He called the shop Zara.
The lesson Ortega learned from his early scare on demand-supply gap was this: To be successful – in his words,
“you need to have five fingers touching the factory and five touching the customer”
Simply put, it means: Control what happens to your product until the customer buys it. In these times, when supply chain flexibility is one of the hottest topics of discussion, I consider this example as a lesson on what goes a long way into building a robust and customer responsive supply chain for the future.
Story credits: Zillion Consulting
Photo credits: Procurify.com
Centralized order fulfillment is what keeps the company a market
leader in the fast-fashion industry, enabling it to boast its agile supply
chain.
The quick response time to the fashion trends comes from
their own efficient, vertically integrated supply chain. Unlike the other
retailers who have their manufacturing bases in Asia, Zara keeps its
outsourcing vendors closely to its HQ in Spain. Since the production facilities
are closer, shipments happen often and in smaller batches. This allows them to
experiment on fashion trends liberally. Even if a fashion trend didn't pick-up,
they would still have a low obsolescence stock to get rid of. Unsold items for
Zara accounts for 10% of the total stock compared to an industry average of
17%-20%.
85% of Zara products are sold at full price compared to the
industry average of 60%. Normally, the margin of a clothing company will be
high (4-13%) but the net profit will be very low. Where does the money go, you
ask?
Usually during the production planning, companies consider
the balance between customer demand and the number of goods they produce. But
no company can perfectly predict the market demand. If the prediction is too
optimistic, there will be excess supply that will be sold at a discount. If the
prediction is too pessimistic, there will be opportunity costs. Every company
needs to balance these two outcomes. Most companies produce more than the
market needs and then offer products at a discount later.
But not, Zara.
Zara always produces in small batches and keeps inventory low. It continually enters new design cycles and even has two new arrivals within one-week, luring customers to visit its stores more often and reducing the difference between predicted and real demand. This is a pull model from the consumer rather than pushing the product onto them. Consumers usually visit average high street stores around 4 times a year: This number is a staggering 17 times for Zara.
Zara saves on discounts and on
advertising – which is only 0.3% of its total sales and lower than the industry
average of 3-4% – to spend on those frequent shipments and to pay its European
workers with high labor costs compared to the Asian labor market.
Not only in its logistics process, but the responsiveness is also seen in its designing process as well. Each of Zara’s outlets operates like feedback portals and communicate what’s worn and left out, what trends are selling, what trends are emerging to the commercial team. They source limited varieties of fabric materials and don’t dye them until they know the fashion colors for the specific period. Designers then churn out cat copies of runway designs and they are fast-tracked within 10-15 days to the racks.
But Zara has posted its first-ever loss as a public company.
· 1200 of 7200 stores will close
permanently. Growing profits per store is now the focus so that the ROI is
improved.
· $ 1B will be invested in e-com
growth and $ 1.7B in stores for better integration with their websites. This signifies the importance of the right
investments.
· Through flexible purchasing, Zara
was able to reduce its inventory by 10% in the current quarter.
Zara has physical stores in 96 Markets while it has online stores in 202 markets. Despite this, the online sales account for only 14% of its total revenue. 60% of this comes from the EU and just 22% from Asia. The total online sales target is set to grow at 25% by 2022.
Reactivity and flexibility for its
store business worked well with centralized decision making, warehouse, and
major factories located around each other. With the shift to online, let's see
what the future holds in-store for Zara 😉
Sources for the stats:
·
The
secret of zaras success a culture of customer co-creation
·
Zara
owner to close up-to 1200 fashion stores around the world
Interesting read about the business model of Zara and its supply chain. The Lock down is definitely making things worse as people have to stay home. Zara is the kind of brand where people buy and where them while they go outside. As people do not go outside anymore normally, buying luxury clothing like Zara wouldn't make sense as we can only wear it at home. Unless Lockdown is over all over the country or if Zara changes its focus on providing casual home wear clothes, sales in Zara will be low till the period.
ReplyDeleteTrue. But even before COVID-19 disrupted our lives, there was a slow shift in the consumer behavior towards slow and sustainable fashion. Now that people will be spending less because of this crisis, they will also be more selective towards what they are paying for - whether they are purchasing ethical goods or not. I also came across this article while researching for this topic, have a look at it too if you are interested :)
ReplyDeletehttps://www.businessinsider.in/retail/millennials-attitudes-towards-clothing-ownership-are-bringing-about-a-major-change-in-the-fashion-industry/articleshow/69507669.cms