![A storefront of Aoki Tokyo](https://cdn.i.haymarketmedia.asia/?n=campaign-asia%2fcontent%2fAoki-1.jpg&h=570&w=855&q=100&v=20170226&c=1)
Aoki, a Japanese businesswear retailer that has built its brand on off-the-rack suits and shirts, is repositioning itself with the launch of an affordable custom suit business called Aoki Tokyo.
Aoki worked with Inamoto & Co, Party and Archicept City to develop the initiative. It was produced by DG Marketing Design. The concept is to offer quality tailor-made suits at a relatively low cost within a two-week timeframe.
According to Inamoto & Co, stylists take a customer’s measurements, which are then stored digitally for repeat orders. The company plans to speed up the initial process by using a 3D scanning system in the near future.
The Aoki Tokyo brand aims to channel the high craftsmanship and design values that people often associate with Japan. Its logo is a ‘T’ based on the formation of a tape measure in use. Inamoto said in a media release that Aoki Tokyo “infers a sense of quality and design aesthetics, tapping into the reputation of Japanese design and Tokyo cool that no other place has”.
![](http://cdn.i.haymarketmedia.asia?n=campaign-asia%2fcontent%2fAoki-2.jpg&h=500&w=750&c=0)
The brand has two outlets in Tokyo, one in the upmarket Ginza shopping district and another in Ikebukuro, a less fashionable commercial subcentre. The retail environment is apparently designed to appeal to more discerning customers than those who might visit a regular Aoki shop, as well as a younger demographic.
According to Atsushi Muroi, the founder of Archicept City, the store concept “needed to be a step-up for customers in Tokyo with a keen eye for design. The space is designed to be aesthetically progressive but functionally rational”. He said additional touches include phone charging points for customers.
Campaign’s view: With the launch of Aoki Tokyo, Aoki is competing with companies such as the online retailer Zozo. The company last year began offering low-cost tailoring for suits and casualwear using a measurement suit to record dimensions (which has since run into difficulties).
Aoki's move is a bold one for a company known for supplying budget-conscious salarymen and new graduates with less-than-stylish attire for the office. It is indicative of increasing demand for personalisation among mass-market consumers, and of changing workplace norms that are putting pressure on the businesswear sector.
The merits of retaining the Aoki name are debatable: it is of course more difficult for a brand to move upmarket than vice versa. But the Aoki name is widely known, and retaining a reasonably low price-point means the concept has a good chance of appealing to some existing Aoki customers as well as new ones, provided the products deliver on their promise.