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Consumer Demand and Fashion Marketing

Consumer Demand and Fashion Marketing. Fashion Marketing. The entire process of research, planning, promoting, and distributing the raw materials, apparel, and accessories Marketing is the power behind the product development, production, distribution, retailing, and promotion of Fibers

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Consumer Demand and Fashion Marketing

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  1. Consumer Demand and Fashion Marketing

  2. Fashion Marketing • The entire process of research, planning, promoting, and distributing the raw materials, apparel, and accessories • Marketing is the power behind the product development, production, distribution, retailing, and promotion of • Fibers • Fabrics • Leathers • Furs • Trimmings • Apparel and Accessories • Begins and ends with the customer

  3. Consumer Demand • With increased income, consumers have • better and cheaper products • constant availability • Convenience • pleasant shopping experiences • Research what the customer wants to buy, then develop the product • Marketing firms analyze lifestyles and buying behaviors • Consumer Demand is the effect the consumer has on the market place • Created by increased spending on advertising and other marketing activities • Ultimate goal of marketing is to establish the identity of a brand or store so customers will seek it out (destination brand)

  4. Consumer Groups • Also known as market segments • Age • Lifestyle • Living area • Educational background • Ethnic background • Traditionally, society was divided by income classes • Demographics are statistical studies of population characteristics based on • Birthrate, age distribution, and income

  5. Grey market • Pre 1945 • Most neglected by designers, retailers and the media • Second-fastest growing segment • Tend to feel younger than actual age • Have money to spend and enjoy new products • Tend to dress up more often • Prefers shopping for apparel and accessories by catalog, Internet, or department stores • By 2010, 1/3 of the population will be over age 50 • Future marketers will need to cater to this segment.

  6. Baby Boomers • 1946-1964 • Most influential group since WWII • Largest segment and primary demographic spending group • The women spend more on clothing than any other group • Often ignored by the industry • Advertisers have stereotypical ideas about the style of those over 40 and are afraid to alienate the younger crowd with multigenerational ads • Wants same style as young people but with the appropriate length and fit

  7. Generation X • 1965-1979 • Also known as the Baby Busters • Now career- and family-oriented • Spending reflects orientation • Housing, home goods, transportation, and education

  8. Generation Y • Post 1980 • Also known as the Baby Boomlet • Children of baby boomers • Racially diverse • Global, sports, computer, and entertainment orientation • Ads, TV, movies, Internet, and magazines influence buying decisions • Fashion oriented, passion for clothes • Cannot afford to spend as much as the baby boomers • Prefer specialty apparel chains and boutiques • By 2010, the nation will be polarized • Postwar boomers over 50 and millennial generation under 30 • Companies must respond with multigenerational ad campaigns

  9. Ethnic Diversity • The Immigration and Naturalization Service projects that legal immigration exceeds 700,000 per year • Black, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American segments will grow much faster than the white majority • Look for different things in purchases • Cultural perceptions regarding styling, color, pattern, fabrics, fit, quality, and value

  10. Psychographic or Lifestyle Trends • Psychographics is the use of psychological, sociological, and anthropological factors to construct market segments • Manufacturers and retailers turn to psychographics to further segment and analyze consumer groups and their fashion preferences

  11. Independent Women • More than 75% of females age 20-60 work • 22 million women live alone or are single head of households • Shop less often, favor convenient shopping • Use catalogs, electronic stores, and superstores

  12. Larger sizes • Majority of population is considered large size • 68% of Americans are overweight • This affects • Manufacturers • Must change sizing and construction of garments • Retail stores • Devote more square footage of the store to large-size apparel

  13. Other Psychographic Trends • Community • Connection to the community; cities are gaining population • Renewed interest in family life • More money spent on the home and family activities rather than fashion • Cocooning • People stay in due to fear of terrorism, war, and crime, shopping less or by catalog or Internet

  14. Other Psychographic Trends • Comfort • Staying relaxed and casual dressing at home/work or activewear • Increase at-home use of computers • Online shopping • Working at home • Expected to increase • Value of time • Willing to trade money for free time leads to the appeal of shopping at home/Internet • Stress • Busy schedules = other ways to shop

  15. Target Marketing • Target Market is the group of consumers you want to reach • Market niche • small population group of unserved or underserved people who have a need for a product

  16. Database Marketing • Gathered to improve offerings • Collect and analyze data • Unknowingly we give merchants data • Shopping habits • Size • Color preferences • Lifestyle • Age • Income • And address • Other information is formed into categorized into databases (consumer profiles)

  17. Mapping • Merchants translate sales data and purchasing patterns into geographic maps • Visual representation of their market • Helps management to understand traffic flow and sales potential • Consumer profiles are used to • Learn about customers • Find new customers • Establish target markets • Find/create new products • New ways to advertise • Keep focused on their customers

  18. Consumer Income • Personal income • Gross amount of income from all sources, such as wages and salaries, interest, and dividends • Disposable income • Personal income – taxes. This amount determines a person’s purchasing power • Discretionary income • Income left over after food, lodging, and other needs have been paid for • Money available to spend or save at will

  19. Economic measurements • Purchasing power • Is the amount of goods and services that income can by • Related to the economic situation • Includes • Credit • Corporate Ownership • Labor Costs • Inflation • Recession • International Currency

  20. Economic Measurements • More retailers are offering their own credit cards for their databases • Too much easy credit available • Increase in personal bankruptcy • Corporate debt has lead to manufacturer and retailer bankruptcies • Most companies have grown into corporations or purchased by other corporations • Mergers and acquisitions result in giant “corporate groups”’ • EX: Liz Claiborne • Corporations sell public stock to gain access to funding Credit Corporate Ownership

  21. Economic Measurements • As people receive higher salaries and live better the cost of making products increases • Rising domestic labor costs, we now must search for cheaper sources of labor • Asia, Mexico, the Caribbean Basin, etc. • The US experienced inflation during the 1980s • People earn more money each year • Higher prices • Higher taxes • Result in little or no increase in purchasing power Labor Costs Inflation

  22. Economic Measurements • 2002-2003 • A recession is a cycle beginning with a decrease in spending • Forced to cut back production • Results in unemployment • Drop in gross national product (GNP) • Furthers the cycle • Strong dollar • Americans can afford to purchase foreign-made merchandise cheaper • The Euro • In 1999, the euro became the official currency of 11 of the 15 members of the European Union (EU) Recession International Currency

  23. Global Trade Influences on Marketing • Balance of Trade • Difference in value between a country’s exports and imports • Tariffs • Customs charges imposed on imports in an attempt to protect domestic industry • Quotas • Means of regulating imports and exports • Imports • Goods that are brought in from a foreign country to sell here • Exports • NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement

  24. NAFTA • In 1994, NAFTA created a free market (devoid of import duties) • 560 million people in Canada, the US, and Mexico • Promotes economic growth through the expansion of trade and investment opportunities within the free trade area • Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) has been enacted • The US also has negotiated trade agreements with • Australia, Chile, Israel, Jordan, Morocco, Singapore, and Sub-Saharan Africa • Working on a Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA) • Encompasses 34 Western Hemisphere nations as well as several other countries

  25. Impact of Technology • Business communication • Computers • Intranet: E-Mail on a closed Intranet network system to share information internally among departments • Internet • Video (videoconferencing) • Fax • Television • Telephone • Web sites • E-Commerce • Research Business Communication Personal Communication

  26. Information Systems • Developed based on a companies needs • Product Development • Designers rely on consumer statistics and sales data to track trends • Product Data Management (PDA) and Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) coordinate each step of the design process • In production, goods are given Universal Product Codes (UPC) that identify style, color, size, price, and fabrication

  27. Electronic Data Interchange • In attempt to reduce waiting time in ordering and distribution, textile producers, and apparel manufacturers • Automatic Replenishment • Allows manufacturers to automatically ship goods to stores when inventory levels are low • Value Chain Initiative (VCI) • International standards for sharing information among retailers, manufacturers, and suppliers • Covers all aspects of the supply chain

  28. The Marketing Chain • The flow of product from concept to consumer • Traditionally companies are separate and independent • Trends • Traditional Marketing Chain • Vertical integration • Full package manufacturing • Manufacturer-retailer appliances

  29. Traditional Marketing Chain

  30. Vertical Integration • Many companies are combining fabric production and apparel manufacturing • Manufacturing and retailing • A vertical company produces fabrics, manufactures clothing, and sells the finished product • Cutting out distribution costs increases profits and keeps prices down to the consumer

  31. The Marketing Chain • Full Package Manufacturing • Manufacturer-Retailer Alliances • Forming informal partnerships to integrate the marketing chain • Work on every step of the process together • Must have complete trust in each other

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