The world wasn’t watching STG’s clothes—they were watching STG’s character.
Within 24 hours, your team forges a triage alliance with humanitarian NGOs, using your sustainability budget to get generators humming and mobile clinics running. Local workshops—usually relegated to side contracts—become lifelines for production.
Drone footage of Gazipur’s flooded alleyways is juxtaposed with candlelit tailoring stations in a Guardian photo-essay. Vogue Paris publishes a piece titled “Elegance in the Time of Emergency.”
Workers feel seen. Influencers repost stories of STG tailors, like Lopa, a single mother stitching garments while housing five co-workers. Production is slow but infused with purpose. A capsule of 12 pieces nears completion, woven with resilience and scarred beauty.
The NGO collaboration even sparks an invitation to a sustainability roundtable hosted by the Ethical Fashion Initiative. Yet Paris is approaching fast, and scattered inventory risks undermining the goodwill if STG cannot deliver when the lights go up. And as attention grows, so do questions about what’s happening inside STG’s wider supply chain.
After your team has reviewed and discussed the outcome, proceed to to the next Critical Juncture by clicking the button on the right.