A Stitch in Time Lean Retailing and the Transformation of Manufacturing--Lessons from the Apparel and Textile Industries

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1999-07-29
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

The apparel and textile industries have always been at the mercy of rapidly changing styles and fickle customers who want the latest designs while they are still in fashion. The result for these businesses, often forced to forecast sales and order from suppliers with scant information about volatile demand, is a history of stock shortages, high inventories, and costly markdowns. But, as the authors explain in A Stitch in Time , technological advances in the 1980s paved the way for a new concept in retailing--lean retailing. Pioneered by companies like WAL-MART, lean retailing has reshaped the way that products are ordered, virtually eliminating delays from distribution center to sales rack by drawing on sales data captured electronically at the checkout counter. Armed with up-to-the-minute data about colors, sizes, styles, and geographic sales, apparel and textile companies now must be able to respond rapidly to real-time orders efficiently based on new approaches to distributing merchandise, forecasting, planning, organizing production, and managing supplier relations. A Stitch in Time shows that even in the face of burgeoning product proliferation, companies that successfully adapt to the world of lean retailing can reduce inventory risk, reduce costs, and increase profitability while improving their responsiveness to the ever-changing tastes of customers. Based on the success of these practices in the apparel industry, lean retailing practices are propagating through a growing number of consumer product industries. A richly detailed and resonant account, A Stitch in Time brilliantly captures both the history and future of the retail-apparel-textile channel and offers bold insights on the changes and challenges facing retailers and manufacturers in all segments of our rapidly changing economy.

Author Biography


Frederick H. Abernathy joined John T. Dunlop in a 1979 study of the Tailored Clothing Industry which led to the establishment of the Textile and Clothing Technology Corporation ([TC]2). His continued involvement with the apparel industry led the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to support the research resulting in this book. He is Abbott and James Lawrence Professor of Engineering, and Gordon McKay Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Harvard University. John T. Dunlop has had an extensive career in labor relations and government including serving as U.S. Secretary of Labor from 1975-1976 and more recently chair of President Clinton's Commission on Worker-Management Relations. He has also served as a mediator and arbitrator in a wide range of industries and is the author of more than ten books on labor relations and labor economics. He is Lamont University Professor, Emeritus at Harvard University. Janice H. Hammond investigates how manufacturing and logistics systems develop the speed and flexibility to respond quickly and efficiently to changing customer demand--critical capabilities in the retail-apparel-textile channel. She is the UPS Foundation Professor of Business Logistics at the Harvard Business School. David Weil has written widely on the impact of technology and human resource policy on business performance based in part on his studies of the retail-apparel-textile industries. His research spans the areas of labor market policy, industrial and labor relations, occupational safety and health, and regulatory policy. He is Associate Professor of Economics at Boston University School of Management.

Table of Contents

Preface vii
The New Competitive Advantage in Apparel
1(20)
The Past as Prologue: Historical Background on the U.S. Retail, Apparel, and Textile Industries
21(18)
The Retail Revolution: Traditional Versus Lean Retailing
39(16)
The Building Blocks of Lean Retailing
55(16)
The Impact of Lean Retailing
71(16)
Inventory Management for the Retailer: Demand Forecasting and Stocking Decisions
87(20)
Inventory Management for the Manufacturer: Production Planning and Optimal Sourcing Decisions
107(22)
Apparel Operations: Getting Ready to Sew
129(22)
Apparel Operations: Assembly and the Sewing Room
151(14)
Human Resources in Apparel
165(20)
Textile Operations: Spinning, Weaving, and Finishing Cloth
185(18)
The Economic Viability of Textiles: A Tale of Multiple Channels
203(18)
The Global Marketplace
221(22)
Suppliers in a Lean World: Firm and Industry Performance in an Integrated Channel
243(20)
Information-Integrated Channels: Public Policy Implications and Future Directions
263(18)
Appendix A List of Acronyms 281(2)
Appendix B The HCTAR Survey 283(6)
Appendix C Data Sources 289(6)
Appendix D Companies Visited or Interviewed by HCTAR 295(4)
Notes 299(48)
Subject Index 347(18)
Name Index 365(2)
Business Index 367

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