Lean Mean Merchandiser

Why should you be a Merchandiser in the first place? Of all the professions, why did you chose to be a merchandiser? Were you out of your mind? Or do you love this job so much? Anyways, now that you are one, let me ask you the next obvious question. Are you a lean and mean merchandiser? Now you are wondering, why should you be a lean and mean merchandiser?

The answer is for your own sanity! How can you remain sane in the world of a merchandiser with countless emails, samples, swatches, files, papers, reports, lab dips, wash mocks, phone calls, meetings, costings, follow ups…the list itself is countless. Now you know what we are talking about. You need to be a lean and a mean one to remain sane, leave alone a smart one.

Let’s get to the point. How can you be a lean and a mean merchandiser?

You are Mean when –

  1. You ignore that phone ringing with ultimate urgency on your desk, pleading to be picked up and answered, simply because you are in the middle of finishing your cost sheets.
  2. You stand up at your desk with your body language signaling ‘stay away’ as soon as you see a ‘chatty’ co-worker approach your desk for a short break.
  3. You say ‘NO’ to your factory counterpart asking you to check the ‘washing label’ artwork layout. He better be literate enough to check the English spellings against the standard manual you provided the factory and take responsibility for his job. Really!
  4. You refuse to wait at your boss’s desk when he calls you and then choses to answer a ringing phone or cell instead and goes into a long discussion on some topic of zero relevance to you, with the third party. You simply signal with gestures that you will come back later when he is free. Believe me, if the boss needs you, he will call you again. Or else forget it, you have other stuff to worry about.
  5. You place a ‘do not disturb’ placard on your work desk at needed times and even send out emails that you are not reachable on phone and email for specified time zones, and will answer all queries after that time zone expires. In management parlance they call this ‘manage or set the expectations’.  The more you make yourself available at all times, the more people will hound you at all times. Simple.

One could go on with the list. But you get the idea of what we mean that it helps to be a mean merchandiser. Let’s get to the other bit of being a ‘lean’ one.

You are Lean when –

  1. You throw old and outdated records like rejected lab dips, incorrect old PO sheets, BOMs etc. ruthlessly. You are dead against the hoarding mindset of ‘You may need it someday’.
  2. Your box files are lean and not over flowing with stuff to the extent that it’s even difficult to turn the pages. You see these type of files only too often in offices not to know what we are talking about.
  3. The sample rack next to your work desk allows for some breathing space, air and ventilation to happen. It’s not overloaded with previous year’s or season’s samples, stuffed to the brim blocking all fresh air and ventilation that’s so vital for your health and sanity.
  4. You don’t go ‘looking for something’ which was ‘right here’ a while ago, and spend the next half an hour simply looking for that something! You are not lean if you do, and are heading towards in sanity soon. Mind you. Watch out!
  5. Your order status report is all updated and colorful with red, orange and green Preferably more green boxes signaling that all the major milestones on your tracking sheet are on schedule.70 green, 20 orange and 10 red shows that you are lean and in control of your life.( Learn more about the RAG(red, amber, green) approach to milestone tracking)
  6. Your inbox has not more than 15-20 emails per day. The rest of them are either all deleted or filed away in their proper folders. I once reached the brink of insanity when I had 5000 unread emails in my inbox. Guess what I did to save myself? I pressed the DELETE ALL button at one shot. I still lived. Work happened as before. Trust me, important stuff will find you when needed, anyways.

I think I have shared far too many trade secrets with you. You must deserve to be a part of this exclusive club of lean and mean merchandisers. So more on this later. Have some other stuff to attend to folks. Cheers!

Anjuli Gopalakrishna

+65 84276613

http://www.anjulig.com

Apparel Merchandising / sourcing tips and tricks

Negotiating the Best Deal

Merchandisers in the apparel industry engage in two kinds of negotiation activities. At one level, merchants try to negotiate the deals with their buyers and at the other level, they do the same with their suppliers such as trim suppliers and fabric suppliers. The rules of the game remain the same and only the orientation needs to change, in one instance you think as a buyer and in the other as a supplier.  Here are a few tricks that can help merchandisers to negotiate the best deals in whatever situation they find themselves in the apparel supply chain.

1.      Counter Costing – Merchandisers should take quotations of price and product from at least two to three sources. This allows for a fair judgment of existing market scenario.  You will sense immediately if a particular supplier is trying to over charge you for the product.  You will be able to apply pressure on the preferred supplier, by making him aware that you are getting better quotes from other suppliers, and that he is not in a position of monopoly. 

2.      Comparative Analysis – In addition to taking counter quotes, it’s also important to do a thorough comparative analysis of the various quotes received.  One should compare individual components of the cost break down, as well as the product specifications against which the price is quoted of all the quotations at hand. For example, if you are a buyer negotiating the cost of a fabric, you should compare the cost break down components like the cost of greige, cost of dyeing, cost of processing and finishing, as well as compare the specifications of the product like the fabric width, shrinkage, performance standards of fabric being promised by the fabric supplier etc.  This way, you will be able to judge the true value proposition of each quote instead of simply being blinded by just one criterion of the cheapest price quote.  Often the cheapest option may turn out to be the costliest one in the end, owing to the various invisible and intangible factors involved in the daily business transaction like service quality, delayed delivery etc.

3.      What’s in it for them? Once you have made a complete and thorough analysis of all the quotations, to be a good negotiator, you need to find out whether the particular deal which you are negotiating, is important to the supplier or not, how important is it for them? Is the supplier overloaded with orders at hand, and yours is just another additional order, or is the supplier craving and hungry for orders and needs your order badly. This knowledge will arm you well at the negotiating table. To know to what extent the supplier is willing to make concessions to grab the deal, will help you in negotiating the best deal.

4.      How much are you willing to concede? It’s not sufficient to know what’s at stake for your supplier. It’s also important to take stock of your own situation and clearly know what’s at stake for you.  How important is the deal for you? How far are you willing to concede to get the deal closed? Are you in a position to demand and push the supplier beyond a point? What are the choices or options you have at hand? Do you have a backup plan in hand, should this deal not come through? Would you rather pay more and be safe and work with a reputed supplier? Or are you in a position to take a risk and go with a cheaper but not so well known supplier? All these and many more questions depending on your specific situation need to be answered clearly at your end before going to the negotiating table.  Clarity and understanding of your own objectives will help you in cutting through the confusion and make the best choice and best deal.

5.      When to go to the top desk and what to ask for? Any negotiation goes through various stages and levels. A smart merchandiser needs to know what kind of aspects can he negotiate at his level, and the level of his counterparts in the supplier/buyer end, and what kind of aspects will need to be dealt with at a higher authority level in the organizational hierarchy.  For example, for a specific style/order, if you go to the level of company’s owner, it would be a sheer waste of time, if you start haggling for minutiae like individual cost components, trim costs etc.  An owner is probably not involved in those minor details and is more interested in overall profitability of the business.  You need to therefore know what specific aspects should be kept for negotiating in the end at the highest authority level, after having sorted out all the minute details at lower levels. Talk about things that will matter to the owner at an overall business level for example, future prospects of order volumes that you may bring in for the supplier, building of rewarding relationship etc.

In the end it’s important for merchandisers to remember that negotiation is a process of achieving consensus while avoiding conflict. It’s not a zero sum game of win lose, where you win and the other party loses. If you believe that negotiation is some tricky way to beat people and get your way, you will certainly fail. People are not stupid and most will be able to discern your intent regardless of your outward demeanor.  The key elements of good negotiation strategy are understanding, empathy, trust, contribution and consensus. Both parties have to find a win way out.

 

By anjuli gopalakrishna

www.anjulig.com

Blame Game – bane of merchandising

Blame Game – The Bane of Merchandising

A merchant and his boss in a garment export company having a conversation, which goes something, like this. (M – Merchant and B – Boss) 

M – Sir, I have been chasing the buying office for last one week for fit comments. They delayed in sending the comments and now we cannot meet the PCD. When I asked them for extension on delivery they refused point blank.

B – I was told by the buying office people that we have delayed in sending the fits and have had multiple rejections, and finally they had to approve the third fit under duress.

M – Sir, it’s true that our third fit got approved. They kept making spec changes every time, even though we incorporated all comments.

B – Please tell me complete facts. I was again informed that we did not follow the buyer block on fits and hence the rejection.

M – Sir, we did follow the pattern. There was some confusion while sending the pattern, which lead to some misunderstandings. You can check with our sample technician. They had passed on the old pattern by mistake to the merchandising team. Sir we corrected our mistake immediately, but by the time we sent the correct pattern to the buying office, they had already forwarded the wrong pattern to the buyers.

This could go on and on…but without any positive results.

If you happen to be a merchandiser by profession, you have to know that the buck stops with you, whatever the circumstance or situation may be. If you have not accepted this fact till now, you are not and cannot become a smart merchandiser.

A merchandiser has to know that every order that they handle is like their baby. If the ‘ayah’ (maid/caretaker) did not feed the baby properly, can the mother afford to blame on the ayah and feel happy? Even if she did blame the ayah, it’s HER baby who went without a proper meal. What’s the recourse for this mother? She just has to take complete responsibility even for the actions of the ayah and just has to make sure that the ayah feeds the baby properly in her absence. It’s her baby after all.

A similar approach or paradigm need to be embraced by all you merchandiser community. You are the one thread that connects the entire gamut of activities from beginning to the end of any style purchase order. You have to elevate your role from being mere post box passing information and reporting facts and figures from one end to the other, to that of becoming a sole proprietor of your PO. A project manager who leads the show to ensure successful completion of a project within the given time frame, within the limited resources available, and within the budgeted money assigned to a project.

Each PO is like a project. Since every merchant handles typically 30-40 styles / Pos each season, you have to become Project Managers to the power of 30-40 to manage things effectively in a complex multi style environment.

I am sure all you merchandisers community will feel much more proud of your jobs now than ever before. You have elevated your position to that of a very sophisticated Project Manager, handling the complexity of multiple styles, with diverse needs and requirements, negotiating and communicating across different departments to get your PO move on track.

One of the key tricks that smart Project Managers know is the power of people skills. Again I am reminded of my father’s early childhood lesson passed on to me – clever is one who gets his job done. You have to develop the skills to make people ‘want’ to do the things that you want them to do. Whether it is massaging the ego of ‘masterji’, to promising a free ticket to the latest hindi film to the office boy, you just do what it takes… to get people working on your side.

You most certainly don’t get into the blame game, which is a complete waste of effort and energy. You are smart enough to know that you might as well spend that effort and energy in cultivating relationships with the people your work with day in and day out.

Another trick to remember is that when you point one finger at the other party, there are three fingers pointing within towards you. So you better make sure that you have first fixed and taken care of the three enemies pointing towards you and you will surely be able to eliminate the one enemy on the outside easy enough.

One might be tempted to argue and say, why all the blame should fall on the merchandiser’s shoulders alone. Other departments should equally shoulder their responsibility as well, if it is teamwork. There is definitely some merit in this reasoning. However, a smart merchant knows to look for the origin of mistakes and errors, not with the objective of crucifying the wrong doer. Nobody likes to be crucified, and that’s when people put up their defences and start covering up for their mistakes. A smart Project Manager approaches the issue of finding the origin of mistake from a perspective of finding the root cause that led to that mistake with the resolve to ensure that such an error never occurs again. You will then work in preparing a game plan or a strategy or a process which will eliminate the occurrence of that particular unique error for ever.

With this approach, you will find people opening up more easily. You will have more friends and more insiders on your side. You will have lesser walls to bang your heads against.

I want to end with a very nice quote borrowed from Thomas Carlyle. When a young man asked Carlyle how he should go about reforming the world. Carlyle answered, “Reform Yourself. That way there will be one less rascal in the world.”

About the Author –

Anjuli Gopalakrishna has spent more than a decade in the apparel industry, having worked with leading companies including J C Penney Purchasing Corporation, Tommy Hilfiger India Limited and Li & Fung. Her experience includes apparel marketing and merchandising, sourcing of home products, apparel, accessories and leather goods. She has extensive experience sourcing for US and Europe from sourcing destinations including India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Madagascar, Pakistan, Taiwan and China. She is a Post Graduate in Fashion Management Studies from the National Institute of Fashion Technology Delhi (NIFT). She is now an independent consultant and trainer in supply chain merchandising to buying offices and garment exporters and also a guest lecturer at NIFT Bangalore.

Contact: anjulig@hotmail.com

Hilarious Merchandising Stories – The Wise Tag

The ‘Wise Tag’

I am sitting on my work station in our very charming pristine white Tommy Hilfiger office, with white walls, white cabinets and white work desks.  My boss sits facing me, and the only thing that prevents us from each other’s view is the cubicle wall in between. I can hear him though. So here goes the conversation.

My Boss, “Yes, Majeeb this side.’

Caller speaks. I cannot hear that part.

My boss, “We don’t put any ‘wise tags’ on our denims, Anjum. What are you talking about? “

I am wondering. May be Tommy should consider developing a new product and selling it as ‘Wise Denims’.  Sounds like a wise marketing idea. We could probably claim the wisdom of the jeans lay in their fabrics properties.  Wrinkle free, stain resistant, comfort stretch, nano tech etc. There are so many jargons in the market these days.

My boss, “Which tag’s placement do you need, Anjum.  There is only a paper tag which goes at the back pocket.  There is certainly no wise tag. Stop wasting my time. I have other important work to do. “

Caller speaks.

Now I am getting a bit more interested. So I get up from my desk and move to his. I gesture to him to ask him what was going on. My boss in his typical style, puts his index finger on his head trying to tell me that the fellow on the phone is probably gone nuts.  I smile.  The exasperation in his voice changes to his trademark humor.

My Boss, “Anjum, my dear, we are not so wise enough as yet to be making ‘wise denims’ at TH. May be it would help if you could spell out to me what tag you are asking about. “

Caller speaks.

My Boss, “Oh! The WAIST Tag you mean.  That’s the size tag, Anjum. It goes at the back waistband above the pocket and in between the belt loops. “

I finally figure out. It was our supplier’s merchandiser from Bangladesh, who was pronouncing the waist tag as the wise tag.

May be we will soon have authentic ‘Wise Denims’ from TH in the market.

 

Merchandising as Centre of Excellence (CoE)

Have you come across a person in apparel industry, who is forever in ‘crisis manager’ mode. Every issue that occurs during an order cycle cannot be resolved without his involvement in some way or the other. This person is often found running from one department to another, you spot him in fabric department, negotiating with fabric manager on when will he get his strike offs, you spot him in washing floor, comparing  the washed garments to the original standard from buyer, you spot him in trim store, hunting for trims for his urgent samples, you spot him on production floor clarifying the doubt about the button placement as per buyer requirement, you find him in conference calls with the buying agents, you find him doing costing negotiation in buyer meets, you find him in top bosses cabin, giving the case history to justify delivery extension for a PO, you find him on phone ( oh so often ! ) talking to the embroidery guy, the lace dyeing guy, the Chinese zipper supplier, you find him struggling with the newly installed ERP.. oh we all know the lock of pain on his face while he enters the data for the numerous Pos into the damn system !

No guesses for telling me, who this person is?  We are talking here about the ubiquitous, omnipresent individual called the merchandiser in any apparel supply chain set up.  So where else can we look for a creating a differentiating edge in our set ups, if not here? 

Just imagine this scenario.  A manufacturing or buying set up, which exudes professionalism with a capital P from the moment you step in. You can feel it in the air, in the well maintained greenery, in the neatly organized work desks, in the samples hanging near workstations with neatly typed tags, in the bulletin boards displaying inspiring stories of achievements of employees, relatively quiet place (?) place, or is that too much to ask.. a contagious  high energy environment,   full of young people passionate about their work, looking forward to come to work every day, total harmony between several departments, communicating seamlessly, a zero error zone of sorts, having customers addicted to its service levels so much so, that they won’t go anywhere even in times of recession, competition or price wars.

I have a dream. Yes, and someday I will live to see this dream come true.  Our apparel industry has already made a huge beginning by giving these youngsters a channel to focus their immense energies. True these 20-30 year olds are not from premier MBAs like IIMs (though that would be my ultimate dream come true scenario when our industry will attract the best and the brightest ! ), but these kids are smart  nevertheless,  trained in the MBA institute of life.

The apparel industry has inherent unique challenges and complexities of working in a tightly time bound, multi styles, truly global set up. I mean where else can you find a scenario like this – Australian long staple cotton travelled 1000s of miles from Australia to Pakistan where its woven into greige fabric, then travels another few 1000 miles to Sri Lanka, where its processed into dyed and finished fabric made to order in different colors, again travels a few 1000 miles to Bangladesh, and simultaneously trims are being travelled back and forth for various rounds of approvals between Hong Kong and USA and finally from Hong Kong to Bangladesh,  to be converted into flat front pants,  then shipped to the US or Europe  to be sold on shop floors, coordinated with a shirt which went through a similar journey, made in Mauritius and a hat using that same shirt’s fabric as trim binding, made in Taiwan, all at the same time, and all made to happen within the time frame allotted to get the jobs done !! Phew!!

I am not sure if many other industries can beat such huge level of complexity!!

So the platform is already available. A highly dynamic field to be in with ever increasing and stringent demands… You cannot find a better place than this to hone and sharpen the skills of the young potential of this country.

And yet, let’s be honest, do you feel the merchandisers have got that ‘elite’ status as yet in our industry, that pride of place which a function like merchandising deserves.  It’s the one thread which ties the enterprise together from beginning to the end. This is the place to begin with when creating a differentiating edge. This function must transform into the Centre of Excellence model which is already prevalent in other professionally run industries. 

“Center of excellence” is a concept gaining traction across businesses. A quick survey of companies in any industry will turn up centers of excellence in such areas as IT, finance, human resources, manufacturing, business process, procurement, and, yes, supply chain. Though these centers may go by different names, they basically are hubs for focusing skills and resources on a specific functional area. The general purpose is to identify, develop and disseminate technologies and best practices that make the business work better

Creating a team of people working as centre of excellence, a platform engaged in finding the best practices, in delivering customer centric process improvements , in putting together the expertise from within the organization to deal with complex situations, in brainstorming and generating new ideas of doing business better, to raise the competency level of how we execute the work day in and day out.

Here is an excerpt from an interview I came across of an executive from Procter and Gamble. At P&G, this translates into developing “machine equivalent” ways of managing work, based on processes that deliver “reliable, predictable, repeatable performance, no matter who is doing the work or where in the world it is being done,”

So how can we apply this Centre of Excellence model in our merchandising context? Well it need not be a formal or elaborate structure. We can simply begin by having a group of individuals in a company to form a team of sorts with the objectives outlined above. This could be as simple as an email distribution group!! The purpose will be to share ideas and knowledge for the benefit of the entire organization.  These will be the internal consultants of sorts who will be obliged to freely share the knowledge, resources, information, best practices accessible to one and all in the company.

And the idea is not to copy other industries best practice and ask the question ‘ why can’t we do what they do ?  The key is the learning process itself – that helps develop ideas and practices which are right for your business and your context.  The idea is that of a self motivated peer group, who will brainstorm the ideas on how to conduct every aspect of business better and how those ideas can be put into practice there and then.

This core team or group would be the exalted, respected elites of the organizations who will rise above petty politics or vested interests and enable and lead the change in an organization which will bring in the differentiating edge.  It could well be a group with a cross functional flavor to bring in different streams of competencies into the thinking process at a common platform.  Their job will be to relentlessly pursue the objective of implementing the newer and smarter ways of doing everyday tasks.

I experienced it happening personally during the course of my career. An export house which was primarily a CMT vendor was able to try similar methods and slowly but surely transformed into a preferred supplier partner for a major designer label from U S A  What was the success secret ? A weekly meeting headed by the CEO himself, inviting the cross functional heads and merchandisers at a common table to talk about the issues and find solutions there and then

Another example, where by virtue of a facilitation session that I happened to chair, three different units of the same organization came together for the first time, and when we got talking to each other about common problems, we were able to find solutions and expertise right there and then, proven methods of solving similar problems available within the company, so far kept disparate from each other for the sheer lack of platform which could bring them all together with one overriding objective of finding smarter ways of doing our work.  Why have pockets of skills or ‘expertise silos’ of sorts within the same company? Why not get together and share the knowledge first within the company and then maybe across the entire industry.

Coming back to my contention of making merchandising function as the centre of excellence and hence the differentiating edge, let’s talk about what is expected of this community to rise to the next level of professionalism, an evolution of sorts into the venerable ‘elites’, who could be the deciding factor for whether or not a customer will place business with X company?

Price, on time delivery and quality of merchandise is no longer a differentiating edge. It’s a given which has to be there if a company even wants to exist and survive in the buyer driven highly competitive environment.  Buyers will have thousands of suppliers to chose from, claiming these criteria.

The differentiation will come from the customer experience that you can provide. The sheer feeling or perception that your customer will have of what it’s like to do business with your company.   And this is where the opportunity lies for the merchandising community to make a difference.  After all the customer experiences your organization through the millions of interactions and transactions that occur between you and the customer, right from the R n D inquiry stage to the final shipment. You are the face of the organization, and not only the face, but the middle as well as the tail end of the entire experience that your customer will have of working with your organization.  How you can engage and bind and service the customer will determine the future flow of business?  You can make or break the bottom line indeed.

I would like to suggest three pronged approach, followed by P&G to applying the COE model to merchandising.  First  front to manage is the Mastery. We have to ensure that merchants have the sufficient mastery to do the work. This goes beyond training because it must include means of validating that the necessary knowledge has been acquired and can be applied.

The second front is a governance process.  There cannot be thousand ways of doing a work. There has to be one standardized way of doing things, not just for systems, but a standardized approach to how we think about steps and the sequence of steps to achieve a desired outcome. That’s the only way to make it repeatable and predictable.  How far has our industry achieved this standardization of process and thinking is something worth worrying about.

The third front to manage is innovation.  We have to have an eye towards how you might redesign, retool ore renew that work. A certain baseline of skills might be sufficient now to do the work, but in a year from today, you might have twice the business pressure and will need to complete in four steps a process that now takes eight – and do it with half as many people.

What cannot be measure cannot be controlled. There has to be a process control method in place too. On the mastery front, we need to measure and see who has the competency, at the level required and to identify where someone may need additional skills. Second, thing to measure is process variability. How far were the SOPs followed and how far deviations occurred must be recorded. The third thing to measure is the outcomes. Are we delivering what the business needs to operate ? This is necessary so that we don’t end up creating great business processes that end up on a shelf.
At P&G this concept is applied through HPNs. HPNs are a network of individuals from different P&G businesses who meet virtually every month and physically a couple of times a year. “So we have people accountable for applying this approach as they execute the daily work across each of our businesses and categories and markets,” he says. “We think of it as a living network of people that have that capability and responsibility for validating that our ‘machine’ is operating correctly.”

Success is defined as “getting the work down to a handful of approaches that are necessary for the business issues we face,” says Barr. “This does not mean one way of doing everything. Even, if we get down to three or four ways to produce a desired outcome, we consider that a tremendous accomplishment.”

If we study some of the best companies of the world, it is easy to discern that they are successful because they have very strong SOPs put in place, and are not so heavily people dependent.  It is not like if one merchant is on leave, the entire account’s work goes haywire !

We are talking about a huge paradigm shift here. The merchandising community must rise up and elevate themselves to the new paradigm.  The futuristic view of the role of merchandiser must undergo the following paradigm shift –

From that of a ‘victim’ to that of a ‘mentor’

From that of a ‘mere merchant’ to that of a ‘project manager’ or ‘project owner’

From ‘people’ orientation to ‘process’ orientation

From ‘swatch card’ to ‘job card’

From ‘coordinator’ to ‘customer relationship manager’

From ‘crisis manager’ to an ‘internal consultant, expert, Centre of Excellence’

The merchandising community must elevate themselves to the ‘elites’ of the organization, leading the change and innovation that will become the differentiating edge.  I know it sounds obvious but I cannot think of a better quote to end this discussion, than Mahatma Gandhi’s ‘Be the change you want to see.’ You alone are responsible for YOU. So if you won’t take the necessary actions, then who will ? If not now, then when ?

Anjuli Gopalakrishna.

Delivery Extension – How to convert the sin into a win ?

Any apparel professional on the supply and manufacturing side of the apparel industry has heard the dreaded words- ‘Let the vendor air the goods’. 

The usual supplier reactions are –

 ‘But the buyer did not give comments on time, how can they ask us to air the goods?’

‘There is no way we can air the goods. There is hardly any margin on the order. In fact already the fob is based on bare duty drawback advantage.’

‘They made so many spec changes which pushed the schedule haywire.  Buyer must take responsibility for their part of the job.”

‘The lab dips submitted were in acceptable range, we even submitted spectrophotometer delta readings. They kept asking for resubmits, which ate up all the lead time available.  How can we be made to air the goods, if they could not decide the color they wanted to buy? “

So on and so forth, depending on the various situations one encounters in the apparel world.

The typical buyer responses are –

“We cannot afford even a day’s slide.  This is our best selling style.’

‘We need to get the right product to market. Spec changes were necessary since the vendor was not able to get the fit right in the first place. “

‘Vendor should be able to match the color standard within the time frame they require to keep schedules on track. We are being generous by even accepting the goods with ‘off standard’ color, instead of simply cancelling the order and claiming for loss of sales. ‘

‘They took ages to turn around the first fits. Due diligence should have been done from the beginning to prevent any delays. “

We often get stuck in this tricky and conflicting situation. The vendor feels that buyer is partly responsible for causing the delay and buyer feels that vendor owes it to them to ship the goods on time, no matter what and should proactively manage the deadlines.  What is the best way to handle such situation is the focus of this paper.

Decidedly, each situation is unique and will call for a unique resolution. But for the purpose of this discussion, let us assume the common theme that vendor is not internally convinced about being held responsible for the delay in question. Some part may have been played by the buyer in contributing to the delay as well.  So what do you do to put across your point, without appearing to be playing the blame game?

Some things to consider thoroughly before embarking on the negotiation –

A). what’s your track record? If you have a reputation for shipping on time, you may have a stronger case. If out of the 15 Pos shipping this month, 14 are on track and only one PO is affected, again you have a strong case. Conversely, if the situation is such that many Pos are facing delivery delay threat and this happened last season as well, then you as a supplier do not have much of a platform to bargain.

B). Sample turnaround timelines.  It often happens that the momentum and speed with which samples are turned around reaches its crescendo towards the end of the approaching PCD. In the beginning of the purchase order cycle, the tendency is to be a bit slow and slack in the time taken to turn around the samples. This is a typical student’s syndrome which is prevalent in the industry.  (Remember the last minute frantic mugging before the exams as a student, while taking it easy throughout). This is more often than not picked up as a basis by buyers to put the ball back in the vendor’s court.   So watch out for this one while presenting your facts.

C)  What are your options? Do you have any alternative options or suggestions to still get back on track and avoid delay? For example, you may want to take an exception to submit the fit as a PP or request for an exception to use substitute trims for the purpose of getting past an approval cycle, or you may offer to do split shipment etc.  These would then be used as gambits while negotiating delivery extension.

D). How far are you willing to go?  Sometimes, the pricing is so tight that you simply cannot afford even a 5 % discount, leave alone an air freight situation.  There might be other situation, when there is enough buffers built in the fob to concede a bit by way of discounts.  A clear understanding of how far are you willing to concede in a situation is a must before getting into a negotiating situation. This will prepare you to present your case appropriately.  Though any smart negotiator knows not to lay his cards out too quickly, and keep them for last stages of closing any negotiation.

E). what’s on stake for your buyer?  If your style concerned happens to be a best seller for buyer, you hardly have any chances of getting any extensions.  Similarly if it is part of a special selling line or occasion, for example 4th July Collection or Christmas Collection, with limited shelf space and huge potential of loss of sales, in the event of delivery slide, there is no way that you will get an extension.  On the other hand, if the style in question is part of a core selling which ships on a regular basis, you might be able to negotiate an extension. This knowledge of what’s in it for your buyer is crucial for effective negotiation.

Being armed with this knowledge, keeping a cool mind and thinking from a buyer’s perspective, you should be able to do a very good job of negotiating.  When I was in college I used to participate in lots of debates, and to prepare myself for or against a topic, I would focus on what my opponent is going to speak, rather than what I would speak. This counter focus would help me to prepare a fool proof case for or against the topic I was to represent. I strongly recommend the same strategy for the vendor. Think of what your buyer is likely to counter you with and prepare your case in advance to cater to them. 

The strategy you employ will depend on what kind of situation you are in.  However a few golden rules to keep in mind while putting across your point are –

  1. Speak the buyer’s language. Make them feel you understand where they are coming from. Example – We realize this style is meant for a special promotion and on time delivery is very crucial for meeting the business objectives.  A statement like this in the beginning is most likely to put your buyer on ease and make him feel that you are on his side, and not his adversary.  This will bring down defenses and prevent a situation from deteriorating into a war like conflict.
  2. State the facts in simple, clear and succinct fashion. There is no room for writing long winding complicated communication. Remember, your words, your tone, your silly mistakes are all going to be used by your opponent to fight back with you.  Even innocent intentions will be twisted to sound like malignant insinuations. It’s a war and everything is fair in love and war. There is simply no room for emotion in your communication, which will make you vulnerable.  Attack is the best form of defense and especially when your opponent is guilty even remotely, they will look for your weaknesses and attack you there to break you. Prepare thoroughly before you press the send button on that important email!
  3. Present any alternatives or suggestions to fix the situation. It is very important to come up with some options and suggestions to deal with the situation at hand. It will steer you clear of any blame game scenario.  It will clearly show your focus on resolving the situation rather than on pointing fingers at who is to be blamed.  At the same time, it sends a signal that you are willing to make concessions, and expect the same from your buyers. They in turn will be less likely to get adamant and stuck in a deadlock like situation. However, caution must be exercised in not making the concessions all at once. This is a very subtle game and must be played intelligently. You want your buyer to think that they played a great role in resolving a conflict. Each party makes one concession at a time and comes out feeling like a winner. Each party had it their way in the end.
  4. Make an appropriate justification for your case. Look for things which will be positive reinforcements of your commitment to serving the customer well. It could be your on track performance on other POs, or past seasons. It could be highlighting your going out of the way to shorten the lead time on samples or production schedule to squeeze in as minimal delay as possible.  This will reflect professionalism and customer centric commitment on your part. Your buyer is likely to respect you more and take you more seriously than they would any other non performing or average vendor. After all they buyers also need to build good relationships with good vendors to achieve their business goals.
  5. Sometimes it’s better to lose the battle and win the war.  You must know which battles to pick. Remember, your relationship with the customer is much more important than the air freight you are going to pay on any one PO. There might be situations when no resolution is forthcoming.  You need to make a call at such times on what is more important in the long run. A good relationship with customer will ensure you will have much more business coming your way which will present means of covering up for the loss encountered now, at a later date. Never lose the long term vision of maintaining good customer relationship for a short term gain of delivery extension by getting into unending arguments.

In the end I want to focus on a few mistakes to avoid.

  1. Do not ask for delivery extension just to cover your back. It serves no purpose and creates unnecessary bad taste for the parties involved. Go out with such a request only in very genuine circumstances.
  2. Do not nag or irritate a customer with a delivery delay threat, too frequently, every time an activity on TNA goes a bit off track.  It is very annoying to be asked for delivery extension 75 days ahead of the delivery date, just because fit comments came in a day or two later than the planned date on TNA.  It should be understood that there are enough buffers built in the TNAs to cater to slight deviations from the planned dates.
  3. Do not ask for an extension and then ship the goods on time. Such ‘cry wolf’ behavior will undermine your credibility despite your good performance.

 

You now have the requisite tips on how to deal with delivery extension negotiation, without antagonizing the buyer. Go ahead, put them to use next time you are facing a similar situation. If you have any more ideas to share, I would love to hear of them on the Smart Merchants Club forum formed on linked in. See the link to join in. http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=2723326&trk=myg_ugrp_ovr . You can write in to me directly at anjuli@anjulig.com or anjulig@hotmail.com. Please keep visiting my website – www.anjulig.com for more updates, information, tips which you will find useful for your career in apparel merchandising.

Blame Game – The Bane of Merchandising

A merchant and his boss in a garment export company having a conversation, which goes something, like this. (M – Merchant and B – Boss)

M – Sir, I have been chasing the buying office for last one week for fit comments. They delayed in sending the comments and now we cannot meet the PCD. When I asked them for extension on delivery they refused point blank.

B – I was told by the buying office people that we have delayed in sending the fits and have had multiple rejections, and finally they had to approve the third fit under duress.

M – Sir, it’s true that our third fit got approved. They kept making spec changes every time, even though we incorporated all comments.

B – Please tell me complete facts. I was again informed that we did not follow the buyer block on fits and hence the rejection.

M – Sir, we did follow the pattern. There was some confusion while sending the pattern, which lead to some misunderstandings. You can check with our sample technician. They had passed on the old pattern by mistake to the merchandising team. Sir we corrected our mistake immediately, but by the time we sent the correct pattern to the buying office, they had already forwarded the wrong pattern to the buyers.

This could go on and on…but without any positive results.

If you happen to be a merchandiser by profession, you have to know that the buck stops with you, whatever the circumstance or situation may be. If you have not accepted this fact till now, you are not and cannot become a smart merchandiser.

A merchandiser has to know that every order that they handle is like their baby. If the ‘ayah’ (maid/caretaker) did not feed the baby properly, can the mother afford to blame on the ayah and feel happy? Even if she did blame the ayah, it’s HER baby who went without a proper meal. What’s the recourse for this mother? She just has to take complete responsibility even for the actions of the ayah and just has to make sure that the ayah feeds the baby properly in her absence. It’s her baby after all.

A similar approach or paradigm need to be embraced by all you merchandiser community. You are the one thread that connects the entire gamut of activities from beginning to the end of any style purchase order. You have to elevate your role from being mere post box passing information and reporting facts and figures from one end to the other, to that of becoming a sole proprietor of your PO. A project manager who leads the show to ensure successful completion of a project within the given time frame, within the limited resources available, and within the budgeted money assigned to a project.

Each PO is like a project. Since every merchant handles typically 30-40 styles / Pos each season, you have to become Project Managers to the power of 30-40 to manage things effectively in a complex multi style environment.

I am sure all you merchandisers community will feel much more proud of your jobs now than ever before. You have elevated your position to that of a very sophisticated Project Manager, handling the complexity of multiple styles, with diverse needs and requirements, negotiating and communicating across different departments to get your PO move on track.

One of the key tricks that smart Project Managers know is the power of people skills. Again I am reminded of my father’s early childhood lesson passed on to me – clever is one who gets his job done. You have to develop the skills to make people ‘want’ to do the things that you want them to do. Whether it is massaging the ego of ‘masterji’, to promising a free ticket to the latest hindi film to the office boy, you just do what it takes… to get people working on your side.

You most certainly don’t get into the blame game, which is a complete waste of effort and energy. You are smart enough to know that you might as well spend that effort and energy in cultivating relationships with the people your work with day in and day out.

Another trick to remember is that when you point one finger at the other party, there are three fingers pointing within towards you. So you better make sure that you have first fixed and taken care of the three enemies pointing towards you and you will surely be able to eliminate the one enemy on the outside easy enough.

One might be tempted to argue and say, why all the blame should fall on the merchandiser’s shoulders alone. Other departments should equally shoulder their responsibility as well, if it is teamwork. There is definitely some merit in this reasoning. However, a smart merchant knows to look for the origin of mistakes and errors, not with the objective of crucifying the wrong doer. Nobody likes to be crucified, and that’s when people put up their defences and start covering up for their mistakes. A smart Project Manager approaches the issue of finding the origin of mistake from a perspective of finding the root cause that led to that mistake with the resolve to ensure that such an error never occurs again. You will then work in preparing a game plan or a strategy or a process which will eliminate the occurrence of that particular unique error for ever.

With this approach, you will find people opening up more easily. You will have more friends and more insiders on your side. You will have lesser walls to bang your heads against.

I want to end with a very nice quote borrowed from Thomas Carlyle. When a young man asked Carlyle how he should go about reforming the world. Carlyle answered, “Reform Yourself. That way there will be one less rascal in the world.”

About the Author –

Anjuli Gopalakrishna has spent more than a decade in the apparel industry, having worked with leading companies including J C Penney Purchasing Corporation, Tommy Hilfiger India Limited and Li & Fung. Her experience includes apparel marketing and merchandising, sourcing of home products, apparel, accessories and leather goods. She has extensive experience sourcing for US and Europe from sourcing destinations including India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Madagascar, Pakistan, Taiwan and China. She is a Post Graduate in Fashion Management Studies from the National Institute of Fashion Technology Delhi (NIFT). She is now an independent consultant and trainer in supply chain merchandising to buying offices and garment exporters and also a guest lecturer at NIFT Bangalore.

Contact: anjulig@hotmail.com. Tel – 91-9972596207

Costing and Negotiation skills for merchants in apparel supply chain.

It’s that time of the year again. The beginning of a new season, proto sampling deadlines, endless coordination with fabric suppliers and garment vendors to stick to the dates to make sure the samples reach in time for the ‘ oh so important meeting’, and above all costings, costings, costings..If you are a merchandiser in the apparel arena, you can relate to the above.

A period of crazily hectic activity, and pressures mounting from all sides…buyers, suppliers, bosses…But there is some excitement in all this mayhem. The thrill of working on new styles, designs, fabrics… the excitement and anticipation of booking new orders… the fun in negotiation and haggling for best prices…Ask any merchant on what they like most about their jobs..And they will tell you it’s these aspects which give them an adrenalin rush in their jobs…  Otherwise life would be pretty mundane…

Given the crazy workload that hits a merchant at this time, it is little wonder that some details, often with important implications, get overlooked. If you had more than 100-150 cost sheets to populate, prepare and quote prices on, being a supplier’s merchant… to err in some costings would be human indeed. But wait a minute… let’s just understand the implications before brushing it aside as a simple as that scenario. I came across a cost sheet in my career as a merchant, where instead of typing $ 0.59 for a certain leather patch in the garment, the supplier merchant had typed $ 0.059.  Price was sealed and order was confirmed for 25,000 pcs for a pant. It’s only later that I noticed this error. Now imagine the amount of money left on the table … $ 13,275! Wow, I could do the Europe holiday that I often dream of in that kind of money!!  It’s just criminal to me, irrespective of which side you are on, supplier or buyer, to leave that kind of money lost in human errors, and there are countless such instances which remain unnoticed… lost forever.

The key to eliminate or at least reduce these kinds of errors during costings is to ‘become a marwari’. Now that you have become a marwari, who is quoting price for your own business, every cent will count to you! Now costing will take a totally different dimension, and there is no room for any errors… it’s your money at stake!

Micro Detailing is crucial in preparing cost sheets. At times all the items are not listed on the bill of material provided by the buyer, but you are going to need them eventually in making the garments. Examples are packing trims, interlinings, buttons, threads etc.  So it’s important to not only include the items on the BOM of a tech pack, but also include all the items that will go on the garment.

Protect your cost sheet in every way. You don’t want to base your final price on a fabric consumption only to find out during production that you ended up ordering more fabric than was estimated at costing stage.  It’s your money being lost.  

Fabric is the biggest component of any garment costing. Make sure you take accurate yields based on ratio markers, make sure you take formal commitments from fabric suppliers while taking price quotes, regarding finished width of fabric, shrinkages, defect percentages etc.  This is important because later on it will be possible for you to hold them accountable to cover for your losses, in case the fabric shrinkages exceeded the expectations and you ended up ordering extra fabric, or if more than expected fabric got wasted due to defects etc.  So often due to time constraints, merchants end up taking fabric price quotes on phone, rather than through a proper professional quotation sheet from fabric supplier.  Now if you were a Marwari running your own business, you will not do that, and will take care to have a proper record in place for all raw material prices, before quoting the final price for the garment to the buyers.

Knowing your competition is the secret for becoming an astute negotiator. All businessmen make it their business to know the competitors they are dealing with. This knowledge gives you that extra edge while quoting the prices to the buyers. Are you competing with suppliers within your own geographical location, or are there players from other parts of the globe vying for the same orders?  What is your competitive edge Vis a Vis competition and vice versa.  Especially when speed to market is so crucial in a tough business environment, buyers do not have much time to haggle back and forth and bring down the prices to acceptable levels. You need to quote the right price in one shot, and you have to be accurate. If you over quote, you run the risk of losing the business to another supplier, and if you under quote, you lose money.

An understanding of the buyer margins can help you to hit the buyer targets more accurately in one go. More often than not, you may end up getting a higher price than you aimed for in the first place, and still make customer happy by meeting their targeted margin goals.  What level of market your customer operates in e.g. luxury segment, middle segment or mass market?  What profit margins do they need to make to run profitable business at their end? This keen business sense is similar to astute shop keepers in flea markets who quote the price by looking at the customer and estimating his ability to pay and purchase. You would have seen many sari shop owners, who will willingly open and show as many sarees to a customer whom they think will make the purchase and are reluctant to open even a few when they feel the customer is not going to make the purchase. This simply comes from knowing the customers well. 

Last but not the least; great negotiation power belongs to a person who can think win win. Armed with the knowledge above and even after being as accurate and detailed as possible, if your price quote is still not satisfactory enough from buyer target price, by all means make an alternate proposal to buyer. Give options with suggestions to may be delete a trim or change the fabric source or whatever it may be… but give alternative suggestions to meet and service the customer requirement in way which is win win for both parties. Like Marlin Brando in Godfather when he says – I will make him an offer he can’t refuse.

 

About the Author –

Anjuli Gopalakrishna has spent more than a decade in the apparel industry, having worked with leading companies including J C Penney Purchasing Corporation, Tommy Hilfiger India Limited and Li & Fung. Her experience includes apparel marketing and merchandising, sourcing of home products, apparel, accessories and leather goods. She has extensive experience sourcing for US and Europe from sourcing destinations including India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Madagascar, Pakistan, Taiwan and China.

She is a Post Graduate in Fashion Management Studies from the National Institute of Fashion Technology Delhi (NIFT).

She is now an independent consultant and trainer in supply chain merchandising to buying offices and garment exporters and also a guest lecturer at NIFT Bangalore.

Contact: anjulig@hotmail.com. Tel – 91-9972596207

CFM – Customer Focused Merchandising – top ten tips

In today’s extremely competitive apparel industry, CFM – customer focused merchandising is the single most important factor that can differentiate you from others in the field, whichever side you may be on, be it retailing or sourcing as in buying offices or in manufacturing. We cannot afford to be satisfied with just being ‘nice’ to customer anymore. We must aim to offer them an unforgettable experience. This requires not just training, skills and knowledge, but creating an environment where people take pride in serving others.  Buyers/Customers are not just buying the product or service from you, they purchase ‘how they feel doing business with you’.  It’s         the memory they retain of how it was to work with you…and that’s what keeps them coming back to you again.

  1. 1.       Be the Expert.  

You must know your job thoroughly so that your customer can trust you. An understanding about fabrics, fit/pattern issues, costing, lead times, etc is a must have for a CFM merchant. For example, if you get a request from the buyer for making a certain complex garment at a very sharp price, you as a CFM merchant should be able to act as a consultant to the buyer by giving them options of what modifications can be made to make the garment fit in the target price, as well as warn them of any potential lead time or production feasibility issues to allow the customer to make an informed decision right at the outset of development stage.

 

  1. 2.       Professionalism counts.

Professionalism in every job that they do is what makes a CFM merchant shine above the rest. It’s a reflection of who you are as a person and as a professional. Whether it’s a swatch card you make or whether it’s a lab dip submit you prepare or whether it’s a cost sheet you send to buyer, in every job that you do, you can make a tremendous difference to the experience the customer will go through, just by being a thorough professional. I have witnessed a million frustrating moments which buyers face, when a job is not professionally done. Trying to figure out a badly hand written tag, scratched /rewritten information on swatch cards, incomplete information on submit cards etc are just a few examples.  A professionally done job is what makes the customer go ‘wow’!

 

  1. 3.       Make it easy for the customer.

CFM merchants will ensure to make life easy for customer. Simple. Let me give you some examples. If you are offering different fabric options to the customer, as a CFM, you will make sure to include complete fabric details in terms of count, construction, weight, width, lead-time, price etc…And you will even go a step further to give an estimated garment fob for each fabric option being offered.  There! , you made life easy for buyer, by anticipating and proactively addressing all their needs, without being asked to!  Wow!  I am reminded of a situation I came across in my life as a merchant. A particular submit was rejected for quality by buyer with almost panic sounding remarks, when it was intended for colour approval! Now if you were a CFM merchant, the situation would never have arisen, because you would have simply made sure to write complete details on the submit including the purpose – ONLY FOR COLOR APPROVAL, NOT FOR QUALITY.

 

  1. 4.       Speed to customer.

CFM merchants realise the importance of the need to respond quickly to the needs of the customers, especially critical in the fast paced dynamic world of fashion and apparel.  You have to be able to get back with your price quotes, sample turnarounds, approval submits and the like within the limited time available. In fact, the best is to be chasing the buyers instead of being chased by them.

 

  1. 5.       Manage their deadlines.

A CFM merchant will go one step further in not only keeping track of deadlines for various activities that they need to do, but also act as a consultant and advise the buyer of the deadlines that the buyers need to keep for activities owned by them to ensure on time delivery of goods.  For example if your order involves an accessory which the buyer is going to develop directly with the trim supplier, as a CFM merchant, you will remind the buyer of the timelines they have for developing this trim and the latest by which they should approve the accessory with the trim supplier, so you get it in time for the order.

 

  1. 6.       Communication! Communication! Communication!

One cannot stress enough about the essential communication skills which are a must have for CFM merchandisers. You have to be comprehensive, precise and crystal clear in your communication with the customer. Since majority of business communication happens via email today, some of the crucial things to remember while composing emails are –

–          Write self explanatory subject line

–          Use simple active sentences, instead of ‘jalebi’ paragraphs

–          Write in points

–          Answer all questions and then anticipate any further questions that might come up and answer those as well at one go.

–          Make specific date commitments, instead of ‘asap’, ‘next week’ kind of open ended commitments, and of course you keep them as well.

–          Consolidate all issues in one email instead of doing back and forth via several emails

–          Avoid using ‘urgent’ and ‘important’ for every email you write and use it sparingly for it to have any meaning.

–          Be careful whom you put in ‘to’ box and who in ‘cc’ box instead of doing a blind ‘reply all’

–          When angry with a customer, by all means express it in email with all your might to get it out of your system, BUT DO NOT SEND IT, instead keep it in your drafts folder. Redraft it an hour later with a cool and rational mind.

–          Do not write in bold fonts. It’s simply rude and loud.

–          Do not go overboard with inserts in your email with multiple colours! Stick to the two insert rule and then draft a new email to avoid confusion.

–          Think before you press the send button! Because once that’s done, you have no control over where your written email might land up. So be careful.

 

Other than written communication skills, oral and non verbal communication is another important skill to develop.  You cannot go wrong with a ‘thank you’ and an ‘apology’ so use these magic words as often as you can. Understand the subtle nuances of body language and the tone of voice while communicating. Sometimes, it’s not what you say, but how you say it that matters.

 

A good thing to know with customers is you cannot win an argument with them. Do not even attempt it. Instead approach the issues with an agreement frame of mind and look for win-win resolutions.  Put your point across, but before that make the customer know that you have understood their point of view. A simple trick like, replacing the use of ‘but’ with an ‘and’ in your sentences can do the magic in terms of how you can resolve conflicts faster. Try it.

 

  1. 7.       Do not forget the internal customers.

My dad taught me this early in life- ‘clever is one who gets his work done’. A CFM merchant will apply all the skills that he uses with the external customer on the ‘all important’ internal customers as well.  These are the people within your own organisation across the departments, your own vendors etc.  Building rapport and good relationship with people around you, helps in getting your work done faster. In the cross functional environment, you cannot survive without this skill.  Appreciate good work done by others in public, and criticise in private. Be clear in communicating your expectations and above all be transparent and honest in your dealings.

 

  1. 8.       Cosmic force of Habit.

Habit is a powerful force to break. A CFM merchant knows to use this force. By the sheer delight that they are to work with, they soon get their customers habituated to working with them.  Once the customer is spoilt by your high level of service, it will be difficult for them to break that habit and switch to another supplier.

 

  1. 9.       Build trust based relationships.

Anybody wants to do business with a person or organisation they can trust.  You must develop trust based relationships and win your buyer’s confidence.  Reliability in keeping your commitments goes a long way in building your credibility. Sharing information in a transparent manner builds trust.  Once you create a reputation for yourself, it goes along with you wherever you might be. People might change organisations and move on in life, but they will remember the credibility and trust you built with them in your past dealings.

 

  1. 10.   Take pride in making a difference.

Nothing is more satisfying to a CFM merchant than a happy customer. They take pride in making a difference to other people’s lives. Go ahead and make the day of your customers by doing that ‘extra’ bit in everything you do.  They will love you more and you will love yourself more too !

 

 

 

 

About the Author –

Anjuli Gopalakrishna has spent more than a decade in the apparel industry, having worked with leading companies including J C Penney Purchasing Corporation, Tommy Hilfiger India Limited and Li & Fung. Her experience includes apparel marketing and merchandising, sourcing of home products, apparel, accessories and leather goods. She has extensive experience sourcing for US and Europe from sourcing destinations including India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Madagascar, Pakistan, Taiwan and China.

She is a Post Graduate in Fashion Management Studies from the National Institute of Fashion Technology Delhi (NIFT).

She is now an independent consultant and trainer in supply chain merchandising to buying offices and garment exporters and also a guest lecturer at NIFT Bangalore.

Contact: anjulig@hotmail.com. Tel – 91-9972596207

Apparel Industry – encounters with truth

Post quota regime – wake up call

 

Order in question is 50,000 pcs of a basic men’s pant in cotton twill fabric. Our factory in Bangladesh quoted $ 7.00 per pc as their best price. Next day you hear from buyer that order placed with a vendor in china at $ 6.75 per pc.  Our fty in Bangladesh agreed to do the same order at 6.70 after they heard the news. Response from buyer – too late! Too bad!! Order already placed in china.

 

Moral of the story is that in post quota regime, the winners are going to be suppliers like this one in china. They go for big orders with all their might and quote their best price in first shot. Nobody has time to waste in going back and forth on negotiations in the new regime.

 

The fact that china is poised to be the biggest shareholder in global apparel sourcing market is quite obvious. They have a strong fabric base, high productivity – higher than most other countries, cheap and abundant labor, highly developed infrastructure, vertical set ups and conducive government policies. And they are going for it – all out. They deserve to get the share they are going to get post MFA.

 

But is china the answer to all sourcing questions?? Apparently not. Take for example a cotton voile women’s top with heavy embroidery and hand sequin work, and rest assured that china still can’t beat the likes of India in terms of prices / quality / output. Its true that to beat the Chinese for basic styles and big quantities is difficult, but not impossible.  Global sourcing market is big enough to accommodate china and few more performers.

 

Second to china, quite interestingly, India is being now deemed as the ‘next best’ sourcing destination.  The reasoning given is something like this. Big retailers like wal-mart / j c penney or for that matter any buyer with significant sourcing needs, would not like to put all their eggs in the same basket. Diversification of sourcing options is the need of the hour.  India traditionally is known to have a rich textile base, has abundant and cheap and skilled labor. Having strong fabric base within the same geographical locations can cut down on fabric transit lead times etc.

 

However, this reasoning needs to be taken with a pinch of salt. Just to point out a few instances – prices of Indian fabrics are much higher as compared to Chinese fabrics. Even the lead times of Indian mills on fabrics are much longer than Chinese counterparts, even if you include the fabric transit time. Talk to any garment exporter who purchase fabrics from Indian mills as well as Chinese sources and they will tell you the service quality / reliability / delivery commitments of Chinese fabric suppliers are rated as much better than Indian counterparts.  Majority of Indian fabric sector still remains under unorganized power loom sector with little or no global marketing and servicing skills.

 

Most of the fabric suppliers in India are still dependent for their business on garment exporters, and are not directly marketing their fabrics to the end customers – American / European labels / buyers. Very few mills in the composite mill sector are directly getting fabric nominations from buyers, to supply fabrics to garment makers in turn. On the other hand most of the Chinese fabric mills / agents – NDP, Winnitex to name a few are directly getting in touch with the end customer and getting into nominated fabric sources.

 

How this works is that fabric supplier partners with the end customer / buyer to maintain international required quality levels, keep to committed delivery schedules etc. and are willing to even pay penalty if these are not met for some reasons. This kind of arrangement ensures that fabric suppliers get assured business, and the buyer is in turn assured of quality product and on time delivery.

 

In a true fob fabric sourcing, the garment manufacturer is responsible for sourcing fabric.  Garment exporters get in touch with their fabric sources, negotiate prices, and the buyer need not know the actual negotiated fabric price b/w the garment factory and the fabric mill.  This allows for some buffers to be kept with the garment exporters, so it benefits them. On the other end the buyers also benefit because, they are able to get a much better garment fob price as compared to garment fob based on nominated fabric source.

 

Without deviating further, lets get back to our original point – how India will emerge as competitive in the new regime based on using indigenous fabrics?? In the light of above, the only way is that fabric manufacturers in India need to rise up to the need of the hour, and gear up to international market conditions. They will end up losing a lot of business if they are unable to offer competitive prices and equally good or better fabric quality than their Chinese brethren. They will need to stick to delivery commitments in a very professional manner.

 

Maybe the best way would be to take the middle path – an arrangement in b/w the nominated fabric sourcing and true fob fabric sourcing.  The idea is this, fabric suppliers should aggressively market their product to international labels, speed up the development turn around times, and if any of their fabrics are selected by buyers, then they get in touch with the garment maker and supply the fabric on fob terms i/o going for nomination from buyer.  This way all parties concerned will be happy.  Garment maker is able to negotiate the fabric price on their own terms, fabric suppliers is assured of business, since already fabric quality has been selected by buyer, and buyer is happy too, as he gets the required quality of fabric and garment factory taking responsibility for timely delivery.

 

Speed is crucial!!

 

In the fast paced and highly competitive international retailing scenario, most European / American buyers are on a look out for suppliers who can do quick turn around.  Buyers want to take a read on the fashion trends and quickly supply the trendy / hot selling merchandise, ride on the crest while it lasts and make their bucks. Nobody wants to make their purchases too much in advance and then run the risk of sitting with unsold merchandise, because in b/w the fashion trends changed!!

 

So the critical factor for most Indian suppliers to come out winners in the new global apparel trade is to respond to this need of ‘quick response’ and do it quickly, before its too late, and someone else moves the cheese!!  Quite often a classic incident is heard in the garment circles, which is the best illustrator of the speed factor.  Here goes.  A certain American bra label sent out specific elastic to be sourced to two diff suppliers. One guy was based in china, and the other guy based in Srilanka.  here is the recount of buyer’s experience verbatim ‘ it took srilankan supplier two weeks to get back to us – only to tell us that they are still sourcing. It took them another two weeks to actually send their elastic quality for approval.  During which time the other supplier in china, not only submitted the elastic for approval, got an approval, took the order and even shipped out the entire bra order!!!

 

Sounds a bit exaggerated, but nevertheless, illustrates a very imp point. Speed is crucial.

 

Speed in responding to price quotes / fabric submits / color approval submits – the entire gamut that goes at the prototype development stage. If you talk to a regular buying office worker, you will realize that our Indian suppliers are still far away from responding quickly. On an average a supplier takes min 5 days to revert on costing and that too after being chased for it. They still go through three – four round of hard negotiations before settling at agreeable prices! Now this is funny because, garment industry is not a microchip kind of manufacturing industry. What it takes to make a men’s shirt will not vary too much from season to season, and year to year. Still factories will start out be quoting the highest possible prices, as if the buyers don’t keep records of what they paid for similar styles last season. Expect to be haggled to death before coming down to reasonable prices!! This kind of mentality may have worked in the past, but not any longer. No one is willing to spend too much time on negotiations and the best bidder gets the deal in one shot.

 

This type of thinking holds true for Bangladesh factories as well. Coming to countries like Srilanka / Bangladesh etc. So what’s in store for them in the post quota world? Many experts feel that they are in for trouble, primarily because of their dependence on imports for procuring raw materials. There is minimal or no indigenous supply of trims / fabrics in these countries. This adds to the cost plus to the lead times, that these countries have to offer.  While Srilanka can offer better lead times, as compared to Bangladesh, their costs are still higher in terms of factory overheads / labor cost.

 

What is noteworthy though is that even during the quota regime these countries were very much dependent on raw materials procured from outside. They managed fine all these years, in terms of prices / deliveries / lead times / quality. And post quota, their prices are even sharper, as there is no quota cost involved, compared to the Indian factories. This is especially true for basic product categories – like men’s pants.  So what’s the threat to them??  They have built relationships with their customers over the years, and just because of quota phase out, it’s unlikely that these customers will stop buying from them. Most of the buyers still continue to source from their supplier base in Bangladesh / Srilanka. Well, these suppliers must be doing something right!

 

Many of big suppliers in these countrires have set up their fabric sourcing offices in Hong Kong / shanghai etc, some even own the fabric mills in the Far East. They employ Chinese-speaking locals in these offices for better interaction with the local mills. Few companies have set up fabric processing units in their home country and are only just importing the greige from outside – say Pakistan or china. 

 

Sourcing from Bangladesh, Srilanka is not going to vanish so quickly post quota, provided suppliers wake to the need of the hour. Adopt quick response working, quote competitive prices without going much back and forth.

 

Customer Service orientation – winners strategy!

 

Last but not the least, the biggest challenge for the supply end of the apparel industry to compete with the looming china threat would be to inculcate the ‘customer service orientation’.  They have to acquire professionalism in their approach, in terms of sticking to committed deadlines – be it for deliveries or any other development / production related submits.  Thumb rule is -if you commit a date, stick to it, come what may. To satisfy the end customer should be their ultimate focus and this needs to percolate right from the top management levels to the grass root levels.  The mindsets need to change… business is not going to come easy any longer. Only the best will survive and will deserve to not only survive but also thrive!