Industria de Diseño Textil, S.A. (Inditex; /ˌɪndɪˈtɛks/, Spanish:[indiˈteks]; lit.'Textile Design Industry') is a Spanish multinational clothing company headquartered in Arteixo, Galicia, Spain.[4] Inditex, the biggest fast fashion group in the world,[5] operates over 7,200 stores in 93 markets worldwide.[6][7][8] The company's flagship brand is Zara, but it also owns a number of other brands including Zara Home, Bershka, Massimo Dutti, Oysho, Pull&Bear, Stradivarius, Uterqüe and Lefties. The majority of its stores are corporate-owned, while franchises are mainly conceded in countries where corporate properties cannot be foreign-owned.[9]
Inditex's business is centred around one simple premise – to be quick at responding to the market. Whereas it would take almost a year for a traditional fashion company to get its products out, from conception to runway to stores, for Inditex, this process takes less than two months to replenish stores with new and different products weekly and respond quickly. In Zara stores, it can take a new garment as little as 15 days to go from design and production to store shelves.[10]
The Uyghur Rights Monitor, Sheffield Hallam University, and the Uyghur Center for Democracy and Human Rights have accused the company of using Uyghur forced labour through the Chinese based textile supplier Beijing Guanghua textile group.[11]
History
1960s and 1970s
In the early 1960s Amancio Ortega started his own business in the clothing industry while working for a local shirt maker in A Coruña, Spain.[12] Ortega began developing his designs and he and his wife Rosalia Mera started making clothes in their home.[9][13] Amancio had saved up enough money to open a small factory and sold garments to his former employer, amongst others.[9]
In 1975, the couple opened their first store, Zara, which produced popular fashion at low prices.[9][10] The following year, Zara was incorporated and began opening more stores and factories in Spain.[9] Later that year, after noticing the growing importance of computers, Ortega hired a local professor, José María Castellano, to develop the company's computing power.[9][14]
1980–2000
In the 1980s, the company implemented a new design and distribution method that drastically reduced the time between design, production, and arrival at retail sites.[15] The system was designed by Castellano, who became the company's CEO in 1984. In 1985, Industria de Diseño Textil S.A. or Inditex was created as a holding company for Zara and its manufacturing plants.[16] In 1988, the company began expanding internationally with the opening of a Zara store in Porto, Portugal.[17] In 1990, the company-owned footwear collection, Tempe, populated in the children's section of Zara stores.[18] In 1991, Inditex created the company Pull and Bear, a casual menswear company.[19][20] Later that year, the company also acquired a 65 per cent share in the upscale Massimo Dutti brand. Inditex created Lefties in 1993; the name is taken from the term leftovers and it was created to sell old Zara clothing.[21] In 1995, Inditex purchased the remaining Massimo Dutti shares and began expanding the brand to include a women's line.[22] In 1998, Inditex launched the Bershka brand that was aimed at urban hip fashion.[23] The company bought Stradivarius in 1999, a youthful female fashion brand.[9]
2001–present
Inditex had its initial public offering (IPO) in 2001, on the Bolsa de Madrid.[24] The IPO sold 26 per cent of the company to public investors, the company was valued at €9 billion.[25] The same year, the company launched the lingerie and women's clothing store Oysho.[26][27]
In 2003, Inditex launched the Zara Home brand, which offers bedding, cutlery, glassware and other home decoration accessories.[28] In 2004, with the opening of store number 2,000 in Hong Kong, Inditex had established its presence in 56 countries.[29]
In 2005, CEO Jose Maria Castellano stepped down from the position to oversee expansion plans, he was replaced by Pablo Isla.[30] Inditex launched Uterque in the summer of 2008, the brand specializes in women's accessories.[31] During the same year, the company opened its 4,000th store in Tokyo after doubling in size within four years.[29] In 2011, Ortega, the founder of the business and majority shareholder, stepped down as deputy chairman and CEO Isla handles day-to-day operations.[29] Later that year, the company opened a store in Australia, a move that would put the company on five continents and in 77 countries.[32] After the 2013 Savar building collapse, Inditex was one of the thirty-eight companies who signed the Accord on Factory and Building Safety in Bangladesh.[33]
As of 2019, Inditex is the biggest fashion retailer in the world by revenue.[34]
The company's revenue fell by 18% to $1.85 billion in the final quarter of 2020, primarily due to the fall in retail sales as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. Inditex's stocks fell by 12% over the year.[35]
In May 2021, Inditex said that all its stores in Venezuela would close as it will review its agreement with its local partner Phoenix World Trade.[36]
In the three months to 30 April 2023, the group reported a 13% increase in sales to £6.54 billion and a 14% rise in profit to £3.96 billion.[37][38]
In 2007, Inditex launched the Zara Home online retail store.[45] Zara joined the e-commerce marketplace in September 2010, launching websites in Spain, the UK, Portugal, Italy, Germany and France.[46][47] In November 2010, Zara's online presence grew to include Austria, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg.[48] In September 2011, Inditex brought Zara's e-commerce platform to the U.S.,[49] as well as adding the brands Pull and Bear, Massimo Dutti, Bershka, Stadivarius, Oysho and Uterqüe to the e-commerce space.[50] As of February 2016, Inditex operates e-commerce sites in 28 markets and plans to add 12 more by April.[51][52][53] In September 2018, Inditex announced to sell all its brands online by 2020, even in places where it does not own any stores.[54][55]
Marketing strategy
Inditex avoids magazine advertising, with print campaigns only occurring on billboards in certain regions like U.S. and in-store. Endorsements for celebrities to wear its labels are budgeted instead. The company also invests heavily in a prime commercial location with fashion-forward window displays for optimum high street visibility and product turnaround.[citation needed]
In 2017, Zara Home Belgium was convicted of plagiarism by a Brussels Court,[57][58][59][60][61] which was claimed to have been the first plagiarism conviction of a fast retailer.[62]
Brands
Under the Inditex umbrella are several brands that offer a variety of products aimed at different markets.[63]
Clothing and accessories for cosmopolitan men and women
Lefties
135
1993
Affordable fashion
Active in sixteen markets: Spain, Portugal, Andorra, Mexico, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Israel, Bahrain, Tunisia, Oman, Romania and Turkey
Deputy Chairman of Inditex First Executive of Grupo Pontegadea Director of GARTLER, S.L. Member of the Board of Trustees of Fundacion Amancio Ortega Gaona
Board Member of Inditex Member of the supervisory board of EON Non-executive director of International Airlines Group SA Chairman of Mondo Member of the International Advisory Board of the Spanish Business School (IESE)
July 2016
Jose Luis Duran Schulz
Board Member of Inditex Independent Director & Member of the Audit Committee of Orange
^Nederlandstalige Rechtbank van Koophandel Brussel Read online
^"Limburgse houtsnijder dwingt Zara op de knieën". De Tijd. "Het is een uniek precedent in die zin dat het, wellicht tot ver buiten België, de eerste keer is dat een fast retailer voor iets dergelijks door een rechtbank werd veroordeeld." ("It is a unique precedent in the sense that, perhaps far beyond Belgium, it is the first time that a fast retailer has been convicted of something like this by a court of law.")