This book discusses the value of "how" versus "what." Process innovation is the practice of improving how products are made. Many retailers and brands often over-emphasize what products are sold. In doing so, they miss out on valuable cost savings and on getting products to market faster. This book will demonstrate why investing in the "how" impacts the bottom line. The book also outlines the exact steps brands need to take to improve the "how."
Materials make up every product we sell. The term "materials" accounts for patterns, zippers, ties, trims, and more. Yet, most materials are an afterthought in the product creation process. First, we design and then consider what materials to use. Materials teams do not sit alongside design and are often located overseas to be close to mills and factories. Further, materials teams often report to sourcing. As such, they are isolated from design, merchandising, and planning teams. Although this model has been working for years, it allows for inefficiencies to creep in. There is another layer of complexity to consider. The concept-to-market (that is, go-to-market) calendar outlines the time needed to design, assort, produce, and ship products to a distribution center or store. The calendar marks crucial decision-making moments. It is common for brands to have overlapping calendars. Meaning that teams are working on more than one season at a time. As a result, it is very common to find materials teams scrambling to meet short-term deadlines. Many of these deadlines are pushed out, leading to products being late to market. This costs a retailer or brand valuable profits and gross margin.
Further, long-term innovation goals are also sacrificed. Outdated mindsets related to the use of technology also hinder progress. Decisions on materials and product assortment cannot be made without a physical sample. This happens even at the highest levels of the world's largest brands. The reliance on physical samples is called "Touch Crutch" or "No Sample, No Sale." Contrast this with advances in technology allowing us to do remote surgery and control spacecraft on Earth. As such, retail executives should use digital tools to approve materials and products.
In addition, there are useful tools available to bank materials into a digital library, saving valuable hours of work. Retailers and brands are constantly seeking out ways to be faster to market. Process innovation is where the gains are made. Many areas within product creation are ripe for improvement. Materials and all things related to them are a rich area of opportunity that is rarely explored. This book provides information, insights, and real-life examples to help brands improve processes and get them to market faster. In doing so, there will be a direct and positive impact on the bottom line.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Professional Practice & Development
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
9 s/w Tabellen, 35 s/w Zeichnungen, 35 s/w Abbildungen
9 Tables, black and white; 35 Line drawings, black and white; 35 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 254 mm
Breite: 178 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-041-02287-9 (9781041022879)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Liza Amlani is the Principal and Co-Founder of Retail Strategy Group. The firm works with retailers and brands, helping them improve profitability and organizational effectiveness. Clients span apparel, footwear, luxury, retail tech, and more. Liza is a respected voice cited in Forbes, Bloomberg, Chain Store Age, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Sourcing Journal, and Footwear News. Liza has been an adjunct professor at the renowned Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City. Liza has also been recognized by Rethink Retail as a "Top Retail Expert of 2024." This honor is given to a select group of global experts chosen from a group of over 400 nominees. Before founding Retail Strategy Group, Liza was the merchandising expert in Accenture's retail strategy practice. Before that, she spent 20+ in retail with companies including Ralph Lauren, Club Monaco, Holt Renfrew and more.
Raj Dhiman PhD, is a Co-Founder of Retail Strategy Group. He works with Liza to produce dramatic results for retailers and brands. His retail insights are routinely published in outlets such as The Robin Report. Raj graduated from the University of Toronto with his doctorate in Chemistry and authored three peer-reviewed articles. He decided that academia was not his calling and embarked on a personal transformation journey. As a result, he became a quota-carrying sales rep, selling software to retail businesses. Raj became a top performer in short order and was promoted to lead sales training for his organization. He trained hundreds of elite sales professionals who have gone on to have very successful careers. Raj is an outdoor enthusiast, climbing mountains and hiking trails all over the world. He has also starred in several commercials and frequently places 1st in Table Topics at Toastmasters clubs.
Chapter 1 - It's a Material World Chapter 2 - Materials in the Retail Operating Model Chapter 3 - Creating and Planning the Product Assortment Chapter 4 - Process Innovation Part 1: Who Leads, Design or Materials? Chapter 5 - Process Innovation Part 2: The New Go to Market Calendar Chapter 6 - Guess What? You're Adopted. Chapter 7 - From Providers to Partners: Evolving Vendor Relationships Chapter 8 - Digital Tools Chapter 9 - Material Innovation: "How" Enables The "What" Chapter 10 - Closing the Loop