00:00:00
These are the inner workings of Zara, a
successful enigma full of contradictions.
00:00:06
It is by far the biggest company in Spain.
00:00:08
drawing inspiration from the glitz of the runway,
00:00:11
you might expect headquarters in Madrid,
one of Europe's glamorous capitals,
00:00:15
but nope it's right here
in this rural corner of northern Spain
00:00:19
and in an industry married to glossy full
page campaigns and costly commercials
00:00:24
the company's ad spend
is basically non-existent.
00:00:28
So what's making this
work so well for Zara?
00:00:31
And as the global fashion
industry confronts new competition
00:00:35
and existential problems, can it last?
00:00:38
The retail fashion landscape
is undergoing a moment of reckoning.
00:00:45
Five, six, seven, eight and switch.
00:00:49
Zara is widely
considered the creator of fast fashion.
00:00:53
That was a label given to them
by the New York Times when they opened
00:00:56
a Zara store in New York.
00:00:58
Fashion is the ability for retailers
to respond to changing
00:01:01
consumer trends and quickly
churn out goods with very short lead time.
00:01:05
Trendy threads,
00:01:06
which usually cost little enough
that it doesn't matter if you only wear it
00:01:09
for a couple of lunches
or a single evening alone
00:01:12
squatting on a stove.
00:01:15
Some people
would say that H&M did the same thing.
00:01:17
But given the size and the presence
globally of Zara, there's
00:01:22
a lot of people who would argue that
they are definitely the ones who get the crown.
00:01:25
It's for those
aspirational luxury shoppers
00:01:29
who can't afford to buy top-tier brands
or even mid-tier brands.
00:01:34
They are for the shoppers
who want to look stylish, look chic,
00:01:38
but can't consistently afford
those higher price labels.
00:01:43
Zara is one of several brands
owned by Inditex, the publicly traded
00:01:47
parent company created by the tycoon
Amancio Ortega.
00:01:51
At the end of September.
00:01:52
It was valued at $183 billion,
with brands in more than 200 markets.
00:01:57
But make no mistake, Zara runs the show.
00:02:01
It's the brand that gives the name
recognition to Inditex as a whole.
00:02:05
And when you look at the six top brands,
which is Zara, Massimo Dutti,
00:02:09
Stradivarius, Oysho, Pull&Bear and Bershka.
00:02:13
Zara represents about 70%
00:02:16
of overall sales.
00:02:18
And the company’s approach has changed the way we shop,
00:02:20
in the last two decades,
clothing production has roughly doubled
00:02:24
while the global population
has increased by 30%.
00:02:28
In short, people are buying more clothes,
wearing them for shorter periods, then
00:02:31
repeating the process with any of a
swelling number of businesses
00:02:35
with devastating consequences
for the environment,
00:02:38
which don't worry,
we're going to come back to.
00:02:41
One thing
that's unique to the apparel industry
00:02:44
is that it is extremely fragmented.
00:02:46
Nowhere in the world
00:02:47
will you find a huge company
that has a huge, huge market share.
00:02:52
Everyone seems to have very,
very low market shares: 1%, 2%, 3%.
00:02:56
And so there is space
for many big players.
00:03:01
So what makes Zara different?
00:03:03
First there's its unconventional approach
to marketing.
00:03:06
There's no advertising basically.
00:03:08
Definitely not traditional advertising.
00:03:10
We think marketing is
under 1% of sales for Inditex,
00:03:16
a typical fashion retailer
00:03:18
you'd be looking at marketing
spend of somewhere between a low
00:03:22
to mid-single digit proportion of sales,
so you know, materially higher.
00:03:27
Over the years one thing that has helped
00:03:29
is that the name has become popular,
00:03:31
and you have high profile figures
who wear the brand.
00:03:35
A clear example is the Queen of Spain,
who sometimes wears Zara.
00:03:39
It’s interesting
given that it's not a luxury brand.
00:03:41
And then there's Zara’s often bizarre
promotional imagery and product shots.
00:03:46
They're trying to capture the feeling that
00:03:49
a shopper gets when they try on a coat.
00:03:52
It makes them perhaps feel snug and warm,
and they want to capture
00:03:55
that through the more
editorialized photos on the website.
00:04:05
Not yet,
00:04:06
but, you know, there's always a first
for everything.
00:04:10
The biggest difference
between Zara and its rivals,
00:04:12
though, is its approach to logistics.
00:04:16
Most sportswear companies
and apparel companies in the world
00:04:20
have become, over the years,
extremely reliant on factories
00:04:23
in Asia, Bangladesh,
Pakistan, Vietnam and China, among others.
00:04:27
Zara has also started producing
over the years in those countries,
00:04:31
but more than half of their production
comes from what they call proximity.
00:04:36
That would be markets
closest to its headquarters.
00:04:38
So Spain, its home
market, and here and here and here.
00:04:43
And what that allows for is much more
00:04:46
rapid distribution into stores.
00:04:49
So we think about 80% of stores within
00:04:53
Inditex can have a shipment
every 4 to 5 days.
00:04:58
The second part of their
uniqueness and logistics
00:05:02
is that everything they produce
gets shipped back
00:05:06
to distribution plants in Spain,
like this one near Madrid.
00:05:10
Every Zara item you've
ever worn once came here.
00:05:14
Those products get repackaged
and then they get sent out
00:05:19
to stores across the globe
based on the needs from those stores.
00:05:23
This adaptability helps the brand navigate
a competitive retail landscape.
00:05:29
Which brings us to stores.
00:05:31
Take a look at this chart.
00:05:32
While Inditex, along
with the rest of the industry, closed
00:05:35
some during the pandemic,
the pace has now slowed.
00:05:38
But look at the other line.
00:05:39
This shows its retail floorspace
and that has started
00:05:42
to rise,
meaning the stores are getting bigger.
00:05:46
Part of the reason has been
because of the rise of e-commerce rivals
00:05:49
like Shein and Temu,
has pushed Zara to essentially
00:05:52
try and find different means
to distinguish itself.
00:05:54
It's allowing customers to go in
and try their offerings,
00:05:58
try on their clothes
and have more of a personal interaction
00:06:02
with their products rather than just
viewing it online like a catalog.
00:06:06
As to what makes it
onto hangers and rails,
00:06:09
that's the function of another area
at Zara HQ: product store managers,
00:06:14
each of whom are responsible for a small
number of units in a particular region.
00:06:19
and what they are trying to do
is constantly understand in real time
00:06:24
the trends that are coming out,
the demand that they're seeing,
00:06:27
you know, what is popular.
00:06:28
They're feeding back that information
and trying to synthesize
00:06:32
what they see
as the global trends of the moment.
00:06:35
That information is then being passed
on to the designers and to the buyers.
00:06:40
They basically have about six weeks
from the moment they start
00:06:44
designing a product till the moment
that product is in the store.
00:06:47
This allows them to be very swift,
very agile, very nimble in how
00:06:51
they produce and what they produce
that helps them adapt to fashion trends.
00:06:55
It also helps them adapt
to weather changes.
00:06:58
In 2024
00:06:59
that last part was really important,
00:07:01
at least to one of Zara's
biggest competitors, H&M.
00:07:05
The Swedish retailer,
is blaming poor sales
00:07:07
at the start of June, due to bad weather.
00:07:10
If you look at the revenue
for both companies since Covid, you'll see
00:07:14
Inditex has consistently outperformed
regardless of meteorological events.
00:07:22
The biggest
00:07:22
challenges for Zara
and the industry as a whole are twofold.
00:07:26
The rise of Chinese fast-fashion
powerhouses and fast-fashion's
00:07:30
devastating effect on the planet.
00:07:33
What is beyond debate
is that these companies,
00:07:36
like Shein and Temu, have made
inroads, especially in the US,
00:07:41
and have changed the bar
of comparison for Zara.
00:07:44
Zara now has to keep an eye on those,
because these are the other brands
00:07:48
that are being installed and being seen
as the go to place for a lot of consumers,
00:07:53
especially at the lower end
of the age groups.
00:07:56
They have also changed the bar
for environmental impact, right?
00:08:00
They're not public companies in the way.
00:08:02
A publicly traded company like Zara or H&M is.
00:08:05
And so they also have less
a responsibility towards
00:08:08
stakeholders like investors
on their environmental practices.
00:08:12
And that in a way
has changed the pressure
00:08:15
that a company like Zara has.
00:08:17
So fast fashion undoubtedly
has an impact on the environment.
00:08:22
The raw materials are used in fast-fashion
are incredibly water intensive, energy intensive.
00:08:27
Fashion is responsible
for 20% of the 300
00:08:31
million tonnes of plastics
produced each year.
00:08:34
In the time it's taken you to get to
this point of the video,
00:08:37
look how many items of clothing
were thrown away or destroyed.
00:08:41
In the US alone.
00:08:42
This equates to 10,000,000,000kg of waste a year.
00:08:47
Given the sheer volume
that is produced by retailers
00:08:50
like Zara, it undoubtedly
will impact its environment.
00:08:54
It's also been criticized as promoting
overconsumption and a culture of waste.
00:08:59
So throwing away your clothes
after just a few uses.
00:09:03
And one of the ways that retailers
are looking to push back
00:09:06
against this negative
image is by creating all sorts of pledges.
00:09:10
So Zara, for example, has pledged
to reach net zero
00:09:13
emissions by 2040, and it's also
introduced a repair service.
00:09:16
But the question is whether or not
that is enough to offset
00:09:20
the sheer volume of clothes
that it churns out on a yearly basis.
00:09:23
That's one of the key challenges
for Marta Ortega, who became
00:09:27
Inditex’s non-executive
chairwoman in 2022.
00:09:31
She's been central to
Zara's business strategy,
00:09:34
specifically in its high end
initiatives and Zara Women.
00:09:38
But to prosper and continue
her father's legacy in the company,
00:09:42
she'll need to evolve her playbook
to address intensifying pressure,
00:09:46
fueled in part
by the group's decades of success.
00:10:14
For.