| | | | [STRATEGY OF ZARA & BURBERRY] | | TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………….1 STRATEGIES……………………………………………………………………..1 CONCLUSION: COMPARISON ZARA VS BURBERRY…………….4 REFERENCES.……………………………………………………………………5 Introduction ABOUT ZARA… Zara started operations in Spain in 1975‚ and now operates in 74 countries worldwide. Zara is one of the largest international fashion companies and it is owned by INDITEX‚ one of the world’s largest distribution
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CHAPTER 1 MACROECONOMIC SITUATION After an impressive growth performance for almost six years‚ the world economy has entered a period of uncertainty due to a financial turmoil triggered by the subprime mortgage crisis in the United States of America (USA). During 2002 to 2007‚ the world economic growth averaged 4.5 percent per annum compared to 3 percent in the 1990s. The sudden gloom in world economic prospects has come as a surprise in view of the persistent economic growth and stability
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moment. The case later moves on to explain how Zara came to be what it is‚ and how they carried out their business model from its beginnings. The company Zara was founded in 1975 by its current major stockholder‚ Armancio Ortega‚ and was aimed at women‚ men‚ and children. It is affiliated to other clothing brands including Massimo Dutti‚ Pull and Bear‚ Bershka‚ Stradivarius‚ and Oysho‚ all part of the Infitex corporation. From its starting roots‚ Zara has managed to set themselves apart from their
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Macro-Environmental Analysis of US Market Clothing & Fashion Industry Demographic Forces Current Population Size 315‚736‚331 Population Density 88.08 inhabitants per square mile (34.01km2) Population as at 9.33am AEST 25th April 2013 - http://www.census.gov/popclock/ Density - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_population_density Population Distribution Major City Population New York-Newark 19.3 million LA-Long Beach-Santa Ana 12.675 million Chicago 9.134 million Miami 5.699
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Interaction of micro elements The interaction between 5 competitive forces‚ create environment for Apple very competitive and hard to survive. Low entry barrier‚ rapid innovation of supplier and changing demand of consumer create the product life-cycle shorten. A lot of competitors with very similar product specification let product easy to imitate and alter PC become near to commodity product. Thus this leads to low market share industry. In addition‚ strong power of suppliers‚ a lot of competitors
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industry? Is that different from what it takes a regional player to succeed? 2. What elements of Zara’s value chain help/hurt its ability to grow? Do you think Zara should grow 3. How would you advise Salgado to proceed on the issue of upgrading Zara’s POS systems? Intro - Inditex (Industria de Diseño Textil) of Spain‚ the owner of Zara and five other apparel retailing chains * Global Apparel Chain - Characterized as a prototypical example of a buyer-driven global chain‚ in which profits
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THE MACRO-ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS OF MICRO-ECONOMIC MARKET FAILURES IN TELECOMMUNICATIONS – THE CASE OF SA. Nicola Theron ECONEX www.econex.co.za Department of Economics University of Stellenbosch nmb@sun.ac.za 1. INTRODUCTION This paper will examine the micro-economic market failures and the rationale for regulation in the South African telecommunications sector. The role of telecommunications in economic growth will be emphasized by analysing the effect that the micro-economic market failures
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Company Overview Zara is one of the largest and the most internationalized retailers that Inditex Group owns. Inditex Group is based in Spain‚ which is a global specialty retailer that designs‚ manufactures‚ and sells apparel‚ footwear‚ and accessories for women‚ men and children around the world. Zara’s history The founder of Zara‚ Amancio Ortega‚ opened the first Zara store in 1975 in a central street in La Caruña‚ Spain. It was first featured as low-priced look-alike products of popular‚ higher-end
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supply chain explaining how it supports the "fast fashion" model. Zara‚ Spanish clothing with retail chain throughout the world is probably the world’s fastest growing retailer with almost a thousand stores. Zara has it own unique business model that enabled Zara to be compete with its competitors‚ and it’s driven by Zara’s "fast fashion" with its vertically integrated supply chain. Vertically integrated supply chain allowed Zara to successfully build up a strong retail chain combine with the forces
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How is Zara organized with respect to its vertical integration and outsourcing decisions? What governance structure does it appear to follow? Support your conclusions with reference to details of the Zara and the Ferdows reading. Zara manufactures and distributes its products in small batches. Zara is vertically integrated as the company manages all design‚ warehousing‚ distribution and logistic functions. Zara outsources sewing of garments to an outside supplier. Zara controls the product it
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