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
Premium Inditex Communication
ZARA (Study case) Vladimíra Olívia Gáborová Vlada.gaborova@gmail.com ISL 356 Phd. Emre Demirci Study case 11.4.2014 Manufacturing and clothing business has a long tradition and it is well established. People always feel need to protect themselves against the wind‚ cold‚ sun etc…. In the past there was not a high demand for clothes‚ since it was much as a cottage industry. Everything starts to change by industrial revolution‚ when development in technology opened
Premium Clothing Fashion Inditex
Intuit Point of Sale software. To upgrade Zara’s current POS system‚ Zara should keep the old POS system running until the new system is ready for cut-over. The first plan is to upgrade the Information Infrastructure to support the new system. Zara must first upgrade its company’s network infrastructure from modem based to broadband based. Zara must ensure the network connectivity is available at every store. Once the network infrastructure is in place‚ Zara should contract with Intuit-HP professional
Premium Point of sale
countries have resulted in cheaper labor and inputs. This results in lower costs and multiple supplier options for retailers. Rivalry among competitors is a concern for apparel retailers. There are many large players of similar size. For instance‚ Zara has 4% market share in Spain‚ while H&M hit 10% in Sweden‚ only to see like-for-like sales declines‚ proving that there are tight constraints on gaining a dominant market share in the industry. The clothing products are fairly standardized‚ non-complex
Premium Retailing Product
Zara: IT for Fast Fashion On a beautiful August night in 2003‚ Xan Salgado Badas and Bruno Sanchez Ocampo settled into seats at their favorite tapas bar in the Spanish city of La Corufia‚ ordered pulpo gallego (octopus Galician style)‚ and resumed their argument. Salgado was the head of IT for lnditex‚ a multinational clothing retailer and manufacturer headquartered in La Corufia
Premium Point of sale
Aalborg University BSc Economics and Business Administration 2012 October 24BSc Economics and Business Administration Mini Project The ZARA Case Study in Economics and The Organisation of Economic Activity The report has been prepared by: Inga Dragunaite ___________________________________ Justina Vaidziulyte ___________________________________ Kristina Kirilova ___________________________________ Aleksandar Varbanov
Premium Inditex Transaction cost Costs
com/research_registers The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at http://www.emerald-library.com/ft International Marketing Review 18‚5 542 Received June 1999 Revised February 2000 Accepted June 2000 Benefits and challenges of global sourcing: perceptions of US apparel retail firms School of Business‚ University of Wisconsin-Madison‚ USA‚ and Manchester Business School‚ The University of Manchester‚ Manchester‚ UK Keywords International sourcing‚ Retailing‚ Clothing
Premium International trade Foreign exchange market
DIFFERENT SOURCING RELATIONSHIPS Direct sourcing model The adidas Group holds direct contractual relationships with its core suppliers who are centrally supervised by Global Operations. Global Operations is a Group function which manages product development‚ commercialisation‚ distribution and supervision of the manufacture of apparel‚ footwear and accessories for the adidas‚ Reebok and TaylorMade-adidas Golf segments. These suppliers produce the predominant share of the total sourcing volume of
Premium Adidas Manufacturing
Case # 4 – Zara Zara is the flagship company of Inditex‚ an international clothing retailer. Zara began its business as a small retail store in Spain founded by Amancio Ortega Gaona in 1975. In the following decades Zara has grown to nearly 450 store location in 29 countries by the year 2000. Zara consistently accounts for more than 80% of Inditex’s net sales as indicated by Figure 1; linking the success of Inditex to the success of the strategies of Zara. Figure 1 Inditex Net Sales by Concept
Premium Inditex Retailing Inventory
ZARA By John M. Gallaugher A look inside the innovative techniques of one of the largest fashion retailers 2012 Joshua Crocker MGMT 3030 12/19/2012 ZARA By John M. Gallaugher A look inside the innovative techniques of one of the largest fashion retailers 2012 Joshua Crocker MGMT 3030 12/19/2012 A Goldman analyst once described this fashion retailer as “Armani at moderate prices” and another suggested that fashions were “Banana Republic” while prices were “Old Navy” (Folpe
Premium Fashion Retailing Fast fashion