JODHPUR Application of Category Management Principles in ZARA Submitted To:- Mr. Sanjay Kumar Submitted By:- Mr. Ritesh Malpani IInd Semnester MFM Introduction:- Category management is a retailing and purchasing concept in which the range of products purchased by a business organization or sold by a retailer is broken down into discrete groups of similar or related products; these groups are known as product categories (examples of grocery categories might be: tinned fish‚ washing
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Normals Differentiation Techniques of Differentiation PART TWO • Techniques of Integration: Indefinite Integrals‚ Integration by Parts‚ Definite Integrals‚ Improper Integrals • • Applications to Engineering Systems Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE) and Partial Differential Equations (PDE) PART THREE • • • Properties and Evaluation of Matrices Introduction to Symmetric and Skew-symmetric Matrices Simple simultaneous Linear Equations 1 PART I DIFFERENTIATION 1.0 1
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THE BCG MATRIX Introduction: * Imagine that you’re reviewing your organization’s products. You need to decide which ones you should focus investment on. * One of the products is doing well financially. However‚ demand has fallen‚ and this trend looks set to continue. * Another product is also doing well‚ but it’s in a new market‚ and needs a lot of cash to support it. Should you continue investing in it? * And another product is barely profitable‚ although its market is growing
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brand identity‚ and its successful business model. I have used Porter’s five forces model (Porter‚ 1995) to analyse the industry and Zara’s strategic position. I have applied the theory of this model and its determinants to my research of Zara; providing evidence to form strong conclusions. Zara faces competition from other market leaders such as Topshop and H&M which all provide customers similar products of ‘disposable’ fashion. The concentration of the market also influences rivalry amongst
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are a lot of big brands and even small small jewelers are present in the market. II. Threat Of Substitutes In Porter’s model‚ substitute products refer to products in other industries. To the economist‚ a threat of substitutes exists when a product’s demand is affected by the price change of a substitute product. In general jewelry falls under the category of apparels‚ all over the world. Additionally‚ in India‚ Jewelry is often looked as the option for investment rather than apparels. There are
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homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jtrangeo The geography of European low-cost airline networks: a contemporary analysis Frédéric Dobruszkes ⇑ Transport Studies Unit‚ School of Geography and the Environment‚ Oxford University‚ South Parks Road‚ Oxford OX1 3QY‚ UK a r t i c l e i n f o Keywords: Low-cost airlines Low-fare airlines No-frills airlines Air transport Airline networks Europe a b s t r a c t Low-cost airlines (LCAs) have become essential actors supplying nationwide and
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Porter’s Five Forces Model versus A Blue Ocean Strategy Porter’s Five Forces Model‚ provided by Michael Porter‚ is an external environmental analysis tool for a specific market. This model emphasizes that in any existing industry‚ there are five competition forces: threat of new entrants‚ power of suppliers‚ power of customers‚ threat of substitute products‚ and intensity of competitive rivalry. In addition‚ these five forces can influence and determine the profitability of the enterprise. Using
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industry or serve the entire market? According to Michael C. Porter‚ the porter’s three (3) generic strategies are very important strategies‚ which can be applied to products and services in any industry or organization regardless of its size. The Three Porter’s Generic Strategies In order to gain competitive advantage‚ Michael Porter developed three generic strategies that a company could use; The Cost Leadership Strategy‚ The Differentiation Strategy and the Focus Strategy. These strategies have been
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Porter analysis of Zara Zara fashion chain‚ with 546 stores in 30 countries today from which 340 are outside Spain- and 2914‚3 millions of total sales in 2002‚ is undoubtedly the group’s locomotive (Inditex‚ 2003). In 2002 it represented 33% of the group’s total stores‚ accounted for 72% of the group’s total sales and contributed to the holding’s total profits for 540.4 millions (Inditex FY2002 Results Presentation‚ 2003). Moreover‚ Zara with 75-90 new stores within 2003 takes the lion’s share
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Difference high- and low-involvement buying The amount of time and money a potential customer is willing to spend on researching information about a product‚ depends on the perceived risks and values of the product‚ as well as personal interest‚ motivation and the benefits of purchasing it. The “[…] motivation to process information […]” (Solomon‚ Bamossy‚ Askegaard and Hogg‚ 2010‚ p. 192) differs considerably based on the customers level of involvement (high or low involvement) within the
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