Lecture 5 External Environment Parts of these slides are material developed and copyrighted by Johnson‚ Scholes & Whittington (2006) and Lynch (2006) Sustainable Competitive Advantage • One of the main purposes of analysing competitors is to explore where and how sustainable competitive advantage (SCA) can be generated • Public service and not-for-profit organisations may also wish to explore SCA as they may be in competition for finance from external bodies • SCA will probably require
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IMPLEMENTATION OF IS IN ZARA: Zara well known to everyone as a Fashion Store is also an excellent business system to study the implementation of the various IS systems for various departments of Zara. Some of the departments in which these IS systems are successfully implemented are as follows and let us look into each of these Business system of Zara in detail Design Sourcing & Manufacturing Distribution Retailing • Merchandising • Store operations DESIGN: Zara has a dedicated design
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A network and flow explanation to Zara’ success Angel Díaz and Luis Solís Instituto de Empresa‚ Maria de Molina 12‚ 5°‚ Madrid 28006‚ Spain E-mails: angel.diaz@ie.edu; luis.solis@ie.edu Abstract Zara is a Spanish fashion manufacturer and retailer that has known swift success. Spaniards have become used to visiting Zara frequently‚ as there is always a new product. Zara launches 100 different collections every year‚ with over 11000 models‚ none lasting more than five weeks in production and with
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Zara case Zara uses a vertically integrated system (VMS): In this system‚ wholesalers‚ retailers and distributors work as a unified system. One channel owns the others. They have a corporate VMS system‚ because Zara has managed to build a system that is controlled from the headquarters and it allows a quick response to decide and solve problems. Inditex‚ Zara’s parent company owns most of the resources to design‚ produce and distribute. Recommendations: Instead of doing everything themselves
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and clean. We were attracted to Zara since it is very fashionable and has high variety of distinctive styles. Ideal for the independent shopper since customers are not bothered by employees. Zara was also spacious; however we found it was unorganized and messy. 2. We could not distinguish the new clothing line from the previous and since there store is grouped together by color themes‚ it is difficult to distinguish the different styles offered at Gap. At Zara as we entered the store it was difficult
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1. Zara is a Spanish clothing retailer which has 1700 stores in all over 78 countries. 2. Zara has continually maintained its mission to provide fast‚ affordable‚ and fashionable items. 3. Zara’s supply chain has undergone tremendous changes in order to sustain its competitive advantage in today’s market. 4. Zara holds 6 days worth of inventory‚ while H&M holds 52 days‚ and Spanish retailer Cortefiel holds 94 days of inventory. 5. Launched approximately 11‚000 new items per year
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Albert Sedaghatpour Individual Case Analysis-Zara 7/24/09 Introduction Zara is the flagship chain store of Inditex Group owned by Spanish tycoon Amancio Ortega. The group is located in Spain‚ where the first Zara store was opened. Zara has opposed the industry-wide trend towards turning fast fashion production to low-cost countries. Possibly its most atypical strategy is its policy of zero advertising; the firm opted to invest a portion of revenues in opening new stores instead. At the end of 2001
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new technology to expand productivity and increase competitiveness INTRODUCTION ABOUT ZARA • Established in 1975‚ Zara is the flagship of Inditex (Industria del Disen˜o Textil‚ SA). • Inditex has become the world’s second largest clothing retailer with 2‚692 stores spread across 62 countries worldwide by the end of January 2006. • In addition to Zara‚ which accounted for 66 percent of the group’s turnover in 2005 • Inditex owns seven other clothing chains: Kiddy’s
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Case Study: Zara-Fast Fashion Case Summary: Inditex is the parent company of six different apparel retailing chains that includes Massimo Dutti‚ Pull and Bear‚ Bershka‚ Stradivarius‚ Oysho‚ and‚ most importantly‚ Zara. Zara has historically been the most profitable of the chains‚ operating 282 stores in 32 countries at the end of 2001 (Ghemawat & Nueno‚ 2006). The other five chains that are operated by Inditex have not matched the growth capabilities or revenue of Zara. Zara’s apparel offers
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Question 1.3 Capital Efficiency Inditex’s relative capital efficiency is lower than that of H&M due to the fact that Inditex’s working capital and profits per store are much less than those of H&M Inditex is opening more stores based on projections and anticipated future value of the buildings As long as Inditex’s profit margins stay high‚ they will have the money to invest and pay expenses. Question 2.1 – Advantages Compared to Average Retailers Zara follows fashion closely. Zara is better able
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