Brand rehab: how Sungjoo Group CEO Kim Sungjoo bagged an ailing German luxury brand and resuscitated it for the Asian market.Kim Sungjoo, chairperson and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of Sungjoo Group, went from being the queen of South Korea's fashion franchising industry. to the savior of a tattered tat·tered adj. 1. Torn into shreds; ragged. 2. Having ragged clothes; dressed in tatters. 3. a. Shabby or dilapidated. b. Disordered or disrupted. German brand. She was one of The Wall Street Journal's "Top 50 Women to Watch" in 2004, and Asiaweek listed her among the "Seven Most Powerful Women in Asia" in 2001. Her group operates 90 retail stores in South Korea for Marks & Spencer, Lulu Guinness and Billy Bag, with sales of US$100 million in 2005. Two years ago, Kim obtained control of the worldwide operations of another brand she had been carrying for a number of years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time leather goods of MCM (MultiChip Module or MicroChip Module) A chip package that contains several bare chips mounted close together on a substrate (base) of some kind. (Modern Creation Munich). Founded in the 1970s by a German entrepreneur, MCM had become highly popular in Germany, South Korea and New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of by the mid-1990s. Facing internal problems and an inability to keep up with the rapidly changing economic landscape of the late 1990s, the company faltered and the brand took a deep plunge. Sungjoo Group bought MCM and took on the challenge of turning it around. CW contributor Silvia Cambie talked with Kim to find out what it takes to make a brand ready for the 21st century, and for a foreign business to be successful in Asia. Silvia Cambie: In what way has communication helped you to build your retail business? Kim Sungjoo: Women are our main consumers, and being one of them has helped me to understand how to communicate with them. When I started my business in Korea in the 1990s, I had to find a formula that would set me apart from powerful competitors. I chose the human touch. We are very store-oriented and like to tend to the needs of individual customers. At organized store events we take the time to talk to our customers and find out what they like. We give them a sense of belonging and make them feel like they are part of our community. We knew we were doing the right thing when we found out that 60 percent of our customers visit our stores as often as three times a week. SC: How have communication technologies affected your business? KS: Technological innovation is very important to us. The Asian financial crisis of 1997 acted like a brushfire brush·fire also brush fire n. 1. A fire in low-growing, scrubby trees and brush. 2. A relatively minor crisis. adj. on the tradition-bound ruling class, replacing it with a new "ecosystem" dominated by the younger generation. MCM clientele in Asia is very young--usually in their early to mid-20s. We discovered that they had started an MCM Cafe on Yahoo!. It was a spontaneous initiative, and we decided to support it by inviting the members of this Internet community to a store event. SC: How do you revitalize re·vi·tal·ize tr.v. re·vi·tal·ized, re·vi·tal·iz·ing, re·vi·tal·iz·es To impart new life or vigor to: plans to revitalize inner-city neighborhoods; tried to revitalize a flagging economy. a brand? KS: My background in social sciences helps me to understand the reasons why women buy our bags. I also worked for Bloomingdale's in New York in the 1980s, where I was involved in the launch of brands such as Fendi, Armani and Polo Ralph Lauren Polo Ralph Lauren (NYSE: RL) is American fashion designer Ralph Lauren's luxury lifestyle company. Polo Ralph Lauren specializes in high-end casual/semi-formal wear for men and women, as well as accessories, fragrance, and housewares. . Following the liberation movement A liberation movement is a group organizing a rebellion against a colonial power (Anti-imperialism) or seeking separation from a state for parts of the population that feel suppressed by the majority. of the 1970s, women began to take leadership positions in corporate America. They needed products that reflected their new lifestyle: bigger bags with enough space to fit not only their cosmetics, combs, pins and keys, but also their books, papers and personal organizers. The same applies now to MCM. This brand used to cater to women who were not working and had plenty of free time. Our new, 21st-century client base is composed of highly professional, widely traveled working women. For them, we are combining German precision and quality with Korean high-tech. In 2005, we hired Michael Michalsky, Adidas' former creative director, who helped to resurrect the sport brand by creating alliances with personalities from the fashion world like [designers] Yohji Yamamoto Yōji Yamamoto(山本 耀司、Yamamoto Yōji, born 3 October 1943) is an internationally known Japanese fashion designer based out of Paris, Japan, and New York. and Stella McCartney Stella Nina McCartney (born 13 September 1971) is an English fashion designer. Early life Stella McCartney was born in London, the daughter of former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney and Linda McCartney, an American rock music photographer famous for her support of vegetarianism . The fact that he was willing to leave a huge brand like Adidas and join us made news all over the world, and gave the MCM brand a much-needed boost. SC: More and more businesses in Europe and North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. are discovering Asia. How would you advise such businesses to approach the Asian markets? KS: Westerners make the mistake of believing that Asia is mainly focused on the past because of its history and traditions. Recent developments--such as unprecedented economic growth, globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation and the Internet--have created a generation of younger consumers who are currently driving Asia's markets. Businesses from Europe and North America also tend to think that most decisions in Asian households are made by men. This could not be further from the truth. The crisis of 1997 enabled women to emerge and claim a more active role. Women are behind 70 to 80 percent of all purchases made by Asian households every year. Foreigners also have the mistaken idea that what works in their markets is bound to work in Asia as well. What they need is a "glocal" approach: They can keep their global principles, but they need to adapt them to local conditions and tap into local talent. less bang for the buck When it comes to luxury purchases, style and design hold sway--not advertising. That's the finding by U.S.-based Unity Marketing, which conducts its Luxury Consumer Tracking Study every quarter. In its second-quarter 2006 report, Unity Marketing listed the factors that least influenced U.S. fashion shoppers in their most recent purchases as exclusivity (rated very important by only 20 percent), recommendations of friends (18 percent), Internet research This article is about using the Internet for research; for the field of research about the Internet, see Internet studies. Internet research is the practice of using the Internet, especially the World Wide Web, for research. (12 percent), articles and reviews (11 percent), and advertising (9 percent). "According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. shoppers, advertisements didn't influence them when it came to making their last purchase," says Pamela N. Danziger, president of Unity Marketing. "However, advertising, as well as articles and reviews, is of critical importance in communicating information about the latest styles and designs, building awareness and trust in specific stores, and exposing consumers to different designers' sensibilities. So while advertising may not drive shoppers in their purchases, it plays an indirect role in the fashion sales equation." For full survey results, go to www.unitymorketingonline.com/reports2/luxury//luxury2Q2006.html. about the author Silvia Cambie is the director of Chanda Communications in London and chair of the IABC/ Europe and Middle East region. |
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