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Fashion Business, Think Globally

Thinking Globally

I think we all agree we have a very huge monster to deal with in China, which we (USA) are for the most part responsible for. However, I think that until USA follows our own laws of compliance in regard to Intellectual Property (IP) we will continue to have a problem internationally.  Additionally, I think it will pay off if the US could take the time to study and understanding international cultures. It is not all about the US!  Education in schools, colleges and within our businesses should focus on further education and incumbent workers training. The same curriculum is often taught for the past 25 years!!! Business and commerce has changed and it is a fact that in recent times it changes daily.

The US would be more advised to think Global in its overall approach in business and exports. It may also be a good idea to be more sensitive to the way business is conducted internationally. Have a cup of tea and take the time to know who you work with. In order for the US to survive our international depression we need to first get a grip here domestically and also understand the amazing opportunities that the US has NOW with exporting US products.  I believe we can survive and ultimately win if we react and adjust but it has to be NOW!

I am so very disappointed that there is a real lack of understanding for the need for domestic manufacturing to bring the jobs back. China is a massive growing economy and although there is much about their culture that is disturbing we should also recognize we have many problems here, which we need to address. Face facts that China is our future consumers. China loves “Made in the USA” and we need to focus and profit from this ASAP. It is a Global economy and we are all partners! I believe if we work together we all win. It will take a team!

Sincerely,
Frances Harder

The Many Looks of Peruvian Alpaca by Deborah Belgum & Apparel News

The Many Looks of Peruvian Alpaca by  Deborah Belgum Apparel News


Dog in Lima, Peru

The world of alpaca clothing has many looks.

Frances Harder, president of Fashion Business Inc., in Los Angeles, found  that out recently during a nearly three-week United Nationis-sponsored mission to Peru to teach women-owned alpaca companies all about costing and production as well as the ins and outs of the U.S. clothing market.

While in Lima, Harder found that alpaca sweaters are not limited to just humans. There are a few canines, like the one she saw here on a Lima street, that like to don warn-weather gear. (It is winter right now in Peru.)

Harder traveled to Arequipa to give a number of classes. She was accompanied by a group of U.S. and European manufacturers brought by PromPeru, the Peruvian promtional agency. The manufacturers were searching for alpaca producers who could meet their fashion needs.

One of those U.S. production people was Laura Sherman, a consultant to Woodleigh Clothing in Glendale, Calif.

Sherman said she spent one day “speed-dating” 16 manufacturers who examined her samples. She buys panels of fabric and material. The panels are then sewn into tops and dresses and other garments. “Four of them were willing to work along with us,” Sherman said, after returning from her first trip to Peru in June

Harder traveled on to the high-altitude town of Puno, on the shores of Lake Titicaca, to see an experimental alpaca ranch where they are trying to raise alpaca whose fur is longer and finer.

The take-away from Harder and Sherman is that the Peruvian people are some of the nicest people in the world. And there are a lot of alpaca in this Andean country.


Frances Harder with baby alpaca in the highlands of Peru

Source Article http://www.apparelnews.net/blog/2378_the_many_looks_of_peruvian_alpaca.html

Chargebacks

Chargeback- Typically the term refers to the monetary penalties assessed against vendors for non-performance violations.


S
elling to large department stores has become a very risky business and new companies should be aware and educated about ways to avoid the possibility of canceled orders and charge backs.  These charge backs can occur for a number of reasons. Some typical reasons could be when the store wants part-payment for any of your garments that have not sold and, or end up on the mark down rack, or if your shipment is late.  However, in reality charge backs are much more complex and will add to the manufacturer’s overhead costs and may even affect the pricing of the garment.  Manufacturers who want to keep selling to these big stores and rely on these types of orders will often try to cooperate with discounts and chargebacks and may compromise profit margins.  Unfortunately, it has become such a contentious issue that now some manufacturers refuse to sell to certain retailers because of these charge back issues and what some perceive as bullying tactics. For this reason many manufacturers have opted to open their own retail stores in recent years.

Some reasons for Chargebacks:

  • Late delivery
  • Defective product
  • Customer returns
  • Products not shipped together – (Tops and bottoms)
  • Labeling
  • Shipping infractions

Chargebacks Protecting the Retailer

Chargebacks originally had a valid reason and to some degree they still do in protecting retailers from non-conforming products, which can cost millions of dollars in product returns and, or wasted advertisement for products that aren’t available. However, the problem is when retailers abuse vendors through the over use of chargebacks. For certain larger department stores who abuse charging back it has become big business and charging back manufacturers has provided the retailer with other means of making a profit.

 

Chargebacks & Markdown Refunds

As listed above chargebacks can be demanded by a store for late deliveries, or for not following the manual of instructions from the retailer, and for a variety of other reasons, which often can seem totally unreasonable!  If too few garments sell at full price, sometimes department stores go back to the manufacturer to ask that they share in the losses from the discounted sales.  Even when the retailer may have made a bad buying selection or the weather has not been typical for the season, the retailer may try and pass on to the manufacturers these problems, when in reality it should not be the manufacturers’ burden. Ironically, markdown money, and or credit demanded by a retailer add to the manufacturer’s overhead costs and may boost the original wholesale price of the garment, which will then end up reflecting the retail selling price.  Another cost that retailers expect the manufacturer to share is the cost of advertising, or promoting the product through in store flyers and newspaper advertisements.  Or, even the positioning of the vendor’s product on the retailers’ floor space.

going out of businessIt has become difficult for the vendor to protect themselves or to fight back due to the sheer weight theses retailers have behind them. For the most part larger retailers have become the bully, taking whatever they can shake out of the pockets of their vendors. Many vendors do not survive this type of encounter with larger retailers. In order to win a contract with a larger retailer, many vendors have to offer a substantially lower cost point, which will compromise profit margins. To do this, vendors will make a contract with the manufacturer of the product, or adjust costing for in house production based on the number of units ordered for a certain price, often dictated by the retailer. But after negotiating a low price on an item, larger retailers frequently substantially slash the number of units they ordered. This leaves the vendor paying a higher price for production for a smaller quality of units that then eats into the already diminished profit margins.  The wise seasoned manufacturer will calculate for problems when costing garments that hope to sell to a larger retailer. They will also calculate for any allowable discounts that will be part of the deal.

Short Pays

Additionally large retailers will often short pay vendors invoices, frequently citing an inconclusive and often unproven performance violation as the reason for the chargeback. However, I have been aware of many manufacturers who were short paid on invoices with little or no information regarding why they were short paid. All larger retailers have legal counsel on staff that small manufacturers do not have, or the capacity to fight the fight to get the payment they are owed! There has been a history of many branded manufacturers’ who have been driven out of business due to unreasonable deductions and chargebacks. Often manufacturers will allow for these uncalled deductions because they want to continue to receive orders from these larger retailers as they have become reliant on the orders to operate.

How to Avoid Chargebacks

read your contractsPurchase orders from larger retailers are very detailed (can be the size of a phone book). These manuals usually include lots of language about penalties, delivery dates, product compliances and inspections.

Be aware of the terms related to “MARGIN support” which refers to how you need to address maintaining a certain margin for the retailer. Be sure that margin does not include shrinkages (theft), employee discounts, return allowance etc. All agreements should be based on actual not anticipated losses. Damage claimed by the retailer must reflect damages that the manufacturer can control or avoid.

  • Read your purchase orders with the help of legal advise
  • Agreement should address:
    • Penalties
    • Damages
    • Damages in transit – should retailer pick up merchandise from your factory then damages in transit should not be your fault.
    • Make sure your agreement specifies that the claim must be substantiated in writing with sufficient notice for you as a vendor to respond.

Should a manufacturer get unreasonable charge backs they will often engage a professional chargeback negotiator to work with the retailer in the hopes that the chargebacks can be reduced.  

Startup Manufacturers

To avoid all of the above nightmare scenarios, startup manufacturers should avoid taking orders from large department stores until they are prepared to sell to them as they can break a small company with one order.  It is far more advisable to diversify your PO’s  to a variety of smaller stores who will usually stay loyal to your company if you perform with your initial first orders. Smaller specialty stores are far less likely to charge back, but it should be noted that they have less buying power with the manufacturer. Plus, these types of orders are smaller and are also more time consuming to fulfill and will result in costing more in production. As with ALL aspects of your business it will be important to build good relationships. It may take time to make the right business connects for your business and also to find the right retailers for your product.

However, it will be important to investigate who you choose to sell to!

Technical People Can Make You Want To Kill Yourself

Here is an example of what you can expect to find from some of the technical people you are going to work with. Consider the following email response from a pattern maker when she was asked to follow through on work she had committed to doing…

Pattern maker: “I got a job that requires me to work full time until about the 18th, plus have a ton of stuff going on this week. I can’t work on the jacket until next week, I’m so sorry. Unfortunately nobody wants me until everybody wants me.

Client: “I just got back from being out of town and just got your message. We have our production already on the schedule with the factory and cannot change it without running the risk of getting pushed out. Can you give me a date that you can comfortably commit to for completion of the work so I can calculate if we will still be able to meet our deadline for production. If we can’t meet the date, I’ll need to pick up the pattern, jacket and notes from the fitting so I can get everything completed and to the factory in time.

Pattern maker: “I’m sorry but this client is on a very short deadline and she has enough work for me to be able to work full time, which I desperately need right now. If you wanted the pattern done by a specific time, you should have told me so. Also, I’ve been available most of the winter, so you could have contacted me earlier.  I’m under an enormous amount of pressure this week and next, so I cannot tolerate anyone else trying to put pressure on me at the last minute like this.  The soonest I will be able to work on it is such and such. I should be able to finish the work that day.

If you are not the technical person doing the work, you can expect to have countless experiences with technical people who you will hire to do specific work and then will not follow through, will not deliver on time, will start the delays right after you make the first payment and the list goes on and one. Whatever it is that makes it this way is unknown, the reality is, if you’re going to be in the fashion business and have to rely on other people to do technical work for you, GET USED TO things like this. It happens all the time and if you’re a new startup company, it will happen to you more often than you will ever want to believe happens.

You’re new, you don’t have many (if any) contacts in the industry, you don’t know a lot of things and you have to rely on other people who have certain skills that you don’t. In a sense, you are completely beholden to your technical people because you have no other choice. The only thing you can do is talk to as many people as possible about who they are using and interview as many people as possible before committing to anyone. This time spent up front doing your due diligence will ultimately save you time, money and a lot of sleepless nights filled with frustration, anger and anxiety. And don’t take anything that your technical people say as the truth, take it from the people who hired them in the past and then hired them again. You’d be surprised at the number of technical people who do not have repeat customers.

 

A New Formula for Measuring PR Success

For anyone considering using a PR firm, this is for you…

public relations measurement 2 A New Formula for Measuring PR SuccessIsn’t there a better way to measure PR effectiveness?

Experienced digital marketers know that “conversion rate” is the holy grail of online success metrics. Conversion rate is the percentage of visitors to a Web site that accomplish an objective. If 100 people visit your Web site, and 7 of them fill out your lead form, your conversion rate is 7%. Conversion rate is so integral to digital marketing it forms the basis for the name of this blog, and my accompanying consulting practice.

In addition to being a valuable signpost on the way to true ROI calculation, conversion rate has the advantage of measuring outcome, not volume. As Avinash Kaushik discusses frequently on his uber-useful Web analytics blog, the smart money is on measuring and analyzing ratios.

Why is Public Relations Exempt from Ratios?

But yet, public relations has never had ratios in its collection of success metrics. It’s always about volume. How much coverage did you get? What’s the paid media equivalency of that coverage (which is the grand champion of pointless, extrapolated metrics), how many reporters did you talk to? etc. etc. etc.

It’s not surprising that both old school public relations and inexperienced Web site managers use the term “hits” (which Jim Sterne snarkily says is an acronym for “How Idiots Track Success.”)

Why can’t we apply conversion rate to public relations? Instead of measuring how many people we’ve talked to, let’s track the results of those conversations. If you have conversations with 20 journalists and bloggers, and 6 of them write about your client, your conversion rate would be 30%.

If you believe that the future (present?) of public relations is hyper-targeted communication and personal relationships with writers that are created before you need their help – and continue long after – isn’t conversion rate a better gauge of the PR practitioner’s expertise? It’s essentially their batting average – how often they can turn relationships into results.

A conversion rate methodology would put the final stake in the heart of the batch and blast press release era, which emphasizes building media lists, not media relationships.

Let’s use math to put the relationships back in public relations. Who’s with me?

Reprinted with permission from Jay Baer, May 9, 2011 from his website http://www.convinceandconvert.com/

I need…

At every step of the way in the process of starting a fashion business or launching a new product, you are going to be saying “I need…”. “I need this…”, “I need that…”, “Where can I find…”, “Who can help me do…” and the list goes on. As every person and product is different, we felt the best way to help you was to provide a place where you could post what you need or are looking for and we and other people could respond with answers to those questions.

When you subscribe to Fashion For Profit, you’ll get access to a series of forum boards where you can post your questions about where you find what you’re looking for and get answers to those questions from the people who are already doing what you’re trying to do. Having quality, reputable referrals and information is critical to your success as a startup, so look no further than our forum boards and get what you need the first time.

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Need Some Inspiration

How much do I feel like quitting sometimes? You put your heart and soul into your endeavor, not to mention all of your money, and sometimes you find yourself asking the question, WHY am I doing this? It is so hard to keep going sometimes and it’s easy to lose your perspective when you encounter daily challenges unlike in any other business. The fashion business is really tough BUT it’s also really rewarding because you get a chance to do the things you’re most passionate about, you get to see your vision of something become reality and if you play your cards right, you’ll one day see someone walking down the street wearing something that was once just an idea and YOU made it happen… THAT is why you do it and THAT is why you keep going!

When you subscribe to Fashion For Profit, you’ll get access to a series of forum boards where you can post the issues you’re having in your business and get some practical feedback and advice, even if it’s just a pep talk that you’re needing. And sometimes you just need to know that someone out there understands what you’re going through and that most definitely is the case!

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