Ira Neimark

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Ira Neimark
Ira at book signing.jpg
Ira Neimark in 2011 at a book party for 'The Rise of Fashion'
Born(1921-12-12)December 12, 1921
DiedApril 18, 2019(2019-04-18) (aged 97)
EducationColumbia Business School
OccupationBusinessman
Spouse(s)
Jacqueline R. Myers
(m. 1953)
Children2

Ira Neimark (December 12, 1921 – April 18, 2019) was an American author, lecturer, and retail executive who served as Chairman and CEO of Bergdorf Goodman from 1975 to 1992. His reintroduction of French haute couture to New York[1] with Yves Saint Laurent, Hubert de Givenchy, and Christian Dior sparked a period of growth for Bergdorf Goodman, which went from $18 million in sales in 1975 to $250 million in sales by 1992. During his tenure, he expanded the women's store three times and opened the Bergdorf Goodman Men's Store in 1991 across the street from the primary location on Fifth Avenue, between 57th and 58th Streets, in New York.

Early life[edit]

Neimark was born December 12, 1921 in Brooklyn, New York and is the son of attorney Eugene G. Neimark and Lillian (Braude) Neimark. They were hit hard financially by the Great Depression; after his father's death, it led the 16-year-old Ira to seek employment in late 1938. He was hired by Bonwit Teller for "a Christmas job as a page[boy] in the store's 721 Club for men, a shop offering a sampling of the store's best items."[2] After the Christmas season of 1938, he continued to work for Bonwit Teller as a doorboy, greeting customers as they entered the store. In 1940, he was promoted to office boy to the store president and then to the position of stock boy in 1941.

Neimark attended Erasmus Hall in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn, but did not receive his diploma until 1945, after the end of World War II. His graduation was delayed due to working and to enlisting in 1942 in the U.S. Army Air Corps as an Aviation Cadet. He served in Saipan with the 20th Air Force, 498 squadron. Prior to his enlistment, he took evening classes in 1941 and 1942 at Columbia Business School. (Columbia lists him an alumnus, despite the fact that he did not earn a degree, and invited him back as an adjunct professor during 1983 and 1984; he was also a guest lecturer from 2009 to 2014.)

Retail career[edit]

After his service in WWII, Neimark returned to Bonwit Teller, serving as manager of Merchandise Control, and then assistant to the president. After promotion to blouse buyer at the luxury department store, he then moved to McCreery's in New York in 1950. In 1951, he was hired by Gladdings in Providence, Rhode Island, as divisional merchandise manager for which he was paid $9,000 a year.[3]:43 In 1959, he moved to the prestigious G. Fox & Co. in Hartford, Connecticut, as assistant to the general merchandise manager. Soon after, G. Fox's owner, Beatrice Fox Auerbach, asked him to assume the presidency of one of the company's affiliated stores, the far less prestigious Brown Thompson. In 1967, he returned from Brown Thompson and was made vice president and general merchandise manager of G. Fox & Co. After Auerbach's death, Neimark moved to B. Altman and Company, located at Fifth Avenue and 34th Street in New York, where he became executive vice-president and general merchandise manager in 1970. In 1975, he assumed the reins of Bergdorf Goodman from Andrew Goodman; it made him the first non-family-member to lead the company since its founding in 1899.

Neimark set out to transform the store from "old, dull, expensive, and intimidating" to "young, exciting, expensive, and intimidating".[3]:153 His primary strategy was to put designers in the lead and, to that end, recruited Dawn Mello to head the store's fashion office.

Neimark embarked on strategy to bring top designers from around the world into an exclusive arrangement with Bergdorf Goodman. The first step of the "Italian Strategy",[3]:166 which was representative of the approach, was to lure the house of Fendi to Bergdorf Goodman, which was done through personal contact and the promise of strong promotion and featured placement. Regarding personal contact, Neimark recounts the role of his wife, Jackie:

The five Fendi sisters were seated around a large oval dining room table. As Dawn and I presented our case to this forum of five powerful women, I couldn't shake the feeling that we were arranging a marriage contract of some sort. Later, as they were discussing the proposal among themselves in Italian, one of the sisters, Anna, directed a question to us in English. She had a daughter, Maria Theresa; when Maria comes to the States, would we take care of her? Jackie, mother that she is, said she would be delighted to look after Maria Theresa. Now, whether this seeming innocent question was a calculated litmus test of some sort I can't say, but all of a sudden it was "Cara mia," and smiles all around.[3]:168

Regarding the promise of promotion, Bergdorf Goodman became known for doing extravaganzas,[4] which garnered attention from The New York Times, Women's Wear Daily, and celebrities of the day.

Back in 1981, the store organized a show for Fendi furs at the nearby Pulitzer Fountain. The fountain was the runway, and the tiers were lined with black Mylar and filled with gallons of water.[5]

Donna Karan and Michael Kors also had their careers launched through fashion shows at Bergdorf Goodman.[5]

Beginning with Neimark's reintroduction of French couture to New York,[1] a period of growth for Bergdorf Goodman lasted throughout his tenure and beyond as president and CEO. He took the company from $18 million in sales in 1975 to $250 million in sales by1992.

Professional honors[edit]

The governments of Italy and France awarded Neimark the Cavaliere Della Republica and the Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters, respectively, as well as the Medal of the City of Paris. He was a Director Emeritus of Hermés of Paris and formerly a director of The Fashion Institute of Technology Foundation.

Personal life[edit]

While working at Gladdings in Providence, Rhode Island, Neimark's friends facilitated a blind date with Jackie Myers, the handbag buyer for T.W. Rounds, which specialized in prestige leather goods and, at its peak, had 11 locations in New England.[6] She is the daughter of Harry M. and Yetta Goodman Myers, who owned T.W. Rounds. They married on March 10, 1953. They had two daughters.

Death[edit]

Neimark died on April 18, 2019, at his home in Harrison, New York.[7]

Activities[edit]

After his retirement, Neimark served as a guest lecturer at Columbia Business School and presented to business students at The Wharton School, George Mason University.[citation needed]

He wrote four books about his experiences as a successful luxury retail executive: Crossing Fifth Avenue to Bergdorf Goodman (2006), The Rise of Fashion (2011), A Retailer's Lifetime of Lessons Learned (2012), and The Rise of Bergdorf Goodman and the Fall of Bonwit Teller (2015).[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Bernadine Morris, "Spring Couture Draws Fans Even in a Winter Storm," New York Times, March 1998
  2. ^ David Moin, "Bergdorf's Benevolent Dictator," Women's Wear Daily, September 30, 1991
  3. ^ a b c d Ira Neimark, Crossing Fifth Avenue to Bergdorf Goodman, Specialist Press International, 2006.
  4. ^ Ira Neimark, "Promoting the Designers", The Rise of Bergdorf Goodman and the Fall of Bonwit Teller, GamePlan Press, 2015; pp. 135–139
  5. ^ a b Spencer Cain, "10 Things You Never Knew About Bergdorf Goodman", 2013, http://stylecaster.com/secrets-of-bergdorf-goodman-10-things/#ixzz454EoJlhe
  6. ^ Patrick Healy, "T.W. Rounds to close doors," Providence Business News, December 2, 2001; http://pbn.com/TW-Rounds-to-close-doors,7885
  7. ^ Arnold, Laurence (April 20, 2019). "Ira Neimark, the Bergdorf Goodman Chief Who Boosted the Brand, Dies at 97". Bloomberg News. Retrieved April 20, 2019.