Victoria Beckham to axe 20 workers in bid to keep fashion brand afloat

Victoria Beckham

Victoria Beckham is set to make 20 staff redundant at her loss-making fashion label to ‘future-proof’ it after the coronavirus pandemic.

The news comes just months after reversing plans to furlough employees.

Mrs Beckham’s company, with its flagship Mayfair store which sells £2,000 dresses and £1,000 handbags, will also halve the number of annual fashion collections after being hard-hit by the Covid-19 crisis.

The blow for the staff come just two months after she came under fire for deciding to furlough 30 members of staff.

Public outcry prompted her to reverse the decision, insisting her team’s welfare ‘means everything to me’.

Mrs Beckham, 46, and her ex-footballer husband David, 45, are estimated to be worth £355million.

A source told The Sun the new redundancies were a bid to save the label.

They said: ‘Victoria is devastated. These are really tough times and no one is exempt from the pandemic’s clutches.

‘This business is her pride and joy. It has never been about money. She hasn’t even paid herself for the past three years.

‘She is doing all she can simply to keep as many people in work as possible.’

The fashion line, which she launched in 2008, made losses of £12.3million in 2018.

A spokesman for Mrs Beckham said: ‘We have built a new strategic vision to streamline and future-proof the brand and, sadly, have to make redundancies to deliver this.’

Mrs Beckham was forced to make an embarrassing U-turn over plans to ask for taxpayer cash to pay dozens of staff during the crisis.

Earlier this year, the former Posh Spice axed plans to furlough around 30 of the company’s 120 staff after facing fierce criticism for drawing on the public purse.

The fashion brand sent letters to 30 members of staff warning them that they were going to be furloughed under the Government’s scheme for two months.

She told The Guardian: ‘We will not now be drawing on the government furlough scheme. At the beginning of the lockdown the shareholders agreed with senior management to furlough a small proportion of staff. At that point we didn’t know how long the lockdown might last or its likely impact on the business.

‘The welfare of my team and our business means everything to me.’

It is understood the firm’s application would have cost taxpayers £150,000.

The firm denied the U-turn was a result of the public backlash and instead insisted the board ‘now believe that with the support of our shareholders, we can navigate through this crisis without drawing from the furlough scheme’.

In June it was reported that Mrs Beckham was loaned a £6.4 million lifeline to save the fashion empire.

The company has allegedly racked up £42 million worth of losses over the past four years.

Victoria was reportedly able to keep control of her ‘flagship Victoria Beckham Ltd’ after being ‘backed by a private investment agreement’.


Paul Jones

Harvard alumni and former New York Times journalist. Editor of Business Matters for over 15 years, the UKs largest business magazine. I am also head of Capital Business Media's automotive division working for clients such as Red Bull Racing, Honda, Aston Martin and Infiniti.

https://bmmagazine.co.uk/

Harvard alumni and former New York Times journalist. Editor of Business Matters for over 15 years, the UKs largest business magazine. I am also head of Capital Business Media's automotive division working for clients such as Red Bull Racing, Honda, Aston Martin and Infiniti.