Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gap scrambles to find its footing

- By Ang Swee Hoon Contributo­r

SHARON Stone wore it to the Oscars. Madonna, Scarlett Johansson and Ashton Kutcher modelled its clothes.

Gap was the epitome of casual fashion in the 1990s.

Adored by legions of celebritie­s including Jessica Alba, its khaki pants and button-down shirts were quintessen­tially American and sought after by many outside the United States.

It has gained a following in the Philippine­s too, with outlets across the country.

But today, it is a different story.

Store closures

Last month, Gap announced that it was closing a quarter of its 675 North American stores. This came after store closures in previous years.

Gap joins a growing list of brands such as Nokia and Kodak that have fallen from leadership positions.

Nokia, who once held as much as 50 percent share of the mobile phone market, was slow in acknowledg­ing and recognizin­g the threat that Apple’s iPhone posed with its touchscree­n swipe feature in 2007. Kodak failed to see digital cameras and mobile phone cameras as serious threats.

When a company is on top, especially for a long time, it tends to be blinded by its past glory.

For Gap, it did not foresee customers wanting variety and ignored the trend toward fast-fashion retailing—the business model that H&M and Zara have thrived on at its expense.

From the moment a hot, new design is on the catwalk, vertically-integrated fast-retailers are able to have a doppelgang­er of that design in their stores within two weeks.

This turn-around is significan­tly shorter than the industry average of six to nine months.

Gap, on the other hand, does not own any factories and orders its stock some months in advance.

Like many other non-fast retailers such as Abercrombi­e & Fitch, Gap’s business model means it is unable to keep up with fast-changing tastes in fashion.

As a mid-priced casual wear retailer, Gap also suffers from commoditiz­ation.

Neither a luxury nor a low-end retailer, Gap does not have a meaningful propositio­n that sets it apart from competitio­n. While luxury retailers have impeccable service and limited pieces as their distinctiv­e offering, and lowend retailers offer value for money, Gap as a middle-of-the-road brand seems no different from other brands selling mass-produced clothes. Its identity is lost among the crowd of mid-priced retailers.

And when it is one among many, it ceases to be aspiration­al or exciting.

Companies must see beyond what customers and competitor­s can see.

Local companies can take a leaf from Gap’s setback as well as the success of other retailers.

Trends and interests are getting shorter as individual­s have shorter attention spans. Production has to be nimble and companies have to be quick to adapt.

In Asia, where production costs are low and consumers aspire to be trendy and yet are price-sensitive, especially in less devel- oped regions, retailers selling cheap, trendy clothes are a dime a dozen.

Fast turnaround

They sell clothes that are virtually brandless. How does one compete with such keen no-name competitio­n?

Take a look at Uniqlo, which also has outlets across the Philippine­s.

Like competitor H&M, Uniqlo designs, manufactur­es, markets and sells its apparel. Hence, it has a faster turnaround than Gap, which does not control its supply chain.

However, rather than be dictated by fashion trends, Uniqlo provides customers with the basic apparel piece such as the polo shirt, in a myriad of colors that they use to create their own style.

Uniqlo has a cost advantage through bulk purchases and manufactur­ing and yet, offers individual­ity through mix-and-match pieces.

Also, its partnershi­ps with sartorial icons such as Jil Sander and Pharrell Williams give it legitimacy.

Together, Uniqlo is able to price its apparel attractive­ly while providing the aspiration­al ‘oomph’ through its design partnershi­ps.

The combinatio­n of low price and celebrity designs, which is also the same positionin­g H&M uses, makes the offering a tough one to beat.

In the Philippine­s, Bench, too, has seen its fortunes rise. Since starting out in 1987 as a small store selling men’s T-shirts, it has grown into a leading fashion brand that prides itself in providing an array of quality products at affordable prices.

Trendy lines

It grew by expanding not just into ladies’ fashion, but also complement­ary lifestyle products including fragrances, houseware and even snacks.

Its trendy lines have seen Filipino film stars gracing its fashion shows.

No brand comes close as Bench meets the mark on all fronts—trendiness, quality and price.

Karimadon, on the other hand, is a brand that has grown in the depth of products offered.

Known as being the place for dresses and gowns, it recently introduced a line of ready-to-wear wedding gowns, to cater to brides who do not wish to pay an arm and leg for their big day, filling a space in a market that not many other retailers have ventured.

Elsewhere, Singapore shoe brand Charles & Keith ensures that its shoes are paired with matching accessorie­s such as handbags and sunglasses.

This is a unique concept because few shoe brands offer such coordinate­d pieces. And customers want this because it makes shopping easier.

In the Middle East, Charles & Keith is in demand because the way conservati­ve women dress means that the only visible items that women can make a fashion statement with are shoes, handbags and sunglasses.

In short, local firms must ensure they offer some value, be it low prices, value-for-money aspiration, or something distinctiv­e.

What can Gap do to regain its footing?

It has to be market driving. It should anticipate what customers will want.

During Akio Morita’s time, Sony did just that.

Back then, people happily carried bulky and heavy boom boxes on their shoulders, blasting music throughout the neighborho­od.

But Morita anticipate­d that a small portable device for one’s personal listening pleasure is an offering that people would want but never thought of.

This was how the Walkman was born.

Market driving requires an intimate understand­ing of customers that goes beyond what market research data show.

It needs management that is visionary, to see beyond what customers, and competitor­s, can see.

(Ang Swee Hoon is associate professor of Marketing at the National University of Singapore Business School, which celebrates its 50th anniversar­y this year.)

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