — The Locked In series, 1.2bn organic views, and the omnichannel flywheelShannon's own journey — From football coaching in the US to Head of Retail; the constants that haven't changed; what's on the learning list for 2026⠀About the guestShannon Osman is Head of Retail at Footasylum, the UK apparel, footwear and accessories ...
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