Bottega deleted social media and revenue climbed 16%. This is the luxury psychology of restraint.

Bottega Veneta deleted their social media accounts in January 2021.
And no, it wasn’t the intern making a catastrophic mistake.

They didn’t “take a break.” Not “went quiet for a bit.” They didn’t even announce it and flounce off.

They just pressed delete. A million Instagram followers… gone. Facebook, Twitter… poof, gone, vanished. At peak popularity. During Daniel Lee’s golden era. All while the rest of the luxury industry was doubling down on digital.

Industry experts predicted disaster. And Bottega, they got the opposite.

→ Revenue went UP.

Brand heat – the industry’s measure of desirability and buzz – actually increased. Superfans created a fan account that generated more engagement than any corporate social strategy could buy. Press coverage exploded. Their absence became the story.

Meanwhile, you’re posting three times a day, showing up on Stories, explaining your methodology in carousel format, and your DMs are trash can fire of prospects still wanting to “pick your brain for free.”

You’re doing brilliantly with visibility but you’re also excelling at being taken for granted.

Wanna change that… let’s dive into this week’s dispatch.

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The psychology luxury brands understand without even realising

Bottega Veneta didn’t delete social media because they were being antisocial or “done with it”. They understood something personal brands don’t want to admit:

The market respects what you protect.

Every luxury brand operates on this principle.
Gatekeeping is a strategy.

Hermès produces fewer Birkins than they choose to sell. The Row has no logos, barely markets, makes themselves difficult to 1buy from – and charges for a t-shirt. And we want them more.

Bottega didn’t bother chasing algorithms or even having an account, they turned strategic restraint into their loudest flex.

When you’re everywhere – on every platform, jumping on every trend, butting into every conversation – you’re not building authority, or a high-end business. You’re signalling to the market that you’re just another commodityAnd the market will treat you exactly that way.

So what happened with Bottega’s strategy?

  1. It turned absence into an event. The hitting delete generated more press coverage than any PR campaign. Vogue, Forbes, GQ – eeeeveryone covered it. The event became more interesting than the content ever was.
  2. It protected narrative control. They choose what story got told and how, rather than letting social media or its algorithms shape public perception.
  3. It created a gap and fans raced to fill it. When the brand stepped back, superfans stepped up. Third-party validation – the most credible kind – replaced brand-created messaging.
  4. It signalled unreal confidence. Only brands who don’t need validation can afford silence. The restraint itself became proof of value.

It was a gamble and it paid off to the tune of a 16% uplift in revenue. Wut?!

Now, before you run off to IG or the ‘Tok to erase your entire existence, pause for a moment. This was a calculated move, not a knee-jerk reaction to hating social media. I know you’re itching for permission to bail – consider this your reminder that restraint is strategy, not escape. This isn’t your permission slip, okay?

BUT it is a heads-up that you can absolutely market without social media. And yes, I’m segueing into an Ad Break…

What have you been doing in your marketing?

You’re over-explaining your process in long-form LinkedIn posts. Breaking down your methodology step-by-step in free content. Teaching your frameworks in Canva carousels. Showing your entire behind-the-scenes operation like you’re running a reality show.

You call it being available, serving your audience or creating value. The market calls it people-pleasing – and treats you like just another commodity.

  • Over-explaining = uncertainty. Luxury brands never justify their prices. They state them. When you’re explaining why your process works, you’re telegraphing that you’re not sure people will believe you. You’re in proving energy instead of certainty energy. Big difference, babes.
  • Educational dumping = commodity. When you give away the entire methodology, you become the person they learn from – not the person they hire. They’ll thank you, take notes, and go implement it themselves with the help of Chatty G. Or worse, hire someone cheaper to do it.
  • Constant performance = accessibility. Posting every day, responding to every comment, being “on” across five platforms – that’s not authority positioning. That’s burnout availability positioning. And available things aren’t luxury.
  • BTS oversharing = influencer cosplay. You’re not an influencer. You’re a strategist, consultant, expert. A professional. Mining your daily life for content angles depletes the creative energy your clients are actually paying for.
  • Always-on availability = no boundaries. WhatsApp, Instagram DMs, LinkedIn messages, “quick call?” requests – when you’re accessible everywhere, you’re valuable nowhere. Top-tier providers are hard to reach. That’s not inconvenience. That’s positioning.

And it’s part of building a luxury brand.

Is this making you nod your head and make you want to trash your whole business in favour of doing it differently in 2026? Good, it means you’re ready for the high-end shift.

The Uncomfortable Truth… cos I love dropping luxury bath bombs

Right now, you’re not building a top-tier brand by doing more. You’re building an exhausted one.

And the market knows, it can feel it and see it. That’s why they want discovery calls instead of buying. That’s why they ghost after you’ve given them free strategic advice in DM.

Not because your work isn’t valuable. It is! But rather because your behaviour signals it isn’t.

Luxury brands have always known and shown: supply creates perception.

When you’re everywhere, you’re not scarce.
When you’re not scarce, you’re not luxury.
When you’re not luxury, you’re negotiable.

Bottega Veneta understood this instinctively. They made restraint the strategy. They let scarcity do the selling. They protected their energy and their narrative… and revenue followed.

You can do the same thing. But you need to understand what restraint actually means for a personal brand that needs to make sales.


WANT THE FRAMEWORK?

I’ve spent 20 years at the forefront of brand building and buyer psychology. And now, I’ve codified these principles into frameworks personal brands can actually apply. Not “delete social media and hope for the best” – but strategic silence that positions you as top-tier while still running a profitable business.

Four ‘Strategic Silence’ Levers for personal brands who need to make money, not just delete their social media

Carolynne Alexander signature

Founder of The Business of Luxury
Creator of Unignorable: The Luxury Personal Brand Building Programme
Creator of The Quiet Marketing Method™

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Carolynne Alexander translates luxury brand psychology for personal brands. After 20 years building brands and mastering buyer psychology, she teaches top-tier experts & service providers how to become Unignorable – not just visible. Her frameworks turn ‘I hope they notice me’ into ‘they couldn’t ignore me if they tried.’

  1. Ok, The Row did make a boo boo with the secret sale recently.

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