Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (2024)

CASE STUDY CONCEPT: The Zara supply chain drives its successful business model.

Zara changes its clothing designs every two weeks on average, while competitors change their designs every two or three months. It carries about 11,000 distinct items per year in thousands of stores worldwide compared to competitors that carry 2,000 to 4,000 items per year in their stores. Zara’s highly responsive supply chain is central to its business success. The heart of the Zara supply chain is a huge, highly automated distribution center (DC) called “The Cube”. The screenshot below shows a closeup satellite view of this facility.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (1)(click on screenshot for larger image)

The company was founded in Spain in 1974 by Amancio Ortega and his wife Rosalía Mera. It is the flagship business unit of a holding company called Inditex Corporation with headquarters in Arteixo, Galicia, a city in northwestern Spain near where Mr. Ortega was born. In 2019 Zara was ranked as the 46th most valuable brand in the world by Forbes (see bibliography below).

Company Business Model

Agents for the company are always scouting out new fashion trends at clubs and social gatherings. When they see inspiring examples they quickly send design sketches to the garment designers at the Cube. New items can be designed and out to the stores in 4 – 6weeks, and existing items can be modified in 2 weeks.

The company’s coremarket is women 24 – 35 years old. They reach this market by locating their stores in town centers and places with high concentrations of women in this age range. Short production runs create scarcity of given designs and that generates a sense of urgency and reason to buy while supplies last. As a consequence, Zara does not have lots of excess inventory, nor does it need to do big mark-downs on its clothing items.

Zara has 12 inventory turns per year compared to 3 – 4 per year for competitors. Stores place orders twice a week and this drives factory scheduling. Such short term focused order cycles make forecasts very accurate, much more accurate than competitors who may order every two weeks or every month.

Clothing items are priced based on market demand, not on cost of manufacture. The short lead times for delivery of unique fashion items combined with short production runs enable Zara to offer customers more styles and choices, and yet still create a sense of urgency to buy because items often sell out quickly. And that particular item or style may not be available again after it sells out. Zara sells 85 percent of its items at full price compared to the industry average of selling only 60 percent of items at full price. Annually there is 10 percent of inventory unsold compared to industry averages of 17 – 20 percent.

In Spain customers visit Zara stores 17 times per year on average compared to 3 times per year for competitors. Because their clothing designs change often, it is harder for people to see them clearly on the Internet and thus they are encouraged to come into the stores instead and try on the unique fashions that Zara offers (screenshot below shows people at a Zara store in Madrid, Spain).

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (2)

Zara spends its money on opening new stores instead of spending a lot on ad campaigns. Estimates vary on the number of Zara stores worldwide. An article in the New York Times Magazine (November2012, “How Zara Grew into the World’s Largest Fashion Retailer” see reference in bibliography below), placed the store count at around 5,900. An article in Forbes simply states there are “more nearly 3,000 stores” (June 2019, “The World’s Most Valuable Brands – #46 Zara“, see bibliography below). Annual sales for 2018 were estimated by Forbes to be $21.3 billion. The holding company, Inditex SA, is a public company and Inditex provides annual statements, but it does not break out Zara sales from sales of the other brands owned by Inditex (Pull&Bear, Massimo Dutti, Bershka, Stradivarius, Oysho, Zara Home and Uterqüe). Zara also uses a flexible business model where its stores can be owned, franchised, or co-owned with partners. So it is not always possible to find exact numbers for Zara’s business operations and finances.

[Editor’s Note: Inditex, owner of Zara and other fashion brands plans to close more than 1,000 stores worldwide in response to the Covid pandemic and increase its focus on online sales – https://www.glamour.com/story/zara-store-closings-coronavirus-online-shopping. Can you think of some ways this will change Zara’s supply chain?]

Manufacturing and Supply Chain Operations Make Zara Unique

Zara buys large quantities of onlya fewtypes of fabric (justfour or five types, but they can change from year to year), and does the garment design and related cutting and dyeing in-house. This way fabric manufacturers can make quick deliveries of bulk quantities of fabric directly to the Zara DC– the Cube. The company purchasesraw fabric from suppliers in Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece. And thosesuppliers deliver within 5 days of orders being placed. Inbound logistics from suppliers are mostly by truck.

The Cube is 464,500 square meters (5 million square feet), and highly automated with underground monorail links to 11 Zara-owned clothing factories within a 16 km (10 mile ) radius of the Cube. All raw materials pass through the Cube on their way to the clothing factories, and all finished goods also pass through on their way out to the stores. The diagram below illustrates Zara’s supply chain model.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (3)(click on diagramfor larger image)

Zara’s factories can quickly increase and decrease production rates, so there is less inventory in the supply chain and less need to finance that inventory with working capital. They do only 50 – 60 percent of their manufacturing in advance versus the 80 – 90 percent done by competitors. Zara does not need to place big bets on yearly fashion trends. They can make many smaller bets on short term trends that are easier to call correctly.

The Zara factories are connected to the Cube by underground tunnels with high speed monorails (about 200 kilometers or 124 miles of rails) to move cut fabric to these factories for dyeing and assembly into clothing items. The monorail system then returns finished products to the Cube for shipment to stores. Here are some facts about the company’s manufacturing operations:

  • Zaracompetes on flexibility and agility instead of low cost and cheap labor. They employ about 3,000 workers in manufacturing operations in Spain at an average cost of 8.00 euros per hour compared to average labor cost in Asia of about 0.40 euros per hour.
  • Zara factories in Spain use flexible manufacturing systems for quick change over operations.
  • 50% of all items are manufactured in Spain
  • 26% in the rest of Europe
  • 24% in Asia and Africa

The screenshot below illustrates how the Zara supply chain is organized. Manufacturing is centered in northwestern Spain where company headquarters and the Cube are located. But for their main distribution and logistics hub they chose a more centrally located facility. That facility is located in Zaragoza in a large logistics hub developed by the Spanish government. Raw material is sent by suppliers to Zara’s manufacturing center. Then finished garmentsleave the Cube and are transported to the Zara logistics hubin Zaragoza. And from there theyare delivered to stores around the world by truck and by plane.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (4)(click on screenshot for larger image)

[ Instructors, students and professionals can request afree SCM Globe trial demoNOTE: This is an advanced case. Work through the three online challenges of the beginning case, “Cincinnati Seasonings” before working with this case. ]

Zara can deliver garmentsto stores worldwide in just a few days: China – 48 hrs; Europe – 24 hrs; Japan – 72 hrs; United States– 48 hrs. It uses trucks to deliver to stores in Europe and uses air freight to ship clothes to other markets. Zara can afford this increased shipping cost because it does not need to do much discounting of clothes and it also does not spend much money on advertising.

Zara’s Supply Chain is Lean and Agile

Stores take deliveries twice per week, and they can get ordered inventory often within two days after placing their orders. Items are shipped and arrive at stores already on hangers and with tags and prices on them. So items come off delivery trucks and go directly onto the sales floor. This makes it possible for store managers to order and receivethe products customers want when they want them, week by week.

Zara stores respond practically in real-time as styles and customer preferences evolve. It is a great business model for success in the high-change and hard to predict fashion industry. It means about half of the clothing the company sells, which includes most of its high margin and unique fashion items (but not its lower margin basic items), is manufactured based on highly accurate, short-term (2 – 6 week) demand forecasts. Because this business model tracks so closely to real customer demand from one month to the next, it frees the company to a large degree from getting caught in cyclical market ups and downs that ensnare its competitors (those cycles are driven by boom-to-bust gyrations generated by the bullwhip effect). Turbulence in the global economy since 2008 has hurt sales at many competing fashion retailers, but Zara has seen steady, profitable growth during this time.

[Editor’s Note: In the coming months we shall see the effect of the Covid pandemic on Zara’s business model, and how they change their supply chain operations to respond.]

A fast-moving and finely tuned supply chain like Zara’s requires constant attention to keep it running smoothly. Supply chain planners and managers are always watching customer demand and making adjustments to manufacturing and supply chain operations. The screenshot below shows the result of one simulation using the supply chain model outlined above. Continuous adjustments need to be made to production rates, vehicles, and delivery routes and schedules to keep this supply chain working well.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (5)(click on screenshot for larger image)

Zarais a clothing and fashion retailerthat uses its supply chain to significantly change the way it operatesin a very traditional industry. Noother competitor can copy its business model until it first copies its supply chain. And since supply chains are composed of people, process, and technology, even the latest and greatest technology is not a competitive advantage all by itself. People must be well trained, and processes must be put in place thatenable people to applytheir training and their technology to best effect.

Buying technology similar to that used by Zara is easy. But for the technology to be used effectively, competitors must learn about the mental models and the operating procedures used by Zara. Good mental models enable people to understand the potentials and see the opportunities that a real-time supply chain offers. Effective operating procedures enable people to act on what they see and capitalize on the competitive advantages their technology gives them.

Zara has spent more than 30 years building its unique real-time supply chain and training its people. So competitors have a lot of learning to do to create the mental models, and roll out the operating procedures needed todo what Zara does so well.

[ See our blog article “Five New Supply Chain Technologies and How to Use Them” for more about new technologies and how they can be used to improve supply chain operations and create competitive advantages for companies.]

YOUR FIRST SUPPLY CHAIN CHALLENGE

Get this supply chain to run for 15+ days and keep inventory and operating costs as low as you can.

Imagine you are in charge of Zara’s supply chain operations. This case study and supply chain simulation will give you an appreciation of what that job is like. In this exercise your mental model of Zara’s supply chain will expand and your understanding of how this supply chain works will deepen. You will see the continuous adjustments that need to be made to keep the supply chain working and to keep operating expenses and inventory levels under control.

Load a copy of the Zara supply chain model from the online library into your account. Then start running simulations to see how the supply chain works. Start by doing whatever seems necessary to keep the supply chain running without stock-outs or over-stocks for 15 days. When you run the first simulation you will see a problem occurs on day 5. As with all cases, there are many possible ways to respond to this problem. And depending on how you respond, other problems will appear as you work toward getting your supply chain to run for 15 days. Do whatever seems necessary to get the supply chain to run for 15 days. Then refine your solutions to get the supply chain to run at lower costs in transportation, facility operations and on-hand inventory across the supply chain.

Its agile and responsive supply chain enables Zara to work on a short sales and operations planning (S&OP) cycle. Let’s assume Zara works on a 15 day cycle where its competitors work on 30-day or even 60-day planning cycles. So you are creating a 15-day supply plan to meet the 15-day demand plan which is already entered into the model in the form of product demand at the different stores. To get this supply chain to meet demand and run for 15+ days you need to make adjustments to elements of your supply plan:

  • Store delivery amounts and frequencies
  • Delivery amounts and frequencies on air freight routes
  • Product manufacturing rates at Zara clothing factories
  • Movement of products between Zara Cube, Zara factories, and Logistics Hub in Zaragoza
  • Supplier delivery amounts and frequencies for delivering bulk fabric to the Cube

The screenshot below shows a closeup of the Zara Logistics Hub in Zaragoza, Spain. Product deliveries are made to stores by airplane and truck from this facility every day.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (6)

When you have questions about how to work with this case, the answer is always to ask yourself, “What would I do if this were the real world and I was the person in charge?” Model and simulate different ideas. Make reasonable assumptions and estimates. Then add/change/delete products, facilities, vehicles and routes as called for in your supply chain model to reflect your ideas. When you run simulations you will see how well different ideas work. Go with the ideas that work best to find the solutions you need.

Look in the online guide for useful tips and techniques that will help as you work with this case. Here are some places to look:

ZARA SUPPLY CHAIN REPORTING TEMPLATE: Import your simulation data into this template to create 15-DAY P&L REPORTS and key performance indicators. Zara’s agile supply chain enables it to use shorter planning cycles (15-days instead of 30-days). The reporting template is designed for use with the supply chain model in the online library titled “Zara Clothing Company Ver4”. If you add more products, facilities, or vehicles to the model you will need to expand the spreadsheet to accommodate those additions. A sample P&L report created from simulation data is shown below: Download a copy of the Zara Clothing Company P&L Reporting Template here

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (7)(click on image for larger picture)

CREATE AN EXECUTIVE BRIEFING a 3 to 5 page report or a short deck of presentation slides. Use screenshots and data produced by simulations to illustrate what you learned about how the Zara supply chain operates. Explain what were the main problems you encountered in getting your simulation to run for 15+ days. Show what you did to address those problems. Present the three or four main things you learned about this supply chain. Explain why these things make this supply chain such a competitive advantage for Zara.

SAVE BACKUP COPIESof your supply chain model from time to time as you make changes.Click “Save” buttonnext to your model inAccount Managementscreen. There is no “undo”, but if a change doesn’t work out, you canrestore from a saved copy. And sometimes supply chain model files (json files) become damaged and they no longer work, so you want backup copies of your supply chain to restore from when that happens.

[NOTE: There is a bug in displaying route distances and travel times. For new routes, the distances and times show ROUND-TRIP, but on existing routes they may show as zeros or ONE-WAY numbers. This is a display problem only. The distances and times used in the simulations for new and existing routes are always ROUND-TRIP so simulation results are accurate. See workaround to Bug #2 in the FAQs for an easy fix to this display problem. ]

YOUR SECOND CHALLENGE

Expand this supply chain to support more stores, and keep inventory and operating costs under control.

Do some research on store rental costs, labor rates, transportation costs and product demand in different markets, then use your research to update and expand your model of Zara’s supply chain:

  • Go towebsites of commercial real estate brokers in cities of interest and see what you can find out about rents (for cities in North America start with www.cityfeet.com and for cities in other parts of the world start with www.knightfrank.com).
  • Research salary levels and median incomes in different cities. New stores open in cities with median incomes high enough to be profitable markets for Zara. Store rent and operating costs will also be set by market rates in those cities.
  • Go to 3PL and logistics services company websites to find out about transportation costs. Assume air freight rates from Zaragoza remain the same to any city, but truck transportation costs will be different in different cities.
  • Consider subdividing the two high level product categories (Zara Basics Pack, Zara Fashion Pack) into lower level product categories to get more insight and into how this supply chain operates. What are some lower level product categories that make up the Fashion Pack, or the Basics Pack?
  • Do searches to find fashion industry demand forecasts for clothing in different cities around the world. Use that research to set the product demand levels in the new stores. You can also update product demand levels at existing stores based on this research.
  • You can measure the carbon footprint of different supply chain designs. There are default estimates of carbon generation already entered for facilities and vehicles, and the simulations use this to calculate the supply chain carbon footprint. You can enter your own estimates for carbon generation for the facilities and vehicles if you wish.

Do the best you can with the time available! Do internet searches on relevant key words and phrases. See what comes up, and select sources that seem the most trustworthy and accurate (that’s what we did for this case study; our assumptions and sources are listed below). If you can’t find the exact numbers you are looking for, then estimate numbers you need based on other numbers you find in your research (please read “All Supply Chain Models are Approximations“). Do not spend more than your allocated time doing research. As the saying goes, “Good is good enough.” Document your sources; make your best estimates; and move on.

Update and expand the Zara supply chain model using your research data.Update product prices and demand at the existing stores based on your research. Also experiment with adding new stores in other cities in Europe, Asia, North America, South America or Africa (represent all stores in a single city with just one or two stores and keep the total number of facilities in your model to between 15 – 20).

For added realism see how stores in New York and Shanghai are located in the existing supply chain model in the SCM Globe library. Stores can be on actual Zara store locations or can be placed in the middle of a cluster of actual Zara stores. Enter the collective demand, costs and on-hand inventory for all actual stores represented by a single store in your model.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (8)

Note in the existing model how flights from the logistics hub in Spain land at nearby airports for stores in New York and Shanghai, then delivery trucks move garments from those airports to the stores as shown in the screenshot above. Use this same approach as you expand into other countries outside of Europe. Add new vehicles and create delivery routes for them to deliver products to the new stores. This adds an extra layer of realism and shows how dependent this supply chain is on tight scheduling and just-in-time (JIT) delivery of products.

Adjust your supply chain model to support these new stores and still run for 15+ days. Once you get it running for 15+ days, then make adjustments to your model to lower transportation and operating costs and on-hand inventory amounts.

CREATE A FINAL PRESENTATION showing your expanded supply chain model and describing the supply chain challenges you encountered. Explain why successful solutions to those challenges provides such a competitive advantage for Zara.

  • Explain the supply chain principles and best practices you used to solve the challenges you encountered. What were your biggest challenges and how did you solve them?
  • Identify places in your expanded supply chain model (facilities, vehicles and routes) where you used new technology such as that explained in the blog article “Five New Supply Chain Technologies and How to Use Them“. How do these technologies produce the performance capabilities you show in your simulation results?
  • Show how a supply chain with these capabilities makes it possible for Zara to use its fast fashion business model. If Zara competitors were to emulate Zara’s business model, what supply chain capabilities would they need?
  • What can you do to lower the carbon footprint of your supply chain?
  • Use screenshots and data from your simulations to illustrate your report.

NOTE: This is an ADVANCED LEVEL case study – work through a beginning level case such as Cincinnati Seasonings before attempting to work with this case.

Working on this case will be challenging… but the skills and insights you develop here will be the same skills and insights you use to manage a real supply chain like Zara’s.

FIND USEFUL IDEAS in the Online Guide to help you expand and improve your Zara supply chain model. There is a lot going on in this case so check out these ideas:

ZARA SUPPLY CHAIN REPORTING TEMPLATE: Import your simulation data into this template to create 15-DAY P&L REPORTS and key performance indicators.Download a copy of the Zara Clothing Company P&L Reporting Template here

To share your changes and improvements tothis model (json file) with other SCM Globe users see “Download and Share Supply Chain Models

SAVE BACKUP COPIESof your supply chain model from time to time as you make changes.Click “Save” buttonnext to your model inAccount Managementscreen. There is no “undo”, but if a change doesn’t work out, you canrestore from a saved copy. And sometimes supply chain model files (json files) become damaged and they no longer work, so you want backup copies of your supply chain to restore from when that happens.

Assumptions and Simplifications Used in this Model

Because Zara operations and financial reporting is combined with the other retail brands owned by Inditex, specific details of the Zara business model and supply chain can be difficult to verify. Yet the supply chain model presented here is still a useful picture of the Zara supply chain and illustrates its operations and its capabilities (see more about this in “Supply Chain Modeling and Simulation Logic“). This case study and supply chain modelisbased on data from articles listed in the bibliography below. Theassumptions and specifications listed here are built into the model, and you can easily change them as better data becomes available. New products, facilities, vehicles and routes can also be added to this model to further explore how Zara’s supply chain operates.

  • Zara finished goods garments are combined into two categories of products, Zara Fashion Pack represents in-house manufactured high fashion items, Zara Basics Pack represents basic items contract manufactured by others
  • Zara Fashion Pack = 100 garments; price of 5,000 euros; weight of 40 Kg; volume of 1 cubic meter;
  • Zara Basics Pack = 200 garments; price of 3,000 euros; weight of 60 Kg; volume of 0.5 cubic meters
  • The Cube employs 3,000 people at average rate of 8 euros per hour = 64 euros per day
  • Automated warehouse in Zaragoza employs 800 people at avgof 64 euros per day and other facility operating costs for utilities, insurance, etc. cost additional 15,000 euros daily
  • Raw fabric costs per case: Fabric1 = 1 cubic meter; price of 1,000 euros;Fabric2 = 0.5 cubic meter; price of 800 euros; Fabric 3 = 0.6 cubic meter, price of 1,200 euros
  • Zara factories need mix of raw fabrics to create their finished goods; see the definition of these facilities to see individual requirements and production
  • The Cube has 1.6 million cubic meters of product storage space
  • 150 million items pass through Cube annually or 411,000 per day
  • 11 actual Zara factories are represented by 5 factories in the model
  • Monorail shipping containers are 50 cubic meters in volume, can carry 10,000 kilograms of weight, and travel at average speed including loading and unloading of 60 kilometers per hour
  • Zara stores in a single city are represented by a single store that combines the demand of all stores in that city – not all cities are included and more cities can be added to this model
  • Vehicle operating costs per km areset to bejust half the normal cost for trucks and airplanes. This more accurately models the process where Zarapays forone-way shipping containers to move products from one facility to another without paying the full round-trip cost (carbon per km was also adjusted to half of normal for the same reason). This compensates for the model logic whichcalculatesvehicle costs based on the round trip distance instead of the one-way distance.
  • Full operating cost per km is used for the monorail vehicles that move products between the Cube DC and the Zara garment factories because Zara owns those vehicles and pays for full round-trip costs.
  • All specifications for Products, Facilities, Vehicles and Routes in this supply chain model can be edited and changed if you have better data
  • New products, facilities, vehicles and routes can be added to this model and you can simulate the results as you expand your model

Bibliography:

A web search on “Zara supply chain” will yield many results; this case study is based on information from some of those results listed below:

The World’s Most Valuable Brands – #46 Zara
A ranking and brief profile of the 100 most valuable and recognized brand name companies – Forbes, June 2019

We went inside one of the sprawling factories where Zara makes its clothes
https://www.businessinsider.nl/how-zara-makes-its-clothes-2018-10?international=true&r=US – By Mary Hanbury, Business Insider, 2018

Zara Uses Supply Chain to Win Again
In face of flator declining retail industry sales, Zara stands out – By Kevin O’Marah – Forbes, 9 Mar 2016

Zara’s Fast Fashion Edge
Speed and responsiveness to customer demand drives Zara’s business model
– By Susan Berfield and Manuel Baigorri – Bloomberg Business, 14 Nov 2013

How Zara Grew Into the World’s Largest Fashion Retailer
History and business model of Zara – By Suzy Hansen, The New York Times Magazine, 9Nov 2012

Logistics Clustering for Competitive Advantage
Zara’sglobal logistics hub outsideSpanish city of Zaragoza – By Yossi Sheffi, Dir MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, CSCMPs Supply Chain Quarterly, Quarter 3 2012

Polka Dots Are In? Polka Dots It Is!
How Zara gets fresh styles to stores insanely fast—within weeks. –By Seth Stevenson – Slate.com, 21 Jun 2012

We found thefollowingslide presentations were also informative:

Register onSCM Globeto gain accessto this andother supply chain simulations. Click the blue “Register” button on the app login page, and buy an account with a credit card (unless you have an account already). Scan the “Getting Started” section, and you are ready to start. Go to the SCM Globe library and click the “Import” button next to this or any other supply chain model.

Zara Clothing Company Supply Chain | SCM Globe (2024)

FAQs

What is Zara's supply chain strategy? ›

Zara sticks to a deep, predictable and fast rhythm, based around rapid deliveries to stores. Each Zara outlet sends in two orders per week on specific days. Trucks leave at specific times and shipments arrive in stores at specific times.

Who is Zara's clothing supplier? ›

Parent company to brands like Zara, Pull & Bear, Bershka, and Stradivarius among others, Inditex Group is Europe's leading clothing retailer. Like many other clothing retailers, Inditex outsources a large quantity of its production to suppliers in countries like China, Turkey, and Bangladesh.

Which functions are integrated in Zara's supply chain? ›

The company created innovative manufacturing process allowing quickly responding and selling clothes to its stores. Zara controls key components of its supply chain: designing, manufacturing, distribution, and retailing.

Does Zara have a responsive supply chain? ›

Zara's highly responsive supply chain is central to its business success. The heart of the Zara supply chain is a huge, highly automated distribution center (DC) called “The Cube”.

What is Zara global presence and strategy? ›

Zara's international market strategies are based on the vertical model of production, centralized control over the production process, and flexibility to the environments of different markets in different countries, as well as diverse and rapidly changing preferences of the customers.

What are the 4 supply chain strategies? ›

Integration, operations, purchasing and distribution are the four elements of the supply chain that work together to establish a path to competition that is both cost-effective and competitive.

Where does Zara source its clothes from? ›

While some competitors outsource all production to Asia, Zara manufactures its most fashionable items – half of all its merchandise – at a dozen company-owned factories in Spain (particularly in Galicia), Portugal (northern part) and Turkey.

Where does Zara get their products from? ›

While most fashion and sportswear firms rely on Asian manufacturing for the bulk of their products, Inditex makes more than half its products in what it calls “proximity” markets — mainly Spain, Portugal, Morocco and, to a lesser degree, Turkey.

Does Zara produce their own clothes? ›

These pieces are sent to external factories to be sewn together, along with a prototype of the item so that the factories can copy the exact design. A spokesperson for Inditex said that Zara outsources all of the stitching of its clothing.

Is zaras supply chain sustainable? ›

As one of the largest fashion retailers in the world, Zara has an opportunity to lead the way into a sustainable future. Zara has taken steps towards good supply chain management, such as the Closing the Loop program. However, its business model is based on an unsustainably high turnover rate.

What are the 7 supply chain functions? ›

While supply chain is a very broad career field, it has 7 primary functional areas: Purchasing, Manufacturing, Inventory Management, Demand Planning, Warehousing, Transportation, and Customer Service.

What are 5 key roles in the supply chain? ›

The five functions of supply chain management include the following:
  • Purchasing. The first function of supply chain management is purchasing. ...
  • Operations. ...
  • Logistics. ...
  • Resource Management. ...
  • Information Workflow.
4 Feb 2021

Does Zara use push or pull supply chain? ›

Zara's business model has been enabled by its innovative supply chain, which has shifted from push to pull & has reduced the time-to-market. Average fashion retailer has 2 to 5 collections that designs more than 5 months in advance and then “pushes” the manufactured merchandise to retailers or their own stores.

How many suppliers does Zara have? ›

In 2021, our supply chain encompassed 1,790 direct suppliers in 44 markets who in turn used 8,756 factories, providing work for over three million workers.

How is Zara's supply chain different from most other supply chains in their industry? ›

How is Zara's supply chain different from most other supply chains in their industry? - Far from pushing its factories to maximize output, Zara intentionally leaves extra capacity. - Rather than chase economies of scale, Zara manufactures and distributes products in small batches.

Why is Zara successful globally? ›

Zara's success is based on its ability to adapt quickly. Unlike many clothing brands, whose designs are stagnant for the season, Zara is constantly assessing and reacting to the environment in a matter of weeks. The brand designs new styles and pushes them into stores while the trend is still at its peak.

What is the uniqueness of Zara a global fashion brand? ›

Zara follows the principle of reducing the quantity manufactured for a particular style. By doing so, Zara not only reduces its exposure to any single product but also creates artificial scarcity. The principle is applied to all fashion items.

What are the 4 global marketing strategies? ›

A global marketing strategy doesn't only cover selling products across borders. It includes layering the 4 Ps of marketing (Product, Pricing, Promotions, and Place) with other marketing processes such as analysis, planning, tracking results, and gathering social proof.

What are the 7 R's of supply chain? ›

So, what are the 7 Rs? The Chartered Institute of Logistics & Transport UK (2019) defines them as: Getting the Right product, in the Right quantity, in the Right condition, at the Right place, at the Right time, to the Right customer, at the Right price.

What are the 3 basic supply chain? ›

There are three main flows of supply chain management: the product flow, the information flow, and the finances flow. The Product Flow – The product flow involves the movement of goods from a supplier to a customer. This supply chain management flow also concerns customer returns and service needs.

What is supply chain process? ›

Supply chain management is the process of delivering a product from raw material to the consumer. It includes supply planning, product planning, demand planning, sales and operations planning, and supply management.

Which sourcing strategy does Zara use? ›

Zara's business strategy is based on vertical integration and logistics trade-offs.

What raw materials does Zara use? ›

Inditex said they'll only use cotton, linen and polyester that is organic, sustainable or recycled by 2025. The use of these materials, along with viscose, make up 90% of the raw materials they purchase.

How much clothing does Zara produce? ›

As the largest fast fashion retailer in the world, Zara produces around 450 million garments a year and releases approximately 500 new designs a week, or about 20,000 different styles a year. That amounts to more than 450 million items produced per year.

How does Zara use its supply chain capabilities to generate competitive advantage? ›

How does Zara use its supply chain capabilities to generate competitive advantage? Stocking clothing far in advance of sales to ensure in-stock availability. Buying new seasonal clothing lines in bulk to take advantage of volume discounts from suppliers.

Who has the most sustainable supply chain? ›

Top 10 green supply chains
  • Marks and Spencer and MAS Holdings.
  • BT (British Telecom)
  • Nike.
  • Adobe Systems.
  • Toyota.
  • Maersk Line.
  • Johnson and Johnson.
22 Oct 2013

How has Zara reduced supply chain disruption risk? ›

So Zara began to source some products from lower-cost locations. In doing so, it also reduced the impact of a potential disruption, since not all items would be affected by a disruption in one geographic area. Large companies can segment their supply chains to improve profits and reduce supply chain fragility.

How does Zara supply chain help minimize waste management? ›

Procurement Methodology: Zara's Procurement team doesn't work on the number of finished clothes but on the quantity of raw materials needed to manufacture the clothes. This helps reduce waste, as you can re-use fabric but not resell a piece of clothing that didn't meet the expectations.

What are the 5 types of supply chain? ›

Here are six types of supply chain models that can drive supply chain management for a business:
  • Continuous Flow. This is one of the most traditional models on the list. ...
  • Fast chain. The fast chain model is one of the new names in supply chain strategies. ...
  • Efficient Chain. ...
  • Agile. ...
  • Custom-configured. ...
  • Flexible.
10 May 2022

What are the 5 types of supply? ›

There are five types of supply—market supply, short-term supply, long-term supply, joint supply, and composite supply.

What are the main supply chains? ›

The three main flows of the supply chain are the product flow, the information flow and the finances flow. These occur across three main stages: strategy, planning and operation. SCM involves coordinating and integrating these flows both within and among companies. A diagram of the main stages of the supply chain.

What is the most important part of the supply chain? ›

Production is one among the most important aspects of this system. It is only possible when all the other components of the supply chain are in tandem with each other. For the process of production to start it is essential that proper planning and supply of goods, as well as the inventory, are well maintained.

What are the benefits of supply chain? ›

Important benefits of supply chain management
  • Better collaboration with suppliers.
  • Better quality control.
  • Shipping optimisation.
  • Reduced inventory and overhead costs.
  • Improved risk mitigation.
  • Stronger cash flow.
  • A more agile business.
  • Better visibility and data analytics.
26 Jan 2022

What are the top 3 elements of supply chain? ›

Generally the key aspects of Supply Chain management are Purchasing (sourcing), Planning (scheduling) and Logistics (delivery). Sometimes logistics is separate, and procurement may be included with Purchasing, depending upon how location specific the procurement activities are.

What technologies are used by Zara? ›

Zara, on the other hand, has, through the use of digitalization and data analytics, managed to develop a nimble, efficient supply chain that cuts this production cycle down to less than three weeks.

Does Zara have a vertical supply chain? ›

The largest company in the Inditex group, Zara operates a vertically integrated business that controls all design, production, warehousing, logistics, and distribution processes for the 450 million items sold annually in their stores.

Who is Zara target market? ›

The Zara target market includes women and men, mainly younger adults in the age range of 18 to 40. This places the Zara segmentation strategy as largely focusing on Millennials and Gen Z, who are both fashion conscious and tech savvy.

What makes Zara's value chain more effective than other fast fashion retailers value chains? ›

Zara sells over 11,000 distinct items per year versus its competitors that carry 2,000 to 4,000. However Zara also boasts the lowest year-end inventory levels in the fashion industry. This lean working capital management offsets their higher production costs and enables them to boast rapid sales turnover rates.

What are the main characteristics of Zara's strategy? ›

The company is owned by textile giant Inditex and is its flagship brand. 7 Zara's ownership of its supply-chain steps allows for more rapid product turnover; Zara can design a product and have it sold in stores a month later. Zara's strategy is to offer a higher number of available products than its competitors.

What is Zara's final product strategy? ›

Product Strategy of Zara

At Zara, what it does is to create new clothing designs all year round and only produce a limited number before moving on to the next designs. With these abbreviated production runs, designs get sold out faster, and there are virtually no leftovers.

What is the supply chain strategy followed by Zara short design to sale cycle? ›

They ship very small batches twice a week. As a result, it creates a sense of scarcity, very few items are unsold, and if the experiment fails there is much time (thanks to their very responsive Supply Chain) to try other different styles. This eventually helps Zara find the right product almost every time.

What is Zara brand strategy? ›

Zara's strategy is to offer a higher number of available products than its competitors. While most clothing retailers manufacture and offer to the public for sale 2,000 to 4,000 different articles of clothing, Zara's production has been markedly higher, at over 10,000 pieces produced per year.

What are the 3 supply chain strategies? ›

3 supply chain strategies for small businesses
  • Demand-driven supply chain strategy. A demand-driven supply chain focuses on meeting demand from the consumer. ...
  • Agile supply chain strategy. ...
  • Collaborative supply chain strategy.
21 Jan 2022

What makes Zara brand unique? ›

The Zara marketing strategy is built on the promise of instant fashion – giving customers the styles they want faster than competitors and still at an affordable price. Zara produces over three times the number of items each year than other fast fashion competitors, however in smaller quantities.

What are the four 4 stages of supply chains? ›

What are the components of your supply chain you should be focusing on right now?
  • INTEGRATION. Integration starts at your strategic planning phase and is critical throughout your communications and information sharing and data analysis and storage. ...
  • OPERATIONS. ...
  • PURCHASING. ...
  • DISTRIBUTION.

What is the best supply chain strategy? ›

Some strategies for an excellent supply chain are:
  • Cut inventory costs. Be it a brick and mortar store or an online business, inventory is always present and it costs money. ...
  • Integrate business processes with technology. ...
  • Use an inventory management software. ...
  • Manage inventory risk. ...
  • Take green initiatives.
3 Sept 2021

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: The Hon. Margery Christiansen

Last Updated:

Views: 6042

Rating: 5 / 5 (70 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: The Hon. Margery Christiansen

Birthday: 2000-07-07

Address: 5050 Breitenberg Knoll, New Robert, MI 45409

Phone: +2556892639372

Job: Investor Mining Engineer

Hobby: Sketching, Cosplaying, Glassblowing, Genealogy, Crocheting, Archery, Skateboarding

Introduction: My name is The Hon. Margery Christiansen, I am a bright, adorable, precious, inexpensive, gorgeous, comfortable, happy person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.