Tag: Li & Fung

Gap: Creating a Global Brand Strategy that Swings

Remember those snazzy Gap commercials with the khaki-clad 20-somethings grooving to swing music?

The “Khakis Swing” spot from 1998 made Gap a sought-after brand — and now the chain is trying to recapture some of that long-dormant excitement with a new global strategy. According to a recent story from Advertising Age, Gap’s campaigns have typically been created in North America for a Western audience. But, like many retail chains, the company is recognizing that significant growth potential lies in developing overseas markets.

The Gap brand is now available in 90 countries (up from 25 at the beginning of 2010) and has 459 stores outside North America. In February, Gap named a new global advertising agency (Ogilvy & Mather); replaced North American president Marka Hansen with Art Peck, formerly head of the chain’s outlet business, and named Seth Farbman as its first global chief marketing officer. Farbman told Ad Age that his efforts will focus on storytelling, social media and coming up with ideas that teams will execute on the ground in San Francisco, London, Tokyo and other regions.

At Gap and elsewhere in the retail sector, brand identities are changing as companies diversify to attract a global audience. At a Penn Fashion Week lecture in April, fashion designer Vera Wang and William Fung, managing director of Hong Kong-based trading company Li & Fung, both predicted that as countries like India and China emerge as major consumer markets, business strategies will no longer be limited to what styles will work in major U.S. cities or in Europe. “The world is going to be a smaller place,” Wang noted.

Fung, whose company sources and coordinates supply chains for about 30% of the brands found in the average American shopping mall, told Knowledge@Wharton that China’s increased buying power will likely lead to “a lot of innovation and design that’s specifically tailored for the Chinese market. When that happens, that will also influence the rest of the world,” just like Americans’ increase in consumption after World War II meant that many products were initially created for the American market.

Efforts to become relevant on a global scale aren’t limited to clothing companies. When Knowledge@Wharton interviewed Alan D. Wilson, CEO of spice maker McCormick, earlier this year, he talked about some of the ways his firm is trying to make its products accessible in overseas markets. For example, “the spice market in China is much, much smaller than you would expect because consumers are cooking with things like chicken powders and bouillons and those sorts of things,” he said. “Because of that, our product line is a little different in China. We are selling certainly spices and herbs, but we also are selling some Western products like ketchup, salad dressings and jams. But we are also selling chicken powders and chicken bouillons that are [in line with] the way people cook there. We have to keep adapting to what people do in their local market.”

When it comes to a global ad campaign, even the smallest detail counts in trying to send the right message, William Lauder, executive chairman of cosmetics company Estée Lauder, told Knowledge@Wharton. He recounted a story about pitching an ad campaign that included a white birthday candle to the firm’s Asia brand managers. Their initial reaction was total silence. “I said, ‘Guys, what’s up?’ … They said, ‘Well, you know, in Asia, we only burn candles like this when somebody dies,’” Lauder recalled. “It was a revelation to us…. Easy to fix, but that’s a cultural relevance piece. In other words, so there’s a consistency of the image, you just change the one thing that all of sudden says the wrong thing to the consumer. The most classic case is the Chevy Nova marketed in Latin America. In Spanish ‘nova’ means ‘no go.’”

Will Gap’s new ad campaign swing or stumble? We’ll just have to wait and see.

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A New Era for China

For the past few decades, the availability of cheap goods from China “has pretty much subsidized the standard of living in the developed markets,” according to William Fung, managing director of Li & Fung, the Hong Kong-based trading company that sources and coordinates supply chains for about 30% of the brands found in the average American shopping mall.

During a recent appearance at Penn Fashion Week with designer Vera Wang, Fung detailed the new complexities his company is facing as retailers experience greater pressure to keep up with changing trends, expand into new markets and streamline production.

In a video interview with Knowledge@Wharton (which can be viewed in its entirety below), Fung discussed in more detail what he sees as one of the key changes for the next generation of retail — China’s transition from a significant source of goods to a consumer market that sets the trends for the rest of the world.

“China works in 30-year cycles,” Fung noted. “If you look at 1949 to 1979, from the founding of the People’s Republic to the opening up of China by Deng Xiaoping, during that 30 years, the world had no China. The world lost China. China closed itself off…. As a result, everybody did their commerce and went about their business very much without considering China.”

After Deng opened up the Chinese labor market beginning in the 1970s, however, “China burst on the world [growing the global labor force by] 20% to 25%.] China was “very productive, very aggressive, they knew that they were behind and they were trying to catch up,” Fung said. As a result, the world was hit with an onslaught of low-priced goods; meanwhile, “the China effect” kept the lid on labor costs in other parts of the developing world.

“But now that era seems to be ending,” Fung told Knowledge@Wharton. “What has happened is that China understands, first of all, that it needs another model for growth…. [Leaders in China now] understand fully that they have to raise the standard of living among their people. Now the country is moving into an era of consumer spending, domestic consumer spending, as a real alternative engine for growth in China.”

As consumer buying power in China grows, Fung predicted that demand for top-of-the-line goods will begin to increase among the country’s population. “As a result, there will be a lot of innovation and design that’s specifically tailored for the Chinese market. When that happens, that will also influence the rest of the world,” just like Americans’ increase in consumption after [World War II] meant that many products were initially created for the American market, Fung said.

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