Amanda Lopez March 15‚ 2014 Case Study #1 - Zara Zara is known for its stylish designs‚ many with a resemblance to the offerings of famous Italian fashion houses and all moderately priced. Despite this very recent popularity‚ the novel business model of Zara has gone virtually unnoticed for over 30 years‚ allowing Zara’s parent company‚ Inditex‚ to grow from zero to almost $20B in revenues. Zara was founded in 1975 and its parent company‚ the Inditex group went public in 2001. Within
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Supply Chain Management Strategy of the Retail Brand Zara Executive Summary The purpose of this report is to understand and analyze fashion retail brand Zara’s secret behind its successful supply chain management. Zara has been the pioneer in agile supply chain management and for popularizing the trend of fast moving fashion. Therefore‚ with the help of this example‚ agile distribution management has also been discussed in this paper. Additionally‚ computer hardware brand Dell and Australia’s leading
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Samantha White – Warwick University – MBA Programme Contents: Item Page Introduction to the firm and its market 3 Vulnerability of the firm 6 Market Exposure - GDP Development and Income Elasticity 6 - Customer structure and degree of dependence 7 - Competition and price elasticity 8 Macro Economic Exposure - Material Price Fluctuation - Exchange rate - Government Intervention 8 Mirco economic decisions – Protection 8 - Brand development and Price positioning 10 - Economies
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industry Inditex is a textile group‚ which owns the famous brand Zara. It has published its last figures testifying of its growing share value on the market. The group is leader in the European textile market and owns more than 4000 stores around the world and generates more than 85 000 jobs. Its headquarters are located in Arteixo in the North of Spain where most of the production is done. The group owns 8 brands: Zara‚ Bershka‚ Massimo Dutti‚ Pull & Bear‚ Stradivarius‚ Oysho‚ Zara Home and Uterque
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ZARA CASE STUDY: THE COMPANY WHERE EVETHING COMMUNICATES Paloma Díaz Soloaga and Mercedes Monjo ZARA CASE STUDY THE COMPANY WHERE EVERYTHING COMMUNICATES Paloma Díaz Soloaga. Head of Fashion Communication and Management. Centro Universitario Villanueva. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. SPAIN soloaga@villanueva.edu Mercedes Monjo. Responsible Textile International Marketing‚ Men’s Collection Carrefour. SPAIN This case has been published by the Journal HARVARD DEUSTO MARKETING
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ZARA Case Introduction This paper will define Zara’s key strengths and competencies in reference of its business model. Role of information system is also evaluated within its business operations‚ strategies and processes. In the end‚ consideration of upgrading the information system of Zara will be addressed. Strengths and Core Competencies of Zara With an increase of competition‚ companies started the assessment of core products‚ technologies and markets‚ which were
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1. Zara profile Zara is the most internationalized of Inditex’s chains which owned by Spanish tycoon Amancia Ortega. The first Zara store opened in 1975 and there are more than 1‚500 Zara stores around the world until now. It is claimed that Zara needs just two weeks to develop a new product and get it to stores‚ compared with a six-month industry average‚ and launches around 10‚000 new design each year. Zara has resisted the industry –wide trend towards transferring fast fashion production to
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Sewing up the Competition - Innovation in the Textile and Clothing Industry Manufacturing doesn’t get much older than the textile and clothing industry. Since the earliest days when we lived in caves there’s been a steady demand for something to wrap around us to keep warm and to protect the more sensitive bits of our anatomy from the worst of the elements. What began with animal hides and furs gradually moved into a more sophisticated activity with fabrics woven from flax or wool – and with
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Coursework Header Sheet 209896-18 Course OPER1027: Operations Mngt: Proc/Value Ch Course School/Level BU/UG Coursework Case Study 1 Assessment Weight 25.00% Tutor J Whiteley Submission Deadline 25/11/2013 Coursework is receipted on the understanding that it is the student’s own work and that it has not‚ in whole or part‚ been presented elsewhere for assessment. Where material has been used from other sources it has been properly acknowledged in accordance with the University’s
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ZARA INTERNAL ANALYSIS. Zara’s core competence is recognizing and assimilating the continuous changes in fashion. They’re very good at this because there’s a very good communication within the company. Store managers send information about the customer demands and new fashion trends to the headquarters on a daily basis. So if there’s a new trend‚ Zara is able to adapt their products or design new articles immediately. If a design doesn’t sell within a week‚ it’s withdrawn from the shops‚ further
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