Family Business Insights
Missoni CEO - Family Ownership Key To Future Success

As part of a new feature on this website, is an item about a family-run business and its development. Family businesses are an important, and increasingly wooed, group of clients by wealth managers.
As part of a new segment on this site, we are running articles on family businesses, which are important sources of wealth management clients, with some family-owned firms later setting up family offices to run their financial affairs. To view a recent comment piece on how private banks are targeting the family business segment, click here.
Iconic family-owned Italian fashion house Missoni is not up for sale, Vittoro Missoni, the second-generation chief executive told Campden FB magazine in an exclusive interview.
Missoni's comments come at a time when other luxury brands, such
as Escada, have been sold as a result of the financial crisis and
others, including Gianfranco Ferre and Christian Lacroix, have
sought bankruptcy protection.
“We do get approached, but now is not the right time. We need to
continue the long-term value and the market’s respect for our
company. The crisis will help our brands come out stronger as I
believe that right now there is great value in the fact that we
are the designers, owners and manufacturers of Missoni,” Vittorio
said.
While the family’s resilience has come to the fore during the
challenging business environment, its commitment to the success
of the brand is central to everything it does, regardless of the
economic situation. “We constantly retain the knowledge and
tradition of our founders, who are members of our own family. We
have day-to-day control and can take decisions easily,” he
said.
Quality is a cornerstone of the Missoni philosophy and, as
Vittorio explained, it is not something the family is prepared to
sacrifice in order to increase production or distribution to
compete with other, bigger brands.
“Sometimes at Missoni we have limitations compared to large
brands, who can move faster thanks to the support of being part
of a large group. But we feel it is important to retain our
Italian way, it’s crucial for the kind of products we make,” said
Vittorio.
The hallmark of many luxury brands is a dedication to quality and
customer service and Missoni is no different. The firm began
training women in knitting in the Lombardia region of Italy
during the 1960s and some of the firm’s employees have been with
the company for over 20 years, working for both generations of
the Missoni family.
Vittorio runs the company, which is famous for its zig zag
patterned clothing, with his two siblings Angela, creative
director, and Luca who serves as the technical and production
expert. Both their parents, founders Ottavio and Rosita Missoni,
still serve on the board of the company alongside their three
children, while the third generation in the shape of Margherita
Missoni joined last year.
The importance of the family’s role in the business was
highlighted during the last 18 months when Missoni was forced to
cut costs in the face of decreasing sales figures. This included
letting go of the company’s most senior non-family employee
Massimo Gasparini.
Luca and Angela both took on aspects of Gasparini’s role on top
of their other responsibilities because, as family members who
have been immersed in how the company operates from a young age,
they were willing and able to step into the breach and ensure the
continued success of their family company. “We must be quick and
elastic to react to today’s changes and challenges,” explained
Vittorio.
With a strong, committed family management and a eye on the
growth markets of Asia, you wouldn’t bet against Missoni being
one of the many family-owned companies that continues to thrive
as world economies edge out of recession.