Fashion marketing
is the process of managing the flow of merchandise from the initial
selection of designs to be produced to the presentation of products to
retail customers, with the goal of maximizing a company’s sales and
profitability. Successful fashion marketing depends on understanding
consumer desire and responding with appropriate products. Marketers use
sales tracking data, attention to media coverage, focus groups, and
other means of ascertaining consumer preferences to provide feedback to
designers and manufacturers about the type and quantity of goods to be
produced. Marketers are thus responsible for identifying and defining a
fashion producer’s target customers and for responding to the
preferences of those customers.
Marketing operates at both the wholesale and retail levels. Companies
that do not sell their own products at retail must place those products
at wholesale prices in the hands of retailers, such as boutiques,
department stores, and online sales companies. They use fashion shows,
catalogs, and a sales force armed with sample products to find a close
fit between the manufacturer’s products and the retailer’s customers.
Marketers for companies that do sell their own products at retail are
primarily concerned with matching products to their own customer base.
At both the wholesale and the retail level, marketing also involves
promotional activities such as print and other media advertising aimed
at establishing brand recognition and brand reputation for diverse
characteristics such as quality, low price, or trendiness.
Closely related to marketing is merchandising, which attempts to
maximize sales and profitability by inducing consumers to buy a
company’s products. In the standard definition of the term,
merchandising involves selling the right product, at the right price, at
the right time and place, to the right customers. Fashion merchandisers
must thus utilize marketers’ information about customer preferences as
the basis for decisions about such things as stocking appropriate
merchandise in adequate but not excessive quantities, offering items for
sale at attractive but still profitable prices, and discounting
overstocked goods. Merchandising also involves presenting goods
attractively and accessibly through the use of store windows, in-store
displays, and special promotional events.
Merchandising specialists must
be able to respond to surges in demand by rapidly acquiring new stocks
of the favoured product. An inventory-tracking computer program in a
department store in London, for example, can trigger an automatic order
to a production facility in Shanghai for a certain quantity of garments
of a specified type and size to be delivered in a matter of days.
By the early 21st century the internet had become an increasingly important retail outlet, creating new
challenges (e.g., the inability for customers to try on clothes prior to
purchase, the need for facilities designed to handle clothing returns
and exchanges) and opening up new opportunities for merchandisers (e.g.,
the ability to provide customers with shopping opportunities 24 hours
per day, affording access to rural customers). In an era of increasingly
diverse shopping options for retail customers and of intense price
competition among retailers, merchandising has emerged as one of the
cornerstones of the modern fashion industry.
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