Urban Outfitters Case Study
Urban Outfitters has defined a highly differentiated and unique shopping experience, supported by the eclectic and highly varied store layouts and merchandise strategy. This approach to retailing appeals to the individuality and uniqueness every consumer also sees in themselves, allowing the consumers to define themselves by what they like. INA actuality, Urban Outfitters is more aligned to key marketing concepts and strategies than its much larger and less differentiated competitors including Sears and Wal-Mart. Appearing non-conformist and counter-culture within its image, Urban Outfitters is actually providing an escape for consumers to use their purchases to define who they really are and what they actually care out. Retailing that appeals to the values and individuality of a consumers are highly effective in creating loyalty and continued repurchase (Puccinelli, Goodstein, Grewal, Price, Raghubir, Stewart, 2009). The intent of this analysis is to explain why Urban Outfitters continues to be successful with this counterculture image vs. its larger and more well-distributed competitors, why their exclusivity is so critical to their success, and how shopping really is a form of entertainment as it is a very personal customer experience (Grewal, Levy, Kumar, 2009). The basic components of the marketing process will also be assessed.
Analyzing the Performance of Urban Outfitters
To fully appreciate how differentiated Urban Outfitters is, consider how effective their supply chain is in gaining access to highly unique products, how unique their stores designs are, and how widely varied their marketing and advertising is. The entire value chain of Urban Outfitter is what differentiates the store chain relative to their much larger, slower-moving yet much more vertically integrated competitors (Patton, 2008). The supply chains for Sears and Wal-Mart would never be able to sustain this same level of product uniqueness and sourcing, nor would they be able to set as a goal the sourcing of one-of-a-kind items not found anywhere else. Both of these stores and the superstore competitors they regularly compete with have supply chain specifically designed for high efficiency, low variability, and a strong focus on inventory turns. In short, Sears and Wal-Mart are looking for products with as little variation in them as possible to ensure they can be managed through distribution, logistics and to stores with as little cost as possible. This is the biggest operational difference between Urban Outfitters and their larger, more diverse competitors. The operational focus and supply chain operations in Urban Outfitters look to continue on the value proposition of every consumer having a very unique item purchases, which also contributors to the development of a unique shopping experience that cannot be easily replicated in larger store operations (Verhoef, Lemon, Parasuraman, Roggeveen, Tsiros, Schlesinger, 2009). For Urban Outfitters the unique merchandise they purchase, their design of new stores, and the launch of stores in international locations all contribute to the image of a store that promotes diversity and non-conformity of its customers' purchases of products (Slater, 2004). Sears and Wal-Mart cannot compete in this area of retailing due to their pricing structures for suppliers as well. Not only are these chains designed for high levels of inventory velocity and minimizing the levels of product variation, they are also designed to support very low cost structures where suppliers are expected to continually drop prices over time. This approach to managing suppliers is how Sears and Wal-Mart continue to drive down their prices over time. For Urban Outfitters whose suppliers are smaller and more interested in an eclectic, unique and highly differentiated products, this approach would never work. Urban Outfitters instead partners with suppliers and attempts to anticipate the needs of its customers and create products of interest (Arndt, 2010). Sears and Wal-mart does this with Proctor & Gamble on special bundling programs of products that are very inexpensive to produce already including soap or detergent yet could never scale to do the type...
Urban Outfitters Continuing Case Study Explain why Sears or Wal-Mart cannot effectively create a trendy counterculture image The reasons for stores like Urban Outfitters to be able to create such a culture are their ability to operate with low and medium volume. Hence it is possible to change the output based on changes in demand. For example, the 'Urban Outfitters' followed the policy of locating stores that have the concentration of targeted
Exclusivity for these groups signals uniqueness. In a creative and individualistic society such as America's, uniqueness has cachet and value to the consumer, so any fashion item that can convey this uniqueness will also have value. Exclusivity also has value because of its scarcity. This is a simple supply and demand equation. The price of a good (its value) is related to the demand for it and the supply of
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