Zara Spanish Apparel Brand
Zara Spanish Apparel Brand
Zara Spanish Apparel Brand
ZARA
ASSIGNMENT
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ANALYSIS
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Zara
Zara produces up to 11,000 different articles each year. The
company employs 200 designers who work in collaboration with
each other based on feedback taken directly from in-store
customers. Partial vertical integration, with owned factories;
owned factory production is reserved 85% for in-season
production.
All Zara stores receive new product twice a week. This compares
favourably with many of the chain's competitors, which usually
receive new styles just once or twice each season. The fact that
new stock arrives so frequently has several benefits. Most
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importantly, it encourages customers to come back regularly and,
because styles are only available for a limited period, it promotes
a sense of exclusivity.
The process starts with an order from the store manager. Because
of the logistics system, the time between receiving the order at
the distribution centre and delivering the goods instore is, on
average, 24 hours for Europe and 48 hours for the remaining
stores.
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Zara
Zara sources fabric, other inputs, and finished products from
external suppliers. It has purchasing offices in Barcelona and
Hong Kong. This gives Zara a competitive advantage towards the
costs of goods sold, as it can purchase from both Europe and
Asia according to prices.
Zara has a low price strategy because they can use a lower cost
structure than their competitors. The quality of the products is
unique and they can cut costs so offer a lower price. So we can
speak of a cost leadership strategy, low cost what gives low
prices.
Zara’s high tech distribution system makes sure that no style sits
around for long. The garments are quickly cleared through the
distribution center and shipped to stores arriving within 48 hours.
The distribution center is centrally located among fourteen
manufacturing plants. Garments moved along two hundred and
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Zara
eleven kilometers of track from the cluster of factories located
there to the distribution center. Hanging garments were arranged
on coded bars that sorted automatically by style within the
distribution center; stock-picking of hanging garments was done
manually. Folded garments were sorted on a carousel, with each
garment dropped down a chute toward a box for its destination
store based on its bar code. About 2.5 million garments could
move through the distribution center each week. Zara’s
merchandise does not waste time waiting for human sorting.
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heavily regulated in Europe; only items previously in stock could
be marked down. In general, Zara tried to minimize the volume of
merchandise moved at end-of-season sale prices, since under
their system there was no need for a large inventory clearance.
Zara experienced 15-20% markdown sale of season volume,
compared to 30-40% for much of the industry.
2: Store window: The first meeting point with the customer and
the place where Zara advertises the next season's look.
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Zara
During its long expansion through 2001, Zara printed price tags
for multiple jurisdictions showing on the single tag all of its
different prices by country.
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3. This system permitted goods to be moved from store to store
without retagging.