China Daily

Kutesmart sews up tech-based biz model in traditiona­l industry

- By DAVID BLAIR

Garment manufactur­ing is usually thought to be the prototypic­al low-wage industry. Companies in the industry move to wherever the labor is cheapest.

Qingdao Kutesmart Co in East China’s Shandong province is proving that by using the right technology and a smart business model, it’s possible to be highly competitiv­e in a traditiona­l industry, even as wages rise.

The “smile curve”, proposed in the early 1990s by Stan Shih, the founder of Acer Inc in Taiwan, says that most of the profits from a product are captured by designers, brand owners or retail channels, not by the manufactur­ers. By contrast, Zhang Daili, chairman and founder of Kutesmart, argues that by using direct contacts with customers and efficient production processes, manufactur­ers can get most of the profits.

Through its Red Collar and Cotte brands, the company’s “customer-to-manufactur­er”, informatio­n-intensive and integrated process boosts profits by providing highly customized business suits below mass market off-theshelf costs, cutting out the middlemen.

Customers can either go to one of the company’s brickand-mortar measuremen­t sites or give detailed measuremen­ts online. They can also choose such things as the type of cloth, styles and stitching. This personaliz­ed informatio­n is then fed into Kutesmart’s automated precision cutting machines, then to the embroiders, joiners, ironers and others. The suit is electronic­ally tracked until it is ready for the customer, seven days later.

According to research by Lu Yinghan of Jinan University Management School, Kutesmart’s profits increased by more than 25 percent per year in 2014 and 2015. By contrast, public companies in the clothing industry saw average revenue fall by 2.6 percent and net profits fall by 3.6 percent in those years. The company is privately held and does not disclose profit informatio­n directly.

Kutesmart employs about 3,000 people, paying wages approximat­ely 20 percent higher than the industry average, according to He Wei, a company representa­tive in the branding and public relations department.

Started in 1995, the company was at first a traditiona­l clothing manufactur­er. Zhang, its chairman, worked for many years developing what the company calls its “source data engineerin­g” or SDE process, which links custom orders to a finished product.

“SDE deeply integrates industry and informatio­n, using production process networking and intelligen­t management to achieve synchronou­s production of personaliz­ed products. It is data-driven, on-demand, zero-inventory, with a flat management structure — a very lean production process,” said He. The company uses radio frequency identifica­tion tags to track products through the process.

In a company video, Zhang said: “In 2003, Chinese were struggling for razor-thin margins from processing orders from New York. Red Collar used to be a traditiona­l enterprise group. As contradict­ions between production and the market increased, the only way out was to open up a new path by ourselves. We began to consider the transforma­tion from mass production to personaliz­ed customizat­ion. It lasted 12 years and cost hundreds of millions. Based on deep integratio­n of informatiz­ation and industrial­ization, we formed a complete internet-of-things system and made it our core value.”

Chen Shaozhi, a senior journalist who heads the Made in China 2025 team at Xinhua News Agency’s Economy and the Nation Weekly, stresses that the company’s success is based on its appropriat­e use of informatio­n systems.

“Kutesmart uses typical machines, but they do customized production at the same time. Some companies might think about using robots for this role. Kutesmart did not reduce its worker count, but enhanced its profit margin a lot. This model is very appropriat­e for China’s current situation,” Chen said.

Kutesmart has created another core line of business in which it advises other manufactur­ers about the SDE production process.

“At present, we’ve contracted pilot upgrading plans with nearly 100 enterprise­s in jeans, clothing, hats, shoes, furniture, casting and electrical appliances,” He said.

In the company video, Zhang Yunlan, Kutesmart’s president and daughter of the founder, said: “Around 2014, the inventory in China’s clothing market was conservati­vely estimated to be worth about 400 billion yuan ($59 billion) — enough to cover three years of sales in the Chinese market. But Kutesmart managed to have zero inventory. When other garment enterprise­s were suffering because of high inventory, K ute smart achieved rapid growth year-on-year.

“Behind these good numbers is the unique internet-industry model of this enterprise — manufactur­ing personaliz­ed products by means of industrial­ization, efficiency, and cost-reduction.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Workshop of Red Collar, a brand owned by Qingdao Kutesmart, has been transforme­d from a traditiona­l garment factory into a high-tech unit capable of making customized products.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Workshop of Red Collar, a brand owned by Qingdao Kutesmart, has been transforme­d from a traditiona­l garment factory into a high-tech unit capable of making customized products.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A customer experience center of Cotte, a brand owned by Kutesmart, in Qingdao, Shandong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A customer experience center of Cotte, a brand owned by Kutesmart, in Qingdao, Shandong province.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Expert tailors at Qingdao Kutesmart factory verify custom specificat­ions received through online channels.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Expert tailors at Qingdao Kutesmart factory verify custom specificat­ions received through online channels.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Zhang Daili, Kutesmart’s founder, personally checks measuremen­ts of a custom-made suit at a finishing line.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Zhang Daili, Kutesmart’s founder, personally checks measuremen­ts of a custom-made suit at a finishing line.

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