Today, David’s Bridal is as much an AI-powered tech company as it is a retailer of wedding apparel and accessories.
“The wedding process is, of course, more than just the dress,” says Elina Vilk, president and chief business officer of David’s Bridal, on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks.
Around 90% of brides in the US interact with David’s Bridal at some point as they plan their wedding, whether that’s through its website, on a social platform or in one of its roughly 200 store locations.
That’s a first-party relationship with the vast majority of US brides-to-be.
To take better advantage of this unique position in the market, David’s Bridal launched a comprehensive digital transformation strategy earlier this year that it refers to as “Aisle to Algorithm.”
The initiative involves a big investment in AI and personalized digital experiences that support brides through every stage of the wedding planning journey – including Pearl Planner, a recently released agentic wedding planning platform that automates more than 300 tasks, provides personalized recommendations and connects couples with vendors.
The only thing it doesn’t do is “deal with your mother-in-law,” jokes Vilk, who describes Pearl Planner as “the OpenTable for weddings.”
David’s Bridal makes money from its planning platform, which is free for users, by charging vendors a subscription fee.
“[It’s] like a SaaS business, but they’re getting a bride; it’s not like a random ad they’re putting out there,” Vilk says. “[Vendors] are being surfaced at the exact moment she needs them … [They’re] surfaced based on the milestone, the task, and it’s tailored and customized to the bride in her specific journey.”
Also in this episode: Why David’s Bridal launched its own retail media network (because of course it did), how the brand thinks about customer loyalty even after the wedding party is over and staying relevant amid changing tastes and a rapidly evolving retail landscape.