Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de
Sole Survivor - Daniel Rubin

Sole Survivor

How I Built a Global Shoe Brand

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
272 Seiten
2025
Canbury Press (Verlag)
978-1-914487-86-6 (ISBN)
CHF 34,90 inkl. MwSt
Entrepreneur Daniel Rubin reveals how he turned the shoe business he founded, Dune London, into a global footwear and accessories brand.
The memoir of a British shoe dog who set up his own business

‘A thoroughly entertaining read and valuable insight into building a business.’ Touker Suleyman, entrepreneur, BBC Dragons' Den

'Daniel’s journey from factory floors to building a global brand is an extraordinary story of resilience, creativity and determination.' Richard Shetliffe, Chief Executive Officer, The British Footwear Association

How does a small London start-up become one of the best-known names on the British high street? Sole Survivor is the warm, plain-spoken and irresistibly readable story of Daniel Rubin, founder of Dune London, and a life spent building beautiful shoes — and a resilient brand — step by step.

Rubin begins with family roots in the trade and a simple idea: make fashion-forward shoes that ordinary people actually want to wear, at quality you can feel and a price that makes sense. From there the road twists through factory floors in India, Italy, Brazil and the Far East; nerve-jangling bank meetings; first stores that thrill and frighten in equal measure; and the practical realities of growth — cash flow, margins, staffing, leases, suppliers, seasonality, and the sheer grit required to keep going. He is generous with the lessons learned when things went wrong: quality lapses, misjudged buys, complicated acquisitions, and the shock of a world that suddenly shuts its doors.

What sets this book apart is Rubin’s voice — kind, candid and deeply encouraging. He doesn’t preach; he explains. He shows how product, people and process come together: how to choose the right factory and still sleep at night; how to price for value, not vanity; how to brief designers, buy well, and protect margin; how to build a team that shares standards and spirit; and how to treat customers as the partners they truly are. He writes honestly about stress and resilience, about learning to let go, and about the joy of seeing something you imagined walk out of the shop on someone’s feet.

For readers who love business memoir, fashion, retail or simply a very good story, Sole Survivor delivers:



An insider’s view of modern retail. From first samples to national roll-out, Rubin shows how decisions get made — and what they cost.


Practical wisdom you can use tomorrow. Sourcing, negotiating, forecasting, merchandising, marketing, e-commerce, store ops, and international expansion are explained in clear, human terms.


A humane leadership handbook. Hiring, coaching, setting standards, and staying calm when the numbers wobble.


A survival guide for hard times. Banking shocks, supply-chain snarls and the pandemic: what to do when the plan meets reality.



The result is a book that celebrates British entrepreneurship without gloss or jargon. You feel the excitement of opening day, the pride of a well-made collection, and the relief when a tough season turns a corner. You also see the discipline behind the romance: the spreadsheets, the sample rooms, the late-night phone calls to factories, the hundreds of small choices that build a brand.

If you’re a founder or manager, you’ll find ideas to copy and mistakes to avoid. If you’re in buying or merchandising, you’ll recognise the dance between instinct and analysis. If you love shoes — or simply love the high street—you’ll enjoy the craft stories, the travel, and the quiet delight of getting the details right: last shapes, leathers, colours, fit, comfort and finish. And if you’re just looking for a hopeful, human story about meaningful work, this is a companionable, cheering read.

Who is it for?
Entrepreneurs and brand builders. Retail leaders and store teams. Buyers, merchandisers and product developers. Students of business and fashion. Readers who appreciate honest memoir with practical takeaways.

Why you’ll love it
Because it’s not theory. It’s lived experience — told with charm, humility and a craftsman’s eye. Because it treats customers and colleagues with respect. And because it proves that good judgement, good shoes and good people can still win, even when the economy wobbles.

Sole Survivor is, at heart, a celebration of making: making products, making shops, making teams and, finally, making a life you can be proud of. It will leave you better informed about how brands grow — and more hopeful about what determined people can build together.

Reviews

Rubin shares how he built Dune London from its modest beginnings into a global brand, weaving in fascinating history about his family’s shoemaking heritage. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, a shoe enthusiast, or simply someone drawn to tales of resilience, Sole Survivor is a captivating read. – Darla-Jane Gilroy, Associate Dean, University of the Arts London and author of The Little Book of Christian Louboutin

Daniel’s journey from factory floors to building a global brand is an extraordinary story of resilience, creativity and determination. What has always stood out to me is his generosity of spirit. – Richard Shetliffe, Chief Executive Officer, The British Footwear Association

A thoroughly entertaining read and a valuable insight into building a business… [and] how hard work and passion can achieve amazing results. – Touker Suleyman, Chairman of Hawes & Curtis, a serial entrepreneur, and a dragon on BBC’s Dragon’s Den

An open and honest absorbing read of one person’s life story, with some great takeaways on the lessons learned from someone who really has been there and done it – Lord Leigh of Hurley, Senior Partner, Cavendish

The highs and lows of his 50-year career chart the very tapestry of British footwear. What Rubin doesn’t know about the shoe trade isn’t worth knowing. – Jill Geoghegan, Editor, Drapers

Buy the book and start reading

Daniel Rubin is the founder and chairman of Dune London, a global shoe and accessories brand. He has been in the footwear industry for 50 years as manufacturer, importer, wholesaler and retailer. Born into a long line of Jewish cobblers and entrepreneurs dating back to 19th Century Russia, he began his career in shoes working with his father in his women’s fashion shoe factory in east London. Initially he took his father’s advice and resisted the pull of the family footwear business and qualified as a chartered accountant. After a spell in finance and industry he succumbed to the lure of footwear and ran two London factories making women's fashion shoes, before competition from abroad undercut margins. Faced with this threat, he set up an import and wholesale business which he ran for 20 years, designing and sourcing shoes from factories in Asia and Europe and selling them to multiple retailers. In 1992, he founded the fashion footwear and accessories brand, Dune London, which has over 200 concessions and stores around the world, including in the US, Middle East, Europe and Asia. During his long career, he has visited factories in over 20 countries. His phone has thousands of photos of shoes and his cupboard has over 100 pairs. After 50 years in the industry, he can reliably be called a shoe dog. He remains obsessed with shoes, fascinated by the product, some of which he considers to be works of art. He remains involved in the Dune business, in particular in the design and development of the ranges. Sole Survivor: How I Built a Global Shoe Brand is his first non-fiction book.

Introduction, p9

1. Origins, 13

2. Early Years, 21

3. Being an Accountant, 31

4. Becoming a shoemaker, 37

5. Challenges of making shoes, 47

6. Importing from India, 55

7. Next stop Italy and Brazil, 67

8. First trip to the Far East, 77

9. Start Browning and commit to importing, 87

10. Funding the business, 99

11. Far East travels, 105

12. China opens up, 117

13. Production moves to Vietnam, 125

14. Building a team, 131

15. First attempt at retail, 139

16. Dune is born, 145

17. First stores, 151

18. Browning struggles, 159

19. Becoming a multiple retailer, 169

20. Dune grows, 177

21. Going international, 181

22. Buy Shoe Studio and triple in size, 189

23. Banking problems, 199

24. Marketing the brand, 205

25. Building the Dune team, 211

26. Painful lessons, 217

27. International expansion, 225

28. Pandemic pain, 231

29. Smaller and sharper, 243

30. Today, 251

What I have learnt in business, 257

Acknowledgements, 263

Timeline, 267

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 35 color plates
Sprache englisch
Maße 135 x 234 mm
Gewicht 504 g
Themenwelt Literatur Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Beruf / Finanzen / Recht / Wirtschaft Wirtschaft
Technik
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Unternehmensführung / Management
ISBN-10 1-914487-86-9 / 1914487869
ISBN-13 978-1-914487-86-6 / 9781914487866
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
warum wir vor den Tech-Milliardären noch nicht einmal auf dem Mars …

von Douglas Rushkoff

Buch | Softcover (2025)
Suhrkamp (Verlag)
CHF 30,80