44) Zara

wēi  danger

The $300-billion fashion industry has always struck me as a tough industry to disrupt – after all it’s dominated by global fashion houses that have enjoyed a near monopoly on trend-setting – trends that they drive through expensive fashion shows and enormous marketing campaigns.  The industry is highly seasonal (conveniently improving the fashion houses’ product turnover) and consumers have grown to accept that they have to wait 6 months or so to buy the clothes that they see on the catwalk (the time it takes the incumbents to organize manufacturing through third parties).

jī opportunity

Zara’s contrarian approach has turned this model on its head – instead of investing in setting trends (for many years it had a zero advertising policy) it is almost entirely reactive and focuses on keeping its costs low.  Its whole model is geared around speed to market and low cost experimentation – for example unlike other large fashion houses, Zara owns all of its designing, manufacturing and retailing operations – enabling it to retail product that it designed less than 2 weeks earlier. It relies on its frontline employees to feedback on emerging trends, and use PDAs to feedback instantly on the success of its new lines (which are initially made only in medium size to limit investment).  Stock is made to order and can be replenished within 36 hours in any store in the EU.  Zara’s pioneering approach, often described as ‘fast fashion’, has helped it overtake GAP to become the largest fashion retailer in the world – in part driven by the fact that its rapid stock turnover leads its patrons to visit its stores 17 times a year versus the industry standard of 4 visits.  Zara rightly is changing the industry and scaring the traditional firms – Louis Vuitton fashion director Daniel Piette described Zara as “possibly the most innovative and devastating retailer in the world”…

How About…

  • Harnessing your front-line staff to feedback consumer responses and set strategy?
  • Question the status-quo in industries that are structured in a way that detract from the consumer experience?