Retail Legend Mickey Drexler: From Building Gap & Old Navy to Running Alex Mill Like a Startup

Retail Legend Mickey Drexler: From Building Gap & Old Navy to Running Alex Mill Like a Startup

Retail icon Mickey Drexler doesn't do retirement. At 80, the man who built Gap into a $14 billion empire, founded Old Navy, and revitalized J.Crew is running Alex Mill like a scrappy startup, and loving it. "I love what I do more now," Drexler says. "I don't have someone breathing down my neck." This is Mickey unfiltered: no corporate boards, no bureaucracy, no focus groups. Just 30 team members, two stores, and a merchant's eye as sharp as when he reinvented Ann Taylor in the 1980s.


In this episode of The Retail Pilot, Ken goes behind the scenes at Alex Mill to explore how Mickey operates with startup intimacy and five decades of wisdom. They walk through design boards covered in vintage scarves, discuss why "a great store looks like it was bought by one person," and unpack Mickey's weekend update ritual - clipping magazines, photographing street style, bringing visual inspiration to the team every Monday.


In this episode you'll learn:

  • Why Mickey runs Alex Mill with only 30 people and why smallness is an advantage

  • The "white space" strategy: How Mickey identified opportunities at Ann Taylor, Gap, and Alex Mill

  • Mickey's weekend update: How he curates inspiration from magazines, street style, and everyday observations

  • The curation philosophy: Why less is more and how to edit 32 prints down to 3-5

  • "If you know, you know": Mickey's brand-right approach and why focus groups are the enemy

  • Why AI will never pick colors and what technology can't replace in retail

  • Biggest career mistakes: Hiring wrong executives, opening too many stores, expanding internationally

  • How Mickey got fired from Gap with no notice after building $14B - and what he wishes he'd done

  • Why wholesale helped Alex Mill reach minimums with only two stores

  • The tension between designers (what's next) and merchants (what's been) - and how to bridge it


Don’t forget to subscribe to The Retail Pilot podcast for more conversations with retail industry leaders and visionaries shaping the future of commerce.

If you missed our last episode, where Nate Checketts (Rhone CEO) on why wholesale saved his brand, how women's beat 8 years of men's in 2, and building mental fitness into brand DNA, be sure to tune in.

Connect with Ken:
-Follow Ken Pilot Ventures on LinkedIn, Instagram, and YouTube.

See Mickey Live: Ken and Mickey will be together on stage at Commerce Next on June 24th - join them for an unfiltered conversation about the craft of retail.


Learn More About Alex Mill:



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