Louvet most recently led the global beauty business for Procter & Gamble.

(Bloomberg)—Ralph Lauren Corp. hired Patrice Louvet as its next chief executive officer, tasking a Procter & Gamble Co. veteran with leading a difficult turnaround at the preppy apparel brand.

Patrice Louvet

Patrice Louvet

Louvet will take the reins on July 17 and join the board, the company said on Wednesday. The CEO will report to the fashion house’s eponymous founder and executive chairman, suggesting that the 77-year-old Ralph Lauren will maintain a key role at the business.

The previous CEO, Stefan Larsson, had disagreed with the founder over creative decisions. That hampered efforts to turn around a business that’s struggling with heavy discounting and sliding sales. Ralph Lauren signaled that Louvet’s tenure may have a more cooperative spirit, praising Louvet’s “collaborative working style.”

“Finding the right partner to work with me to take us forward in our evolution has been my primary focus over the last several months,” Lauren said in a statement.

advertisement

Ralph Lauren is No. 64 in the Internet Retailer 2017 Top 500 with Internet Retailer-estimated 2016 web sales of $809.9 million, down 9.0% from $890.0 million in 2015, according to Top500Guide.com.

In choosing Louvet, the company is turning to a French native who spent more than 25 years at P&G, the world’s largest consumer-products maker. He most recently ran the global beauty business, a division with $11.5 billion in sales. P&G offloaded a large swath of its beauty business to Coty Inc. last year in a $12.5 billion deal.

Louvet previously oversaw P&G’s Gillette lineup and its prestige division, which included fashion brands such as Gucci and Hugo Boss. Before joining P&G in 1989, Louvet spent 1 1/2 years as an officer in the French Navy.

advertisement

‘Track record’

The tepid reception could mean that “investors expected someone with a slightly different professional background, and more meaningful track record in apparel and the fashion industry,” said Chen Grazutis, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “That doesn’t mean he can’t be very successful in this role.”

Ralph Lauren has been seeking a new CEO since the abrupt announcement in February that Larsson was leaving. Chief financial officer Jane Nielsen served as interim chief during the search.

Louvet is getting a big raise after his P&G job. He’ll collect a $1.25 million annual salary, according to a regulatory filing. Louvet also is eligible for a yearly target bonus of $3.75 million and equity grants worth $7.5 million, both depending on company performance.

advertisement

Pay bump

The target package is more than twice as high as what he received in his last full year at P&G.

Louvet will also get sign-on awards worth about $12.6 million this year, including $3.38 million in cash. The remainder comes in shares, of which $6.59 million vest if the company achieves certain financial goals and $2.6 million vest after five years regardless of performance. His contract also gives him a $30,000 allowance to pay for his children’s schooling and six weeks of vacation.

Louvet’s compensation resembles that of his predecessor. Larsson also had a $12.5 million annual target compensation and got about $11.9 million in sign-on awards, including cash and stock linked to performance goals and continued service.

Ralph Lauren’s last CEO had taken over from the founder in November 2015 and proceeded to shake up management ranks, cut jobs and shutter stores. Larsson had previously worked at H&M, No. 77 in the Internet Retailer 2016 Europe 500, and Old Navy (part of Gap Inc., No. 24 in the Top 500), chains known for quickly responding to trends and delivering apparel that’s meant to be both chic and cheap. Ralph Lauren, in contrast, has focused on designs that are created with less input from the outside world.

Favorite

advertisement