CASE DISCUSS
STEP 2: ANSWER THE FOLLOWING DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
1) What are the ways that Inditex ensures that ‘fast Fashion” is truly fast?
2) What are the important attributes of a “fast fashion” retailer to consumers? To store managers??
3) Briefly describe two opportunities for continued growth during the next five years for Zara’s parent. Inditex, SA.?
4) Pick one of the two opportunities and outline the advantages and disadvantages of pursuing it.
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CIRCA 2008
ARTEIXO, Spain—Zara stores have set the pace for retailers around
the world in making and shipping trendy clothing. Now Pablo Isla,
chief executive of parent company Inditex, SA, says Zara needs
to speed up. As rivals catch up, Mr. Isla is attempting one of the
fastest global expansions the fashion world has ever seen, opening
hundreds of new stores and entering new markets. To do that, as
an economic downturn threatens sales, Inditex is changing the sys-
tems that have driven its success at Zara and its other store brands,
to save time and money. Among the innovations, it is introducing
new methods to enable store managers to order and display mer-
chandise faster and adding cargo routes for shipping goods. “There
has been a clear change of mentality in the company,” Mr. Isla, a
former tobacco executive who arrived at Inditex in 2005, said in an
interview at the company’s headquarters here.
The world’s second largest clothing retailer by sales after Gap
Inc., Inditex is responding to a predicament shared by other com-
panies that come up with game-changing formulas: Eventually com-
petitors catch up, forcing the pioneers to do even better to keep their
edge. Low-cost carrier Southwest Airlines Co. is making big changes
to fend off rivals that have copied its efficient operating model.
Inventory-control methods at Walmart Stores Inc. are being mim-
icked around the world, and Google Inc. is updating its search
engine to keep users loyal.
The consumer slowdown is adding pressure. Inditex shares have
fallen nearly 24 percent in the last 12 months, in large part because
investors are worried about an economic downturn in Spain, where
Inditex generates over a third of its $12 billion in annual sales.
The company is pressing ahead with its expansion plans even as
consumers are slowing down. In the U.S., retailers had their worst
monthly sales results in nearly five years in January, and some
chains are planning to close stores and cut jobs. U.K. retailer Marks
& Spencer PLC recently reported its worst quarterly sales perfor-
mance in two years, and warned the pain could extend into 2009.
The industry is watching the company’s logistical makeover.
Though it sells inexpensive trendy clothing—“fast fashion” in indus-
try parlance—Zara has been so successful in luring high- paying
customers that luxury fashion brands such as Gucci, Burberry, and
Louis Vuitton have overhauled their own practices to send new
fashions to stores more frequently. “They’re a fantastic case study
in terms of how they manage to get product to their stores so fast,”
Stacey Cartwright, chief financial officer of Burberry Group PLC,
says of Zara. “We are mindful of their techniques.”
In recent years, competitors across the globe have adopted Zara’s
methods. Italy’s Benetton Group SpA now replenishes stores up
to once a week. Los Angeles–based Forever 21 Inc. and Japanese
apparel giant Fast Retailing Co., owner of the Uniqlo chain, can get
new looks to their stores within six weeks. Even outdoor clothing
maker Patagonia Inc. has doubled the number of new styles it offers
every year. As the popularity of cheap-and-chic chains has zoomed,
Zara’s rivals Hennes & Mauritz AB of Sweden and Mango of Spain
also have become fixtures on U.S. shopping streets.
In addition to Zara, which makes up 60 percent of its busi-
ness, Inditex owns seven smaller store brands, including the
more-upscale Massimo Dutti and the youth-oriented Bershka. In
the last 12 months Inditex added 560 stores, including entering
new markets in Croatia, Colombia, Guatemala, and Oman, to reach
3,691 stores in 68 countries. It plans expansion of a similar scope
over the next year.
The first Zara store opened in 1975 in La Coruña, a port town
near Arteixo in a remote corner of northern Spain. Its two key
traits were an eye for customer tastes and a production process
that started with the final price and worked backward to the most-
efficient production. In the mid-1980s, local business-school profes-
sor José Maria Castellano, a technophile, joined Inditex as right-
hand man to founder Amancio Ortega Gaona, and the company
became a world-class logistical outfit, peddling “fast fashion.” The
first foreign store, in Portugal, opened in 1989, followed by New
York. In 2001, Mr. Ortega took Inditex public and its stores are now
on prime shopping streets around the world.
Stores are stocked with new designs twice a week. Collections
are small and often sell out, creating an air of exclusivity and cut-
ting down on the need for markdowns. The company ships clothes
straight from the factory to stores. Unlike competitors who manu-
facture most of their wares in Asia, Inditex makes two-thirds of its
goods in Spain and nearby countries such as Portugal, Morocco,
and Turkey. The retailer says the higher labor costs are offset by the
flexibility of having production close to its warehouses and distribu-
tion centers, which are all in Spain.
At “the Cube,” as employees call their futuristic-looking head-
quarters outside La Coruña, sales managers sit at a long row of
computers, monitoring sales at every store around the world. When
a garment sells well—or flops—they quickly tell designers sitting
nearby to whip up fresh designs. In the basement, stylists decide
store layouts and window displays. One room is built like a shop-
ping street, its walls lined with lit and decorated store windows that
dictate how storefronts will look from New York’s Fifth Avenue
to London’s Regent Street. Every two weeks, new decorations are
photographed and e-mailed to stores to replicate.
To speed up new store openings, Mr. Isla needed to cut start-up
costs. Inditex now avoids store openings in slow months such as
August. In the past, stores opened year-round, accruing costs from the
first day even if sales took longer to build. Mr. Isla’s goal for Inditex is
to reverse a trend of costs growing faster than sales. It met that target
in the first half ended July 31, 2007, when costs grew 16 percent over
the same period the previous year, while sales increased 19 percent.
In another move to cut costs, Mr. Isla installed software in
store computers to schedule staff based on sales volume at differ-
ent times. As a result, more salespeople work at peak times such
as lunchtime or the early evening. Inditex says the more flexible
schedules shaved 2 percent off the hours staff work. Alarm tags
are now attached to garments at the factories. In the past, at a big
Zara location such as the four-floor store on Madrid’s Alberto
Aguilera shopping street, 10 people spent an average of 12 hours a
week putting on the tags. Now, Inditex estimates, those salespeople
spend 3 percent more time serving customers. “In the past, a ship-
ment would come in the morning, and the staff wouldn’t have it
unpacked till noon. They were just giving away three hours of prime
selling time,” Mr. Isla says.
Continued Growth for Zara and InditexCASE 3-4
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Shipping papers now label the newest collections “NEWC.”
Those pieces are often rushed to the shop floor on plastic shipping
hangers and only later switched to Zara’s customary light wood
hangers. Zara regulars know to look for the black plastic hangers
with the latest looks, says Dilip Patel, U.K. commercial director
for Inditex. Store managers also use new hand-held computers that
show how garments rank by sales, so clerks can reorder best-sellers
in less than an hour—a process that previously took about three
hours. These orders arrive, together with new pieces, two days later.
Also, each of the company’s various store brands shipped mer-
chandise separately in the past, concerned that mixing even behind
the scenes could dilute their images. Combining the brands into
larger volumes has allowed Mr. Isla to launch twice-weekly air ship-
ments with Air France Cargo–KLM Cargo. Planes from Zaragoza,
Spain, land in Bahrain with goods for Inditex stores in the Middle
East, fly on to Asia, and return to Spain with raw materials and
half-finished clothes. The company also started new shipments
with Emirates Airline.
Despite Mr. Isla’s efficiency gains, some experts caution that
Zara faces challenges it is not addressing. Keeping a large amount
of production close to home, some warn, loses its benefits when a
growing number of stores are far away. “The efficiency of the sup-
ply chain is coming under more pressure the farther abroad they
go,” says Nirmalya Kumar, a professor at London Business School.
For now, the company makes up for some of the cost by charg-
ing more for goods sold overseas. In the U.S., for instance, Zara
clothes cost up to 40 percent more than they do in Spain. However,
that could lead to an inconsistent brand image, a risky strategy in
a globalizing world, some critics warn. Mr. Isla says that when he
joined the company, he considered a logistics center in Asia, where
the company produces around a third of its goods, but decided it
would only make sense if Zara had more stores in the region. He
says the group’s current logistics capacity will suffice until 2013.
CIRCA 2009
Inditex SA, Europe’s biggest fashion retailer by revenue, said Wednes-
day it plans a major push online for its flagship Zara-brand, as it
reported a 7.6 percent decline in net profit for the fiscal first half.
Inditex, which also owns the Massimo Dutti, Pull and Bear, and
Bershka brands, is known for savvy use of information technology
to tightly control production and inventories. It collects data from
its 4,430 stores in 73 countries to detect trends and tweaks products
based on consumer tastes.
Compared with its main competitor, Sweden’s Hennes & Mau-
ritz AB, however, Inditex is a bit of a latecomer to the Internet. It
started operating an online store for furnishing brand Zara Home
in 2007, but had so far shied away from the web for Zara cloth-
ing because of the complexity of managing and selling its fast-
changing collections online. So it caught many by surprise when it
said Wednesday that it will launch online sales next year for Zara’s
Autumn/Winter 2010 collection. “There had been some concern
that Inditex was falling behind competitors on e-commerce,” said
Anne Critchlow, an analyst at Société Générale.
Initially, the company plans to launch the online store www
.zara.com in Spain, France, Germany, Italy, the U.K., and Portu-
gal. Later, it will roll it out in all of Zara’s remaining markets. In
the medium term, Inditex also may launch its other six formats
online, said Chief Executive Pablo Isla. “The Internet is becoming a
more and more relevant channel, so it would be logical to continue
expanding online with the other formats,” he said. Neither H&M
nor Inditex discloses what proportion of sales comes from their
online outfits. U.S. rival Gap Inc. generated about 8 percent of its
Gap-branded sales in the U.S. on the web.
For the first half ended July 31, Inditex’s net profit dropped
to €375 million ($550.4 million) from €406 million a year earlier,
while sales were up 6.6 percent at €4.86 billion. Sales in stores
open at least a year, however, shrank by an annual 2 percent in the
fiscal first half, compared with a decline of .7 percent in the sec-
ond half, and operating costs grew 8 percent as Inditex continued
to expand its empire. The retailer opened 166 new stores in the
first half, down from 249 a year earlier. Inditex’s gross margin fell
to 55.3 percent of sales from 56.4 percent a year earlier. Analysts
attributed the decline to a stronger dollar, which is making it more
costly to source materials, and pricing pressures in the company’s
main market, Spain.
The retailer gave a resilient trading outlook, saying sales in the
first weeks of its fiscal third quarter were up 9 percent when strip-
ping out currency fluctuation, the same growth rate as in the first
half. Inditex’s much smaller U.K. rival, Next PLC, which launched
online sales in 1998, meanwhile, posted a 6.9 percent increase
in first-half net profit. Cost savings helped push net profit up to
£131.8 million ($217.5 million) from £123.3 million a year earlier,
as revenue inched up to £1.51 billion from £1.5 billion.
Next, which like Inditex sells clothes and home wares, warned,
however, that like-for-like retail sales are likely to decline between
3.5 percent and 6.5 percent in the second half. At Directory, its
catalogue and online-shopping business, which generates about
40 percent of operating profit, Next said it expects sales to rise by
up to 2 percent. The retailer nevertheless raised its full-year fore-
cast, saying it now expects to deliver pretax profit “close” to last
year’s £429 million, subject to its sales performance in the fourth
quarter, which includes Christmas.
CIRCA 2010
Spanish fashion retailer Inditex SA launched its Zara online store
in the United States in the fall of 2011, seeking to widen its clien-
tele beyond the big cities where it currently operates, chief execu-
tive Pablo Isla said. Early indications for the U.S. were good: A
Zara app for Apple Inc.’s cell phone, the iPhone, was downloaded
by more prospective clients in the U.S. than in any other market,
Isla said.
Speaking to Dow Jones Newswires after the presentation of
Inditex’s 2009 results, Isla said that more than a million iPhone
users downloaded the app since it was first released in December
of that year. “It’s a market where Internet sales are very important,
and it’s a way of accessing all those clients that are interested in
Zara,” said Isla. The app allows shoppers to check out what’s new
in the Zara collection, and to find the nearest shop.
Inditex, based in La Coruña, northwestern Spain, that year
soared past Gap Inc. to become the most-selling fashion retailer
in the world, with more than 4,600 stores. Zara, which is present
in 76 countries, rolled out an online store first later that year in six
European countries, and then progressively added the remaining
countries where Zara operates. Inditex entered the United States
early, in 1994, but expanded rather slowly, focusing store openings
in large cities like New York, Miami, and Los Angeles.
“We have to prioritize at every step, and ours are twofold: grow-
ing in Europe and in Asia,” Isla said. Inditex is opening almost
all of its new stores outside its Spanish home market, which cur-
rently accounted for 31.8 percent of group sales in 2011. The weight
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of Spain was expected to drop to 20 percent of total sales, while
Europe, excluding Spain, was expected to rise to 50 percent and
Asia, 20 percent. The remaining 10 percent would come from the
Americas.
CIRCA 2018
In 2018, Spain-based Zara holds the position of the world’s larg-
est clothing retailer. Owned by Inditex, its strategy is being hailed
as one to bring people into stores and into the brand, rather than
pushing clothing and branding out to the customer, as rival H&M is
known for. It is introducing an augmented reality experience in its
stores. Shoppers can use their mobile phones to see models wear-
ing selected fashions when they click on sensors in the store or dis-
played on AR-enabled shop windows. It has been initially launched
in 120 stores worldwide; such technology is irresistible “digital-
honey” to draw millennials into the store and shop.
In studying these two oft-compared brands, the essential differ-
ences revolve around their overall approach to marketing. H&M
still is fixed on the old 4Ps of marketing model—Product, Price, Pro-
motion and Place—where the company and the brand is the focus.
Zara has replaced the traditional four Ps of marketing with what
it calls the four Es—Experience replaces Product; Exchange is the
new Price; Evangelism is the new Promotion; and Every Place is
the new Place—that puts the customer at the center. “While Zara
is an excellent purveyor of product, it also capitalizes on the store
experience by continuously offering reasons for customers to visit
the stores and catch the hottest trends at affordable prices,” accord-
ing to Shelley E. Kohan, assistant professor at Fashion Institute of
Technology.
The company’s store location strategy is another aspect of its
success. Zara currently operates in 2,213 stores across 93 markets
and 39 online markets. The flagship locations are located in the
most critical markets that appeal to their most loyal shopper. “Zara
has the courage to continually strengthen their portfolio of stores
by closing unprofitable ones, opening new markets, and expanding
sister brands in existing markets (Zara Home, Massimo Dutti),”
Kohan says.
QUESTIONS
1. What are the ways that Inditex ensures that “fast fashion” is
truly fast?
2. What are the important attributes of a “fast fashion” retailer
to customers? To store managers?
3. Why would a retailer introduce its online store country-
by-country? Why was Inditex slow to embrace online sales
when it is so tech-savvy in other ways?
4. Briefly describe five opportunities for continued growth
during the next five years for Zara’s parent, Inditex SA.
5. Pick one of the five opportunities and outline the advan-
tages and disadvantages of pursuing it.
6. Take a look at its new U.S. website. What is good and what
is bad about it?
Sources: Cecilie Rohwedder, “Pace-Setting Zara Seeks More Speed to Fight Its Rising
Cheap-Chic Rivals,” The Wall Street Journal, February 20, 2009, online; Christopher
Bjork, “Zara Is to Get Big Online Push,” The Wall Street Journal, September 17, 2009,
online; Christopher Bjork, “Zara Has Online Focus for U.S. Expansion, Inditex CEO
Says,” Dow Jones Newswires, March 17, 2010; Armorel Kenna, “Zara Plays Catch-Up
with Online Shoppers,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek, August 29, 2011, pp. 24–25; Pamela
N. Danziger, “Why Zara Succeeds: It Focuses On Pulling People In, Not Pushing
Product Out,” Forbes, April 23, 2018.
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