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Starting a fashion brand can feel surprisingly lonely in the beginning, especially when you don't feel like you're part of the club - ahem - the fashion insiders.



You’ve got this idea that keeps following you around in the back of your mind, you’re constantly saving inspiration, researching suppliers, watching brand founders online, and trying to piece together how all of this works, but half the time it feels like everyone else somehow knows something you don’t.

And the reality is, fashion can feel like a very closed industry when you’re first trying to get into it. Funnily enough this industry is the only one I've ever known and I didn't appreciate that startups feel like outsiders until I started working with them. That's when I decided I wanted to lift the velvet rope on the fashion industry and let the outsiders in.


A lot of people looking in from the outside assume you either need a fashion degree, industry contacts, loads of money, or years of experience before you’re “allowed” to take yourself seriously as a founder. What I’ve actually seen over the last 20 years working in fashion, and especially over the last decade mentoring startup founders, is that most people don’t lack ideas or ambition. They lack access. Access to the right information, access to guidance, access to understanding how the industry actually works behind the scenes.


Which is exactly why I created these free resources in the first place.

Not because I think launching a fashion brand is easy, and definitely not because I believe you should wing your way through it with a Canva logo and a dream, but because I know how overwhelming it can feel when you’re serious about your idea and you don’t know where to begin.

Over the years, I kept seeing the same pattern. Founders spending months researching but never really moving forward because every piece of information online seemed disconnected from the next. One person tells you to find a manufacturer. Another tells you to build an audience first. Someone else is shouting about branding, while TikTok is convincing you that you can launch a six-figure clothing brand in three weeks from your bedroom.


Meanwhile, you’re sitting there wondering what actually matters, what order to do things in, and whether you’re already making mistakes before you’ve even started.

So if that sounds familiar, here are the free resources I’d recommend starting with.


Your Fashion Brand Launch Blueprint


This is probably the best starting point if your brain currently feels like fifty tabs are open at once.

One of the biggest misconceptions around starting a clothing brand is that people think they need more motivation, when most of the time what they actually need is structure. Because once you understand the stages involved in launching a brand properly, everything starts to feel far less chaotic.

The Blueprint was designed to help you understand the bigger picture. Not just “how to start a fashion brand” in theory, but the actual moving parts involved behind the scenes, from developing products and understanding sampling, through to branding, launch preparation, production, pricing, content, and building an audience around your idea.


What tends to happen with first-time founders is they jump straight to the exciting bits. Naming the brand, designing a logo, setting up Instagram, contacting factories before they’ve fully developed the collection. And while all of those things matter, there’s a reason so many brands end up overwhelmed halfway through the process.

The foundations were never built properly in the first place.

That’s why this resource exists. To help you slow down slightly, understand the process, and start making decisions with more clarity and confidence rather than constantly second-guessing yourself.



The Fashion Founder Quiz

This one came from years of conversations with people who kept saying things like:

“I don’t know if I’m ready yet.”“I feel like I should know more before I start.”“I’ve been researching for ages but still don’t feel confident.”

And usually, once we started talking properly, the issue wasn’t that they weren’t capable of launching a fashion brand. It was that they were stuck somewhere between learning and doing.

They’d consumed loads of information but still didn’t fully understand where they personally fitted into the process.

The quiz helps you identify where you’re currently at as a founder, where your strengths already are, and where your biggest gaps might be right now. Because for some people, the missing piece is confidence. For others, it’s understanding production. For others, it’s structure, accountability, or simply having someone explain the industry in a way that actually makes sense.

I think one of the reasons people stay stuck for so long is because fashion often gets presented in extremes. Either it’s portrayed as impossibly elite and inaccessible, or it’s made to sound so easy online that people completely underestimate what goes into building a successful brand.

The truth usually sits somewhere in the middle.

You absolutely can launch a fashion brand without industry experience, but you do need to understand how the industry works, and there is a huge difference between casually liking fashion and building a brand that’s commercially thought through.


The Fashion Startup Podcast


The podcast is probably the closest thing to sitting down with me for a proper conversation about the industry.

I started it because I wanted founders to hear more honest discussions about what building a fashion brand actually looks like behind the scenes. Not just polished success stories, but conversations about production, mistakes, mindset, growth, confidence, creative process, pricing, branding, and the realities of trying to build something in a very competitive industry.

For a lot of people entering fashion for the first time, it can feel like everyone else already knows the rules of the game.

And sometimes all you need is to hear somebody explain things in a normal way.

Over the years, I’ve worked with founders from all kinds of backgrounds. Teachers, nurses, personal trainers, corporate professionals, mums returning to work, people running side hustles alongside full-time jobs. Most of them had never worked in fashion before they started their brand journey, which is why I’m so passionate about making the industry feel more accessible and less intimidating for people coming into it from the outside.

That doesn’t mean lowering standards. If anything, it’s the opposite. I want founders to understand the industry properly so they can approach it professionally from the start rather than wasting time, money, and energy trying to figure everything out through trial and error.


The Discovery Call


I know discovery calls can sometimes feel intimidating when you’re new to the industry because people immediately assume they’re walking into a hard sell. I hate pushy sales too, so that’s never been my approach.

The whole point of the discovery call is to give us a chance to talk about your idea properly, where you’re currently at, what stage you’ve reached, and what kind of support might actually make sense for you. Sometimes people come onto the call convinced they need design support when actually what they really need is strategy and direction first. Other people have spent so long researching that they’re more ready than they realise and simply need help moving into the next design phase for tech packs.

And sometimes people just need reassurance that the questions they’re asking are normal.

Because trust me, after working with startup founders for years, there are very few questions I haven’t heard before.

Let's also not forget that it's good to meet online to see if we would be a good fit for each other too - do you like my approach, do we gel, is your project appropriate etc. Fashion has traditionally been quite gatekept, and I’ve always wanted my corner of the industry to feel different from that. I want people entering this world to feel welcomed, informed, and supported while still understanding the realities of what building a brand involves.



My Blog & Emails


A lot of people actually find me through Google because they’re searching very specific questions like:

  • how to start a fashion brand?

  • what is a tech pack?

  • how clothing samples work

  • how much it costs to launch a clothing brand

  • how to find manufacturers


And that’s exactly why I write so much educational content.

Because I know what it’s like when you’re desperately trying to connect the dots and every article online either feels incredibly vague or assumes you already understand fashion terminology.




So whether it’s the blog, emails, podcast, downloads, or free resources, everything I create is designed to help first-time founders understand the industry properly and feel more confident navigating it.

Not perfectly overnight and definitely not by skipping steps, but properly.

Your idea deserves more than sitting in your Notes app for the next five years wondering “what if?” - your idea belongs in fashion and so do you!


And if you’re serious about building something in fashion, you don’t need to have all the answers right now. You just need to start learning how the industry actually works and begin surrounding yourself with the right information, guidance, and support.

That’s exactly what these resources are here for.


See you in the front row,

Michelle Ramsay - The Fashion Expert®



About Michelle Ramsay – The Fashion Expert®

Michelle Ramsay is a fashion designer, startup mentor and fashion consultant with over 20 years of industry experience helping founders bring their fashion brand ideas to life.

Through The Fashion Expert®, she works with first-time and emerging founders on everything from design development and tech packs to manufacturing guidance, launch planning and one-to-one mentoring, helping turn messy ideas and Pinterest boards into real collections ready for production.

After working with more than 400 fashion founders, Michelle has become known for helping people without fashion industry backgrounds navigate the process with clarity, confidence and expert support.

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