Get All Access for $5/mo

Mr. Draper Brings The Goods To You Managing Partner Mahmoud Gao, Mary Freiji and Tiba Al Damen launch Mr. Draper, a personalized men's shopping service for the Middle East region.

By Pamella de Leon

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Middle East, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Managing Partner Mahmoud Gao joined by Mary Freiji and Tiba Al Damen, all of whom have backgrounds in retail and luxury distribution in Dubai, decided to launch Mr. Draper, a personalized shopping service targeting this region. A personal stylist contacts the customer via phone after signing up to discuss lifestyle, preferred fashions and color schemes, brands, budget, and sizes. Clients also have the option to submit their details on Mr. Draper's interactive portal, and "encouraged to link us to their social media accounts and upload pictures of themselves," Gao adds, in order to help the company's stylists formulate a stronger idea of a client's needs. As part of their "complete convenience" strategy, boxed goods are then delivered to the client, and they're encouraged to choose what items they want to keep and return the rest. The founders do note that some of the service's customers prefer visiting the Mr. Draper showroom itself in Dubai Silicon Oasis to work and interact with their stylist one-on-one.

Image credit:Mr. Draper

With buying wholesale and selling retail as their business model, customers can choose from a variety of labels including Ralph Lauren, Valentino and Atelier Privé, and a slew of laidback brands like Converse, Topman and Abercrombie & Fitch. Mr. Draper's advantage over shops is personalizing a customer's experience using their stored preferences, noting which items customers return on their package (with the frequencies of each package based on a case-by-case scenario as it's not a subscription-based model). Mr. Draper's marketing strategies have varied; their most successful being targeted Facebook ads and client referrals, which they cite as their second biggest source of leads after Facebook. There's no sign up, service or shipping fees, and most apparel is priced on par with better department stores such as Bloomingdale's or Harvey Nichols. "You only pay for the clothes you decide to keep, no minimums," explains Gao, mentioning that clients' average spend nearly doubles when comparing package delivery to in-house services.

Pamella de Leon

Startup Section Editor, Entrepreneur Middle East

Pamella de Leon is the Startup Section Editor at Entrepreneur Middle East. She is keen on the MENA region’s entrepreneurship potential, with a specific interest to support enterprises and individuals creating an impact.

Leadership

Emirates Inks Partnership With HiDubai To Strengthen Dubai's SME Ecosystem

Under this agreement, Emirates will reach out to and engage with over 180,000 SMEs on the HiDubai platform.

Entrepreneurs

Here Are The 20 Startups Selected For The Eighth Cohort Of The MBRIF Innovation Accelerator Program

The final participants of the year-long program were selected from over 200 applicants from across 35 countries.

Side Hustle

The Side Hustle He Started in His College Apartment Turned Into a $70,000-a-Month Income Stream — Then Earned Nearly $2 Million Last Year

Kyle Morrand and his college roommates loved playing retro video games — and the pastime would help launch his career.

Marketing

5 Small Business Marketing Tactics to See Results This Quarter

Five quick and effective small business marketing strategies that can yield both short-term results and long-term success.

Social Media

A 3-Step Beginner's Guide to Social-Media Marketing

So you can create a Facebook post -- congratulations! However, that isn't social-media marketing.

Leadership

Steve Jobs' 3 Public Speaking Power Moves Remain Just as Relevant Today, 13 Years After His Final Keynote at the Apple Developers Conference

The co-founder and former CEO of Apple knew how to get big ideas across to consumers and investors.