Canali appointed Alessio Lillocci as creative director with explicit instructions to pull younger customers into a 90-year-old Italian menswear brand built on formal tailoring, according to Glossy. Lillocci's playbook: expand the product line into leisurewear — sweatshirts, relaxed knits, casual trousers — while keeping the tailored suits that built the house.
The move addresses a structural problem for heritage formal brands. The core customer ages up, replacement cohorts wear suits less frequently, and the brand cannot jump categories without risking its positioning. Canali's answer is adjacency expansion: products that share fabric quality and construction standards with the tailored line but fit how younger buyers actually dress. Lillocci, who spent time at Brunello Cucinelli and Prada, brings experience translating luxury craft into categories beyond the original box.
The mechanism works because it separates acquisition from retention. The leisurewear line gives younger buyers a lower-commitment entry point — fewer occasions required, easier to style, less financial stretch than a suit. Once inside the brand, those customers can trade up into tailoring when the occasion demands it. Meanwhile, existing customers who already own Canali suits now have a reason to return for the rest of the wardrobe. The brand expands share-of-closet without cannibalizing its formal reputation.
Lillocci is betting that younger luxury buyers will pay for construction and fabric even in casual categories, a pattern Brunello Cucinelli proved at scale. The risk is execution: leisurewear must feel native to the brand, not grafted on. If the sweatshirt looks like a tailoring house trying to be streetwear, the play fails. If it reads as the same Canali quality standards applied to a different silhouette, it works.
For a small physical-product brand, the steal is clean. Identify the adjacent category your existing product expertise translates into, then build one product in that space using the same materials, construction, and quality cues that define your core line. A leather-goods brand known for structured bags can launch a soft tote. A candle company known for complex fragrance can add a room spray. A kitchenware brand built on cast iron can introduce wooden utensils that share the heirloom positioning. Price the new product 15-25% below your flagship item to signal accessible entry while maintaining margin. Photograph it alongside your core product so the family resemblance is immediate. Market it as "the same craft, more ways to use it," not as a departure. Run the new SKU through your existing email list first — current customers who already trust your quality will convert fastest and provide social proof for new buyers considering the brand. If the adjacent product moves, expand the line. If it sits, the brand's core positioning stays intact because you framed it as an expansion, not a pivot.
The broader pattern: age-bracket problems solve with product strategy before marketing strategy. Changing the message without changing the assortment rarely pulls a new cohort. Canali is adding the products younger buyers already wear, then letting quality and craft do the conversion work.