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An influencer's clothing brand launch was a huge miss for her followers, so she took the site down. She relaunched it 7 months later with better materials and lower prices.

Madeleine White
Madeleine White recently relaunched her pajama brand after criticism.

Madeleine White

  • Madeleine White's pajama brand faced backlash over pricing and material quality.
  • She took the website down and relaunched it seven months later with higher quality and lower prices.
  • White told BI building back trust with her audience is the most important thing for her.

Madeleine White learned what happens when your brand is a huge miss with your fans the hard way.

When she launched her pajama brand, See You Tomorrow, in May, White was thrilled because designing fashion was all she ever wanted.

But the launch went awry. Fans didn't like the price point or the materials used in many of the garments, leading to cries that White was out of touch and had lost the authenticity she had grown her millions of followers for.

"It was always a dream starting my own business," White told Business Insider. "But I could not have been prepared for how difficult it's been.

A clothing launch backfires

White started making content after she lost her job during the COVID-19 pandemic and decided to learn how to use a sewing machine.

Using her decade of experience in modeling, White became known for sharing thrifting videos and industry insights.

On Instagram, she now has 1.6 million followers, and on TikTok, she has 4.7 million.

But after See You Tomorrow launched, fans lamented that she'd forgotten her roots.

White's aim was always to create a brand that would resonate with her followers: one that wasn't budget or fast fashion but also wasn't high-end and unaffordable.

But while things started off well with over half a million visitors on the website, customers felt See You Tomorrow fell short on price point and quality.

"I feel like her original fan base have nothing in common with her current ventures," one said on the InfluencerSnark subreddit.

Under one Reddit post showing a $145 pajama set, customers said they weren't too eager about the price or the materials.

"They're cute, and I've been trying to focus on a smaller but more quality wardrobe, so the price didn't immediately turn me off," one said. "$145 for 100% polyester is absolutely insane though."

"She should get backlash for this, because choosing fast fashion materials but selling it at a high-end price is wild," wrote another. "Were this made from cotton satin or even a cotton silk voile it would be worth it. It would be sustainable."

White told BI she was aware of the complaints immediately and decided to take action. She took the site down and started rethinking the entire brand.

"We went back to the drawing board after a couple of days," she said. "I decided that unless I could fix most of these concerns that people had and really give it a proper shot, then it wasn't really worth continuing the business."

See You Tomorrow campaign
Madeleine White immediately acted when fans didn't like her clothing brand launch.

See You Tomorrow

7 months later

White didn't want to make any announcements while things were in flux, which was hard to do with so many fans eager to know what was happening.

Seven months later, in December, See You Tomorrow relaunched with new, higher-quality pieces and lower prices.

"I decided to bet on myself and put my money where my mouth is and to create the product that I wanted to make," she said. "I trusted my instincts that something wasn't right and that we could do better โ€” and we are doing better."

White had to find new manufacturers and pay for everything herself. She said that though it was hard, she's glad she took that leap of faith.

"I felt like it would be so much more powerful to my audience if I could prove to them that I actually cared about their opinions and I cared about that feedback," White said.

"It's easy to say, I'm so sorry, I fucked up," she added. "But it's much better to say I'm so sorry, I fucked up, and here is how I fixed it."

Madeleine White's pajama brand See You Tomorrow
Madeleine White relaunched See You Tomorrow 7 months after an initial flop.

See You Tomorrow

White told BI that the last few years have been a mad rush because she was so eager to start her own brand. In hindsight, she would have spent longer researching what she wanted to do and not taken the first offer that came along, she said.

"It was definitely an eye-opener," she said.

Trust is everything

White posted a TikTok this month explaining everything. She said what was most important to her out of everything was building trust again with her audience.

It seemed to pay off, with followers thanking her for her transparency and applauding her for listening to their concerns.

@madeleine_white

What happened to @See you tomorrow ๐Ÿฆ‹

โ™ฌ original sound - Madeleine White

White said she doesn't care if she sells one product or a thousand with this new launch โ€” she just wants to repair her relationship with her supporters.

"I've definitely learned just how badly launching a brand that people don't like can hurt your public image," she said. "It just goes to show how important it is for us as people with large followings to do things right."

She said she's also learned that people are happy to pay for quality as long as they know how a price point was reached.

White said influencers are held to a high standard, but ultimately, she sees that as a good thing.

"It just makes the brand better," she said. "I've learned so much, and I've definitely learned not to put my name on anything until I'm 100% happy with it."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Influencers are using AI 'women' to lead people to OnlyFans and Fanvue — where more AI awaits

A robot head on a woman's body
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iStock; Rebecca Zisser/BI

  • AI models are appearing on adult-content sites like OnlyFans and Fanvue โ€” sometimes with stolen images.
  • And some people are selling courses for $220 on how to make your own lucrative AI adult creator.
  • Does AI harm adult creators? And do subscribers even know they're talking to a computer?

Last winter, there were a few news items about how AI might be replacing humans in a surprising job: online influencer. The articles said a crop of new Instagram influencers had amassed large followings and even secured brand deals. There was one catch: The influencers were AI.

Some of these AI influencers, like Lil Miquela, are a sort of artsy commentary on the nature of influencing or something conceptually interesting. But when I looked a little further into one of the AI-generated influencer accounts on Instagram โ€” one that had reportedly gotten some brand deals โ€” I found a different type of story.

One of the most popular AI influencers had a link in her bio to a profile on Fanvue, an OnlyFans competitor. On her Fanvue account, the influencer posted proactive photos โ€” and for a $7-a-month subscription, I could see her nude photos. (I feel strange saying "she" and "nude" because this person doesn't exist. Remember: She's AI. But this is where we are in 2024, I suppose.)

Ah, so I get it now: The business was always pornography โ€” Instagram and other social media were just at the top of the conversion funnel. These accounts weren't trying to become "Instagram influencers" who made money through promoting shampoo โ€” they were using Instagram to drive traffic to Fanvue, where they could get men to pay to see their nude photos.

Once potential customers get to the paysites, they encounter more AI-generated pictures and videos.

The tech news site 404 Media just published a deep dive into this world, "Inside the Booming 'AI Pimping' Industry." What reporters found was an astounding amount of AI-fueled accounts on both OnlyFans and Fanvue. Disturbingly, 404 Media found a number of these accounts used images that weren't purely dreamed up by AI. Some were deepfakes โ€” fake images of real people โ€” or were face swaps, using someone's face on an AI-generated body.

There is also a whole side economy of people selling guides and courses on how others can set up their own businesses to create AI models. One person is selling a course for $220 on how to make money with AI adult influencers.

A Fanvue spokesperson told Business Insider that using images that steal someone's identity is against its rules. Fanvue also uses a third-party moderation tool and has human moderators. The spokesperson also said that "deepfakes are an industry challenge." OnlyFans' terms of service prohibit models from using AI chatbots. Those terms also say that AI content is allowed only if users can tell it's AI and only if that content features the verified creator โ€” not someone else.

Potentially stolen images aside, the existence of AI adult content is somewhat fraught. On one hand, some of these AI creators claim that this is not unlike cartoon pornography. But real-life adult content creators have concerns about AI affecting their business. Some told Business Insider's Marta Biino recently that they find AI tools useful โ€” like AI chatbots they use to talk to fans. But they said they also worried that using AI could erode fans' trust.

I'm not sure that the fans of the AI accounts are always aware that these "people" are artificial intelligence. Comments on one obviously AI-generated woman's account read like a lot of people think she's human. On her Fanvue, the AI-generated woman sometimes posts pink-haired anime cartoon versions of herself.

On one of these posts, a paying Fanvue customer wrote that he wanted to see the outfit on the real woman โ€” not an anime version. I'm not sure that he knows neither one is real.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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