Case Study # 1 – Zara / Due 10/13 – 10 pts / Professor Conrad Zara is one of the world’s largest and fastest growing apparel retailers‚ owing to a unique blend of business practices and an internal culture that many might say run “counter-intuitive” to those of competing U.S. retailers. More recently‚ however‚ industry analysts have started to suggest that the “fast fashion” business model that has made Zara so successful over the past decade has run its course and the very notion of disposable
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Fast Zara‚ Fast Fashion Introduction Everyone‚ no matter youngsters or middle-aged mothers‚ love to buy clothes and keep updated on latest fashion trend. In the past‚ people could only consume western styles clothing if they are rich enough to go shopping by travelling in European countries or able to afford expensive air mail to send the consumed western clothes back from overseas. However‚ it took a period of time and the fashionable clothing may become “old” at the time received. As the information
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(accessed 23 July 2005). (The) US Commercial Service (2001)‚ “Overview of the apparel market”‚ 14 April‚ available at: www.usatrade.gov/website/mrd.nsf/MRDurl/ISA_KOREA_APP_OVERVIEW-OFTHE- Vitzthum‚ C. (2001)‚ “Just-in-time fashion: Spanish retailer Zara makes low-cost lines in weeks by running its own show”‚ Wall Street Journal (Eastern Edition)‚ 18 May‚ p Winters‚ W. (2003)‚ 6th Annual Rising Star Awards‚ available at: www.fgi.org (accessed 19 May 2003).
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successful Supply Chain Management at Zara‚ a flagship chain store of Inditex Group based in A Coruña‚ Spain. The Make-Buy decision The make or buy decision entails choosing between manufacturing a product in-house or purchasing it from an external supplier. When making this decision‚ the two most important factors to consider are cost and
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ADVANTAGES OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION It leads to reduction of transportation costs as the common ownership results in closer geographic proximity. The transaction costs can be controlled if a firm acquires the other firms in the vertical chain‚ then one division of the same company will transfer goods to other divisions. So‚ transaction costs in form of transport‚ cost of negotiation‚ cost of control etc. will be eliminated. The overall average cost of the firm will decrease because if the divisions
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Vertical Integration Vertical Integration deals with the degree to which a firm owns its upstream suppliers and its downstream buyers. When a firm becomes vertically integrated it means that it has incorporated all the aspects of the supply chain including manufacturing‚ distribution‚ warehousing‚ and even retailing. Specifically there are two types of vertical integration‚ backwards and forward integration. Backward or upstream integration is when a firm takes command of a function that its suppliers
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Schmidt‚ Julius Liebrecht‚ Djaky Agbadou‚ Nathalie Garro In-Class Case Study: 1 Introduction: Background Information 1.1 Company overview The firm Zara is a Spanish clothing and accessories retailer based in Galicia‚ northern Spain. In 1975‚ founder Amancio Ortega opened the first store in La Coruna‚ Spain. Zara is the flagship chain store of the Inditex group (Industria de Diseno Textil)‚ encompassing many self-designed different fashion styles from daily clothing to formal suits
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When looking at this question‚ let’s first consider what is meant by vertical separation of a firm. Vertical separation of a firm is when that firm sells the good or service they produce through an independent retailer rather than sell its product itself directly to customers which is vertical integration. So when it come to incumbent firms‚ firms in which are already well established and selling within a market would it be better off if that firm is operated as one firm that is integrated or if
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Q 1.: What is unique about Zara’s business model? Zara has proved to be a maverick of its time it came at a time that the apparel industry was fragmented there was no integration‚ the costs incurred were enormous it was highly labor-intensive leading to outsourcing to save on costs and the business model prevalent was not proving to be highly successful as compared to the models of other industries. In came Zara and showed that strategic imperatives depended on how a retailer sought to create and
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is comprised of many other fast casual and/or café-style restaurant chains‚ including Chipotle‚ Starbucks Coffee‚ Five Guys Burgers and Fries and P.F. Chang’s China Bistro. BALANCE SHEET ANALYSIS One of the significant changes on Panera Bread’s vertical analysis occurs with the Treasury Stock – Common account‚ which went from accounting for -17% of their Total Liabilities and Shareholder’s Equity to accounting for -51% of them. This change constituted for a decrease of approximately 34% over the
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