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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1. INDUSTRY SITUATION ANALYSIS 1.1 Dominant Economic Characteristics of the Industry Environment • Market size: The Industrial Distribution industry was estimated to be $400 billion in 2001‚ but the industry has many sub-industries within it (16). To name a few‚ Home Improvement revenues were $73 billion in 2003‚ $5.1 billion for the Building Materials Wholesale industry‚ $61 billion for the Electronic Wholesale industry‚ $10.4 billion for the Industrial Equipment Wholesale industry‚ and $211
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Executive Summary Spanish Inditex’s most successful retail clothing store Zara is known all across the world for its trendy apparel (Mcafee‚ Dessain‚ & Sjoman‚ 2004). The company has been very successful throughout the years but management has recently decided that the IT infrastructure may need updating. The store currently runs off of a POS system supported by DOS‚ which has not been supported by Microsoft for several years (Ferdows‚ Lewis‚ & Machuca‚ 2004). The POS system has been working flawlessly
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Corporate Strategy – Zara The core concept of Zara ’s business model is they sell "medium quality fashion clothing at affordable prices"‚ and vertical integration and quick-response is key to Zara ’s business model. Through the entire process of Zara ’s business system: designing‚ sourcing and manufacturing‚ distribution and retailing‚ they presented four fundamental success factors: short cycle time‚ small batches per product‚ extensive variety of product every season and heavy investment in
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licensees ran its stores. To prove Zara has the prospect of sustainable growth in the international apparel market‚ it is important to understand and compare the financial differences of Inditex‚ its parent company‚ and its major competitor. The most interesting of Zara’s competitors for comparison is Hennes and Mauritz (H&M)‚ who as the case study states‚ “was considered Inditex’s closest competitor‚ [with] a number of key differences”. H&M differs from Zara because they outsource all of their
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Education Ltd. Company Case 19 Zara – the fast and furious giant of fashion One global retailer is expanding at a dizzying pace. It is on track for what appears to be world domination of its industry. Having built its own state-of-the-art distribution network‚ the company is leaving the competition in the dust in terms of sales and profits‚ not to mention speed of inventory management and turnover. Wal-Mart‚ you might think? No! Tesco‚ possibly? No! The company is Zara‚ the flagship specialty chain
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Zara: The Technology Giant of the Fashion World Synopsis Zara is a company that defines what the fashion industry has termed “fast fashion.” The flagship specialty chain of Spain-based clothing conglomerate‚ Inditex‚ Zara has built an information and distribution system that allows it to put the latest runway fashions in its stores in a matter of weeks at a fraction of what the big-name designers charge. In addition to fast‚ Zara is prolific. In a typical year‚ Zara launches about 11‚000
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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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1. As completely as possible‚ sketch the supply chain for Zara from raw materials to consumer purchase. First of all‚ a designer team in Arteixo‚ Spain sketches out the new styles and clothe lines. It does so after consulting with ‘commercials’ (the term for people who act as connection among the designers and the chain’s 2‚800 global store managers). After that‚ the designer team decides which fabrics offer the best combination of fashion‚ quality and price. Then they electronically send the
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| | | | [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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