| CURRENT
ISSUE :: DECEMBER 2003 :: BIG BUSINESS
Levi’s
Blueprint
Can ‘Segmentation’ Strategy
Stretch Sales Without Tearing Into Profits?
By Sally Beatty
Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Like
a fair number of American companies these days, Levi Strauss & Co.
is struggling with accounting, tax and legal problems. Yet Levi’s
biggest problem today is something more fundamental—selling
jeans.
One of America’s most durable apparel brands is fighting
for its life in the midst of a tough environment for apparel retailing,
and the fact that it’s carrying more than $2 billion in debt
gives it little room for error.
The company’s predicament reflects more brutal conditions
than anyone in the business can remember. “We are trying
to turn around a company in a very difficult environment with an
enormous amount of debt,” says Levi’s chief executive
officer, Phil Marineau. He says the company appears to be on the
right path.
Levi’s
for Everyone
Mr. Marineau,
a former top PepsiCo executive who was paid more than $25 million
last
year to rescue Levi Strauss, has a daring
plan that he calls segmentation: He wants to sell Levi’s
to everyone without alienating anyone, a delicate fashion tactic
in the best of economies. He is targeting various population segments—the
high-fashion elite, trendy teens, aging men and budget shoppers—with
different jeans styles placed in different stores, from Neiman
Marcus at the high end to Wal-Mart Stores.
Wal-Mart, which
sells Levi’s Signature brand jeans for $23,
has publicly praised the line’s sales. The goal for Levi
is to reach the 160 million consumers who shop in discount stores
each week, and reduce Levi’s exposure to troubled department
stores, which are losing market share to mass merchants and specialty
stores. Levi badly needs the volume that only a big retailer like
Wal-Mart can provide to offset the decline in its main jeans business.
The risk is
that the down-market retailers will damage the brand’s
image. If this happens, consumers now paying as much as $200 for
a pair of Levi’s high-end jeans might not want to be seen
wearing the Levi’s brand. That’s why Levi isn’t
advertising its Signature jeans: The company wants to avoid damaging
its status in fashion circles or irritating its full-price customers.
Even Ralph Lauren, who positions his Polo Ralph Lauren brand as
a luxury label but sells huge volumes of sheets and polo shirts
through his own discount outlets, has steered clear of mass merchants.
Still, Levi is a resilient brand that has long appealed to both
workers and socialites, so it just might pull this off.
Levi enjoyed
a resurgence late last year, but consumer demand fell off generally
early
this year, resulting in yet another sales
decline. While Levi showed 4% growth in the third quarter, the
gains came from the low-price Signature line—otherwise, Levi
revenue would have slipped again. Skeptics in the financial community
note that the recent launch of a high-fashion jeans line called
Type 1, sold at department and specialty stores, proved too cutting-edge
for many shoppers.
Levi has little
wiggle room, and not just because of its big debt. Even if the
jeans
keep selling, the company’s reward could
be minimal because mass-market profit margins tend to be thin.
Wal-Mart is widely expected to ask Levi to lower prices still further.
Competitors, meanwhile, will also add pressure: VF Corp. sells
its Wrangler jeans in Wal-Mart for $15 to $18 a pair. And Wal-Mart
sells its own line of private-label jeans for $9.99.
But for those
manufacturers cagey enough to deliver the right product at low
cost, doing
business with the mass merchants can
be highly profitable. That’s because retailers such as Wal-Mart
tend to sell their goods faster. They also don’t often ask
for “markdown money”—payments from suppliers
to boost margins for department stores when goods don’t sell.
Deflation in Denim
Levi’s bet reflects the larger economic issues affecting
the apparel business, including deflation resulting from an oversupply
of goods. Five years ago, department stores sold men’s jeans
at an average price of $40. Today, the jeans sell for an average
of only $34. At national chains like Sears Roebuck or Kohl’s,
the price is about $24. And once new free-trade policies with China
take effect in 2005, the U.S. market will be flooded with even
more cheap clothing. All of this promises to put greater pressure
on Levi to lower its prices.
Levi executives
are quick to cite some upbeat developments. Levi has improved
its fit and styling. It has shortened the time it
takes to get a pair of jeans to market from 15 months in late 1999
to 10 to 11 months today. The goal is to get to 7-1/2 months by
the middle of next year.
In addition,
consumers bought more Levi’s and Dockers in
the third quarter than a year earlier, Levi says, based on reports
from retailers. However, this was offset by lower orders from traditional
retailers; Levi attributes this to concerns about losing shoppers
to Wal-Mart.
Eager to quiet
such fears, Levi surveyed 1,000 stores within 7-1/2 miles of
Wal-Mart and found that surrounding retailers haven’t
suffered. Now the company is formulating plans to boost promotional
activities with Wal-Mart.
|