Kering Group & Gucci

 
 

This report examines the anatomy of a crisis: executive and creative leadership changes, the divestiture of strategic assets, and the high-stakes appointment of Demna Gvasalia as Gucci's new Artistic Director. It includes a critical analysis of the AI-generated teaser campaign for the Primavera show (Milan, February 2026), developing the argument that the fundamental question for luxury is not whether to use AI, but whether the governance exists to use it without destroying brand authority.

This document is being updated. It will be available soon.

If you're interested, sign up to receive updates.

Rafael Carlesso

I produce independent strategic intelligence on luxury conglomerates, covering brand dynamics, pricing governance, competitive positioning and AI deployment risk. Current coverage includes Kering Group, LVMH, Richemont, Armani Group, Prada Group and Moncler. Reports are distributed to financial media, institutional investors and executive search leadership.

Developer of the AI Image Governance framework: a structured methodology for evaluating how generative AI deployment decisions impact brand authority in luxury fashion. The framework separates AI as an internal creative tool from AI as a public facing brand deliverable, a distinction most luxury houses have not yet formalised. EU AI Act transparency obligations (Article 50, effective August 2026) make this operationally urgent.

Research cited by Reuters (Global Industry Editor, Luxury and Retail) and shared with institutional investors including Baillie Gifford. Registered with Spencer Stuart, Egon Zehnder and Heidrick & Struggles.

15+ years in high value markets. MBA in Marketing, Branding and Growth. Based in Milan.

For intelligence reports and governance advisory: rafael@rafaelcarlesso.com

https://www.rafaelcarlesso.com
Previous
Previous

Beyond the Legacy Houses

Next
Next

Kering Group: 2025 Results & Strategic Outlook