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Key Takeaways:
• IDD is shifting the jewelry industry from instinct-based to data-backed decision-making to help retailers optimize inventory performance and profitability.
• Amidst retail consolidation, IDD emphasizes long-term partnerships and trust, using market signals to guide product development and inventory management.
• The company provides comprehensive retailer support beyond products, including marketing training, performance insights, and consumer financing through the Iddeal Card.
If the jewelry industry feels unsettled right now, it’s because multiple pressures are colliding at once.
Gold prices continue to shift. Tariffs are complicating sourcing and margins. The debate over lab-grown versus mined diamonds remains unresolved. Even long-established institutions no longer carry the same influence.
It’s not one disruption. There are many, happening at the same time.
For IDD — a New York–based company that has evolved from a loose diamond wholesaler into a major supplier to independent retailers across North America — that convergence isn’t something to wait out.
“Times of uncertainties always create opportunities, and you’ve got to be partnering with the right companies to be able to take advantage of those opportunities,” said Alok Mehta, IDD owner and CEO.
One of the clearest shifts happening at retail is consolidation. Stores are moving away from managing large vendor lists and toward a smaller group of core partners — often just a handful aligned by category.
“We keep hearing more retailers talk about that,” Mehta said. “They want to cut down on the number of vendors they’re working with. They only want to work with a few, basically one for each category.”
That shift raises the stakes. Retailers aren’t just buying products; they’re choosing who they rely on. In this environment, trust becomes a critical asset.

From Instinct to Information
Jewelry has long been an instinct-driven business — what looks right, what feels right, what a buyer believes will sell.
IDD is working to rebalance that equation.
“Our industry is guilty of working a lot with the gut,” Mehta said. “I think gut plays a role, but it should not be the driver. Data should be, and then gut helps you fine-tune that decision.”
Drawing on decades-long relationships with more than 1,500 retail doors, IDD analyzes performance across comparable store profiles — grouping jewelers by demographics, geography, and type to identify what’s working in the market.
“The retailer only sees so much,” Mehta said. “As a global company, the scale of vision changes, the scale of information that we get changes.”
That broader view is central to how the company is positioning itself for what comes next.
“What got us here will not take us forward,” Mehta said. “We can’t keep doing the same things and expect different results, so as a company we continually invest in the future.”
Where that data becomes tangible is on the sales floor.
IDD operates with a model that extends beyond selling collections into actively managing how they perform. Retailers receive ongoing insight into what’s moving and what’s not, along with recommendations to rebalance inventory.
“When a retailer gives us showcase space, we take that responsibility very seriously,” Mehta said. “It’s our job to make that space profitable.”

Building with Intent
That same discipline carries into product development.
Rather than designing first and merchandising later, IDD starts with market signals — trends, retailer feedback, pricing realities, and material demand.
“All of that goes into account, and then we build a collection — once again, it is completely data-backed,” Mehta said.
A recent example is its latest collection, Goldora, developed in response to strong demand for gold-led design. It was launched last year to a strong retailer response, with new designs and expanded marketing initiatives introduced at JCK Las Vegas 2026 to further build on that momentum.
While many suppliers expand their assortments, IDD has taken a more focused approach — choosing categories where it believes it can lead.
That philosophy has translated into strong performance in competitive areas such as diamond basics, anniversary bands, and flexible bangles (Flexie Collection), where IDD is well known as the industry leader.
“It’s less about the market being crowded and more about the strength of the offering,” Mehta said. “When that’s right, competition is less of a factor.”
Despite diamonds remaining core to IDD’s business, Mehta said its design process no longer begins there, but with a different question: “What kind of jewelry would our retailers sell today?”
The shift signals a broader change in how the company approaches the category — treating diamonds as part of a larger merchandising strategy rather than the starting point.

Clarity Over Reaction
Mehta said the same mindset applies more broadly to how retailers operate in the current market.
In this environment, the pressure to react — to pricing swings, to category shifts — is constant.
Top-performing retailers are stepping back and defining direction, IDD finds.
“Jewelers need to have clarity of thought as to where they want to be,” Mehta said. The focus should remain on consistency and choosing partners that align with their own strategy, rather than reacting to short-term shifts.
For Mehta, that commitment extends well beyond product.
The company’s model incorporates a range of tools to help retailers execute, including marketing support and training, merchandising guidance, and ongoing performance insights. The goal is not simply to place the product, but to ensure it sells through.
IDD also offers consumer-facing programs like its Iddeal Card, a financing platform that has grown steadily over more than a decade and is designed to help retailers close sales and build long-term customer relationships.
Equally important to the company is creating space to connect. IDD recently moved to a new office at 545 Fifth Avenue in New York City, designed to reflect its culture and beliefs. In this place, retailers can spend time reviewing business, exploring products, or simply pausing during a busy market visit.
Whether they work with IDD or not, retailers are encouraged to stop in, have a coffee, regroup, and recharge, reflecting the relationship-first culture Mehta described.
“We are part of the same beautiful industry,” he said. “Our arms are open.”
It’s a small but telling detail — one that reinforces how IDD views its role.
The jewelry industry isn’t just changing — it’s asking different questions: what sells, why it sells, and who you trust to help make sense of it.
For IDD, the answer is a model built on data, accountability, and long-term collaboration.
Because in uncertain times, product still matters. But partnership — and what stands behind it — matters a lot more.
The post In an Uncertain Market, IDD Is Betting on Data — and Trust appeared first on Southern Jewelry News.
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