Nicolas Bijan Pakzad focuses on a new generation of super-wealthy shoppers with his boutique at the Waldorf Astoria
Nicolas Bijan Pakzad took over his dadās Beverly Hills business -- and recently opened a luxury boutique at the Waldorf Astoria.
On a table at the new Bijan boutique in the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Beverly Hills sit framed photos of the rich and celebrated, among them former President Clinton, who was the storeās first customer when it opened in September.
Clinton is just one of a number of powerful and well-known men the House of Bijan has dressed since it opened its original flagship store on Rodeo Drive in 1976. That list of famous clients includes former U.S. presidents ā George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Barack Obama ā as well as the kings of Spain and Saudi Arabia and a host of global billionaires.
The company is now run by Nicolas Bijan Pakzad, who simply goes by Nicolas Bijan, son of the late House of Bijan founder Bijan Pakzad. Recently the brand was pulled into a media squall after the Associated Press and other news outlets reported that Paul Manafort, President Trumpās former campaign manager who was indicted on charges including conspiracy and money laundering, reportedly spent more than $500,000 at Bijan.
āSince we dress some of the most high-profile and powerful men and women around the world, it is very important to respect the privacy of our clientele,ā said Pakzad, a soft-spoken 26-year-old with impeccable manners, who declined himself and through a publicist to comment further on the subject.
Itās discretion that, perhaps, is expected by men who buy Bijanās $12,000 suits ā or one of the limited-edition yellow Rolls-Royce Phantoms that the house did in collaboration with the prestige car brand ā one of which was stationed outside the Waldorf Astoria on a recent morning.
The new outpost is a microcosm of the 6,500-square-foot flagship Rodeo Drive store that Pakzadās father established 41 years ago. His son opened the Waldorf Astoria satellite to cater to clients who might want to pop in for a quick browse rather than make an appointment at the Rodeo Drive store, which is not open to walk-in customers.
āThe Rodeo Drive store can be intimidating,ā said Pakzad, who wears a suit and tie daily and puts out monogrammed linen coasters for guestsā crystal tumblers of water. āIt can be too much for some people.ā
Despite being a millennial himself, Pakzad has no plans to introduce an e-commerce component. If you want one of the brandās hand-made suits, shirts, fragrances or suede jackets, you actually have to come in and buy one.
āWeāve been able to stand apart because we are selling an experience,ā he said. āItās about quality and exclusivity. In the Rodeo Drive store, you are usually the only person in there. If we have more than two customers at a time, itās chaos.ā
Pakzad is taking the brand forward in other ways. In 2014, three years after his father died, he launched a womenās collection, starting with a made-to-order handbag in alligator with palladium hardware that costs about $65,000, and $175,000 if embellished with diamonds. Heās also developing a line of wallets and looking at additional womenās offerings.
He has found other ways to adjust to the shifting retail climate. Heās selling more sports and leather jackets than three-piece suits. And instead of servicing a small clutch of older billionaires who come in and make mammoth purchases, heās seeing younger people eschewing the āone-in-every-colorā mentality for a few select pieces.
āItās healthier and more stable because weāre not so reliant on one man,ā he said.
So, while he still sees the clients who used to shop with his father, heās now working with their children and grandchildren too.
āA lot of our customers have been shopping at the House of Bijan for longer than Iāve been alive,ā he said. āAnd that I can have a relationship with their children for the next 40 years is a big honor. My father left something very beautiful behind. We now have the opportunity to make it even more beautiful than before.ā
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