Supply Chain Practices at 'Zara'
Supply Chain Practices at 'Zara'
Supply Chain Practices at 'Zara'
Project Report
“Supply chain practices of Zara”
Submitted by:
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This report on “Supply chain practices of Zara” would never have been completed without
the support provided by our course facilitator, Prof. Krishnamurthy Venkatramanan.
Moreover, we are highly indebted by the internet facilities provided by the members if IT lab.
Project Group
PGDM 2008-2010
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
SL.NO. PARTICULARS PAGE NO.
1 Acknowledgement 2
2 Executive summary 4
10 Learning 22
11 Zara – In Sum 22
12 Bibliography 23
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This project aims at understanding the supply chain practices followed by the fast fashion
collection manufacturing company Zara, Spain. It takes into consideration the profile of the
company and the characteristics of fashion industry and on what factors does it future growth
depend upon.
Then the report moves on to concrete on the various key factors of success of Zara. The time
cycle of the products of Zara, what it offers to its customers including the customer
segmentation has been considered. Then the logistics and supply chain mechanism has been
considered at length. These include the methodology used to react to recent changes rather
than predicting it, production methods, distribution methods and use of information
technology at various stages of supply chain.
Finally, it is discussed whether the competitive advantage that Zara has is sustainable or not.
The various learning from Zara’s supply chain management has also been jotted down In the
end.
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ZARA’S PROFILE
Zara is the flagship chain store of Inditex Group owned by Spanish tycoon Amancio Ortega.
Zara is the most internationalized of Inditex’s chains. The group is headquartered in A
Coruna, Spain, where the first Zara store opened in 1975. As of August 2009, there are more
than 1,500 Zara stores around the world.
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 designs each
year. Zara has resisted the industry-wide trend towards transferring fast fashion production to
low-cost countries. While it spent little on ads, it spent heavily on stores.
Zara is a vertically integrated retailer. Unlike similar apparel retailers, Zara controls most of
the steps on the supply-chain: It designs, produces, and distributes itself. The business system
that had resulted was particularly distinctive in that Zara manufactured its most fashion-
sensitive products internally. Zara did not produce "classics", clothes that would always be in
style. In fact, the company intended its clothes to have fairly short life spans, both within
stores and in customers' closets.
The fashion industry is characterized as a chain, in which profits derived from “unique
combinations of high-value research, design, sales, marketing, and financial services that
allow retailers, branded marketers, and branded manufacturers to act as strategic brokers in
linking overseas factories” with markets.
There are various types of fashion and each type has its own characteristics. e.g. Fast fashion
is one of them which are used to describe clothing collections which are based on the most
recent fashion trends, whereas classical fashion on the other hand describes those clothing
collections which are evergreen. The recent trends are generally the ones that are presented in
various “fashion week” organized around the globe.
Fashion is a thing which constantly changes. Its value depreciates slowly after the time is
gone. In the time period when the product has just become “out-of-fashion” till its value
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becomes zero, the product is generally sold on sale. As a result, this industry tends to extract
as much profit as possible when the product is in fashion then give “heavy” discounts.
There are many factors on which the future growth of fashion industry depends:-
1. World GDP – The GDP growth will determine the buying capacity of people and also
the condition of other industries on which fashion industry depends.
2. Policies – As many countries are plunged into recession, the countries are changing
the import and export policies. These policies will have a major impact on the
industry growth as most part of fashion accessories are exported to other countries.
3. Development of logistics – Logistics is the backbone of fashion industry. As the better
the logistics, faster the product hits the market, cheaper the cost, better it is for the
customers and so for the companies.
4. Growth of retail chains – Most of the companies do not have their exclusive
showroom only. They depend a lot on multi-branded showrooms across the world to
sell their products. Hence the growth and stability of the retail chains will go on to
improve the condition of fashion industry.
5. Development in IT – Speed of the process, the customer’s order from ordering the
raw material to the final selling of the product, greatly depends on the technology
used in the system. E.g. use of RFID, clipped tags, faster printers, better
communication channels etc. Better the technology available and used the better the
responsiveness of the fashion industry towards customers demands.
6. Others – There are various skills (of people or computer) which influence a lot the
fashion industry such as forecasting etc.
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Firstly, by focussing on shorter response times, the company ensures that its stores are able to
carry clothes that the consumers want at that time. Zara can move from identifying a trend to
having clothes in its stores within 30 days, this means that Zara can quickly identify and
catch a winning fashion trend, while its competitors are struggling to catch up. Catching
fashion while it is hot is a clear recipe for better margins with more sales happening at full
prices and fewer discounts.
In comparison, most retailers of comparable size or even smaller, work on timelines that
stretch into 4-12 months. Thus, most retailers try to forecast what and how much its
customers might buy many months in the future, while Zara moves in step with its customers.
Trend identification comes through constant research not just traditional consumer market
research, but a daily stream of emails and phone calls from the stores to head office. Unlike
other retailers, Zara's machinery can react to the report immediately and produce a response
in terms of a new style or a modification within 2-4 weeks. Many other retailers have such
long supply chain lead times that for them it would seem a lost cause for them to even try and
respond to a sales report.
Secondly, by reducing the quantity manufactured in each style, Zara not only reduces its
exposure to any single product but also creates an artificial scarcity. As with all things
fashionable, the less its availability, the more desirable the object becomes.
The added benefit of lower quantities is that if a style does not work well, there is not much
to be disposed during the season-end sale. The result of this is that Zara discounts only about
18 percent of its production, roughly half the levels of competitors.
Thirdly, instead of more quantities per style, Zara produces more styles, roughly 12,000 a
year. Thus, even if a style sells out very quickly, there are new styles already waiting to take
up the space.
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Zara can offer more choices in more current fashions than many of its competitors. It delivers
merchandise to its stores twice a week, and since re-orders are rare the stores look fresh every
3-4 days. Fresh produce, moving in step with the fashion trend and updated frequently the
ingredients are just right to create the sweet smell of success.
Now, the question is how does Zara achieve its three key success factors which would be
a nightmare for most other retailers to achieve in such short time spans? So, let us look at the
mechanisms that enable Zara to deliver on these parameters as well as some unique aspects of
the retailer's business model.
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If you thought that it is not possible to produce all this success in the same kind of set-up as
other retailers, and that it also has to cost something, you would be absolutely correct on both
counts. Zara follows a structure that is more closely controlled than most other retailers, and
pays further by having the various business elements in close proximity to each other, around
its headquarters in Spain.
While this gives Zara a tremendous amount of flexibility and control, it does have to
contend with higher people costs, averaging 17-20 times the costs in Asia.
Counter-intuitively Inditex has also gone the route of owning capital-intensive manufacturing
facilities in Spain. In fact, it is a vertically integrated group, with up-to-date equipment for
fabric dyeing and processing, cutting and garment finishing. Greige (undyed fabric) is more
of a commodity and is sourced from Spain, the Far East, India, and Morocco. By retaining
control over the dyeing and processing areas, Inditex has fabric- processing capacity
available “on demand” to provide the correct fabrics for new styles. It also does not own the
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What a typical retailer or brand might do? Designers may start looking at fashion trends, and
start designing a look for summer 2010. Information and inspiration comes from forecasting
agencies, trade shows, and various other places. Over a period of 3-5 months they develop the
ideas into physical samples. Sales budgets and stock plans are developed based on what is
going on in the business right then (roughly one-year ahead of the targeted style). At various
times during this seasonal process, there are decision-making meetings, where styles are
accepted, rejected or changed, pricing and margin decisions taken and orders finalised.
Based on a host of factors, the orders might then be placed with vendors in one or more
countries around the world. Typically vendors may take a few weeks to two months to
procure fabrics, have them approved by the retailer, and then produce a number of samples,
and only once all approvals are finished, put the style into production.
From beginning to end, the process of defining a concept to receiving goods in the retail store
might take anywhere from 9 to 12 months for a typical retailer. This one-year advance
decision making on what merchandise and how much to stock is a bit like driving a car at
speed by just looking in the rear view mirror! Amazingly, it seems to work 60-65 per cent of
the time.
Zara, on the other hand, largely concentrates its forecasting effort on the kind and amount of
fabric it will buy. It is a smart hedging by Zara because of two reasons -
fabric (raw material) mistakes are cheaper than finished goods errors
the same fabric could be turned into different garments
In fact, for an extra degree of flexibility Zara buys semi-processed or un-coloured fabric
that it colours up close to the selling season based on the immediate need. With that edge, and
a super-fast garment design and production process, it takes to the market what its customers
are looking for.
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As soon as approvals are received, instructions are issued to cut the appropriate fabric.
The cutting is done in Zara's own high-tech automated cutting facilities. The cut pieces
are distributed for assembly to a network of small workshops mostly in Galicia and in
northern Portugal. None of these workshops are owned by Zara. The workshops are provided
with a set of easy to follow instructions, which enable them to quickly sew up the pieces and
provide a constant stream to Zara's garment finishing and packing facilities. Thus, what takes
months for other companies, takes no more than a few days for Zara.
Finally, Zara's high-tech distribution system ensures that no style sits around very long at
head office. The garments are quickly cleared through the distribution centre, and shipped to
the stores, arriving within 48 hours. Each store receives deliveries twice a week, so after
being produced the merchandise does not spend more than a week at most in transit.
merchandise from Zara's manufacturing plants to the 400+ chutes that ensure each order
reaches its right destination. Optical reading devices sort out and distribute more than
60,000 items of clothing an hour. Zara's merchandise does not waste time waiting for
human sorting.
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Apart from designing to the fashion-of-the-day, Zara's strategy of producing low volumes per
style and changing products quickly in its stores enables it to cut down on the discounts as
well. Only about 18 percent of Zara clothing doesn't work with its customers and must be
discounted. That's half the industry average of 35 percent. Zara also has two clearly time-
limited sales a year rather than constant markdowns.
Lastly, since it spends effort on producing what are current fashion trends, it spends its
design effort on interpreting rather than creating afresh. In fact, Zara has been constantly
alleged to have knocked-off top designers' ranges, thus spending less on product
development and design.
This helps Zara to have an edge over most of its competitor’s strategy by having very low
Inventory to Sales Ratio. A comparison (of Zara and its Competitors) is given in the
following graph -
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Traditional 45 - 60 % 80 – 100 % 0 - 20 % 30 – 40 %
Industry
Model
Advertisement Advertisement
+
Markdowns
Zara
15 – 25 % 50 – 60 % 40 - 50 % 15 - 20 %
Fresh items
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CORE COMPETENCE
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Elicitation
Communication
Tracking
Zara has actually developed its structure in such a way that it supportrs the
methodlogy of Mass Custmization (an inbetween situation of Mass Production
and Customization). This Mass Customization is a combination of Job Shop and
Continous Flow of Production System with high efficieny and low volume, a
scenario rare to find in real world.But Zara has developed it and this has added
to its Compititve Advantage.
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High variety
Job Shop
New Frontier
Batch Process
Mass Customization
Product
Production Line
Old Frontier
Continuous Flow
Low Variety
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LEARNING
Reduction in mark-down can more than make up for the increase in labour cost
Planned shortages can induce more future demand
Good store location, layout and product display can be a substitute for advertising
Faster response eliminates inventory risks
Excess capacity pays for itself by faster response
ZARA – IN SUM
By taking a new and aggressive approach to fashion risk management through current, small
job shop production in continuous flow of fashion items, Zara not only achieved high
margins –NOTWITHSTANDING higher local labour costs – but turned the production
design into a compelling marketing story with the help of its Supply Chain Management, an
effort worth more then appreciation.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
[1] Ghemawat, Pankaj and Nueno, Jose Luis. “Zara: Fast fashion”, HBS: 9-703-497, 1st Apr
2003.
[2] Mcafee Andrew, Dessain Vincent and Sjoman, Anders. “Zara: IT for fast fashion”, HBS:
9-604-081, 17th Dec 2004.
<www.3isite.com/articles/ImagesFashion_Zara_Part_I.pdf>
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