Dior Taps Miu Miu CEO Benedetta Petrruzzo as Managing Director

LVMH has snapped up one of the luxury industry’s fastest-rising stars, tapping Miu Miu chief executive Benedetta Petruzzo to be managing director of Christian Dior Couture, effective October 15.

Petruzzo will report to Dior CEO Delphine Arnault in the key role, interfacing with the brand’s executive committee, design studios, vast communications infrastructure and commercial teams worldwide. “Benedetta’s talent and leadership will be major assets in the continued development of Dior’s activities and its international influence,” Arnault said in a statement.

Petruzzo has overseen a period of explosive growth for Prada-owned Miu Miu since being named CEO of the label in 2020. The brand’s revenues nearly doubled in the first half of 2024 on top of an eye-popping annual growth rate of 58 percent last year. Growth has been powered by a mix of viral products (think cut-off micro miniskirts and crystal-encrusted briefs) and ultra-wearable riffs on collegiate wardrobe staples, from “biker boots to ballerinas,” Petruzzo told BoF in a recent interview.

The Italian executive succeeds Dior’s current managing director, Charles Delapalme, who will “take on important new responsibilities within the LVMH Group” to be announced at a later date, Dior said.

Petruzzo arrives at Dior as it seeks to deliver a soft landing after a period of rapid growth under designer Maria Grazia Chiuri and former CEO Pietro Beccari (who has sinced moved over to LVMH stablemate Louis Vuitton). With nearly €10 billion in annual revenues, Dior is able to leverage unprecedented scale and visibility as it navigates challenges including a slower luxury market, an inquiry by Italian authorities into manufacturing practices and slowing excitement around buzzy items like the Book tote and menswear chief Kim Jones’ sneaker collabs.

LVMH’s move to recruit a key executive from smaller rival Prada Group shows how luxury players find themselves competing head-to-head amid stagnation in the industry’s top line. In previous slowdowns, the French group has leaned on its unmatched financial fire-power to keep snapping up brands, talent, real estate — and ultimately market share.

Learn more:

The Strategy Behind Miu Miu’s Explosive Growth

How did Miu Miu grow by 58 percent last year? CEO Benedetta Petruzzo breaks down the plan that has powered eye-popping acceleration in a slowing luxury market.

Disclosure: LVMH is part of a group of investors who, together, hold a minority interest in The Business of Fashion. All investors have signed shareholders’ documentation guaranteeing BoF’s complete editorial independence.

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