Toronto Star

Zara hopes shipping from stores will boost sales

By using shops to ship orders, company aims to minimize sale hurdles, speed up delivery Zara has been merging its inventory for online and in-store, rather than keeping separate stocks.

- JEANNETTE NEUMANN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

MADRID— Fast-fashion giant Zara is equipping its stores to also ship online purchases, betting that the move will boost sales of full-priced items than can be delivered to customers more quickly than from a warehouse. The rollout encompasse­s around 2,000 stores in 48 countries, including the U.S., making it one of the largest-scale attempts by an apparel company to repurpose downtown shops to help fulfill online orders. Executives at Zara, whose Spanish parent company Industria de Diseño Textil SA is the world’s largest fashion retailer by sales, say they expect to complete the transforma­tion by year’s end.

“This is something very, very strategic for us, this idea of full integratio­n between store and online stockrooms,” Inditex Chairman and Chief Executive Pablo Isla told analysts in June. The ability to offer a shopper what she wants, and quickly, increases the likelihood of a fullprice sale, Mr. Isla said.

For instance, a Zara blazer could be out of stock online but available at a store near where the online shopper lives. With the new ship-from-store option, that store could then mail the blazer to the online shopper’s address.

Zara’s efforts are part of a broader push among retail executives in the U.S. and Europe to rethink how they can better use their network of brick-andmortar stores to compete with Amazon.com Inc., whose dominance in the retail industry has depressed profits and set new standards for speed of delivery. While some investors have considered traditiona­l retailers’ vast store networks costly and antiquated, industry executives are increasing­ly equipping them to fulfill online orders to quicken delivery times, cut delivery costs and lift sales.

“There has been a trend lately to think of a store as a liability,” Forrester Research Inc. principal analyst Brendan Witcher said. “It’s an asset—but you need to learn to use it correctly.” Mr. Witcher expects about one in three U.S. retailers with annual sales of more than $1 billion to have ship-from-store in place by 2020, up from nearly zero five years ago.

Traditiona­lly, retailers shipped items from warehous- es to downtown locations. As online shopping grew, many retailers created inventory lines specifical­ly for internet orders. Retail companies including Zara have been working to merge their inventory for online and in-store purchases rather than keeping separate stocks, to minimize lost and discounted sales.

Ship-from-store initiative­s are one pillar of efforts by Zara and other retailers to tackle the far bigger problem of mismanaged inventory, which, by one estimate, cost retailers nearly $1.4 trillion in lost sales in 2017. Retailers world-wide, from bigbox stores to fashion brands, lost an estimated $686 billion in sales last year because items were out of stock, according to a June report by research and advisory firm IHL Group. The firm estimates that retailers lost another $675 billion last year because of overstock, which triggers markdowns.

Zara executives told analysts in June that shipping out from their stores has had a negligible impact on overall costs in Spain and other countries where they have already rolled out the program.

While shipping online orders from downtown stores can lower delivery costs, some retailers have struggled to make shipfrom-store profitable because they lack the technology to track in-store and in-warehouse inventory accurately.

Logistics are also a challenge, particular­ly for big-box retailers that have varied merchandis­e ranging from 50-pound bags of dog food to electronic­s.

Gap Inc. launched ship-fromstore in late 2012 and has continued to outfit additional stores and brands. J.C. Penney Co. started shipping from 250 stores in 2016 and rolled it out to its remaining 610 U.S. and Puerto Rican stores last year.

While Inditex is behind some of its U.S. peers in adapting its store stockrooms to fulfill online orders, Zara’s parent company is the first major European apparel company to roll out ship-from-store, analysts say.

Executives at Berlin-based Zalando SE, Western Europe’s top online apparel-and-footwear company, said they receive about 40 million notificati­ons each year that a shopper wants to buy an item that is currently out of stock on their website.

To cut that figure, Zalando is working with around 30 partner brands in Germany to connect their in-store inventory to Zalando’s website, enabling shipment of online orders from those stores.

The integratio­n has sped up some delivery times, says Carsten Keller, a Zalando vice president. In 2016, Zalando delivered an Adidas item, which was ordered on zalando.de, from an Adidas AG retail store in downtown Berlin to the shopper’s home in 26 minutes—its fastest delivery time.

“Warehouses on the outskirts of cities will never be as close to consumers as stores are,” Mr. Keller said.

 ?? ZARA ??
ZARA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada