Business to Business: Textile Industry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Business to Business: Textile Industry

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Title: Business to Business: Textile Industry


1
Business to Business Textile Industry
  • By Ravinath, Srinivasan, Wu, Zhou

2
Participants of the B2B Textile
  • Sellers
  • Wholesalers
  • www.wallace-textiles.com
  • www.unitedfabrics.com
  • Raw products
  • http//www.xsyarn.com/
  • http//texprocil.com
  • Manufacturers (dye, fiber, cotton..etc)
  • http//www.filatex.com/
  • http//www.cortyvis.com/
  • End products Manufactures
  • http//www.ydii.com/
  • http//www.brody.co.uk/
  • Buyers
  • Retailers
  • www.macys.com
  • www.llbean.com
  • End-product manufactures
  • http//www.ydii.com/
  • http//www.brody.co.uk/
  • End-users
  • http//www.macys.com
  • http//www.sears.com

3
MAJOR PLAYERS
Sellers
Buyers
Raw Products
Retailers
End Products Manufacturers
Wholesalers
Manufacturers
Manufacturers
End Users
4
Objectives of the B2B Sites
  • Most of the sites are exclusively for members to
    reach better tailored information with very rough
    information to non-members
  • Also serves as a direct channel to consumers for
    specific end products
  • Manufacturer seeking distribution channels
    primarily through wholesale
  • Try to increase visibility among the distributor
    and consumer community
  • Offer product description with different degree
    of details
  • Provide one place to find all information about
    price and compare prices easily
  • Eliminating paper work to improve efficiency and
    reduce transaction cost
  • Automated processes in a traditionally
    conservative industry

5
Challenges
  • The manufacturers sites are generally
    rudimentary
  • Become more efficient in attracting new customers
  • Pay less attention to cycles and seasons and
    provide more promotional mechanisms
  • Most of the sites can be reached only through
    search engines, less opportunities to attend
    Trade shows/ Fairs and hence more publicity
  • Make the site more public and well-known/renowned
  • How to offer differentiated benefits for premium
    customers
  • Improve the details and specifics about the
    products
  • Possibly automate regular shipping contracts

6
Strength and Weakness of Current Website Design
  • Good points
  • Most sites provide detailed information about the
    products
  • Detailed information about the manufacturer,
    location, strength in industry to create
    confidence among buyers
  • Provide owners information and contact address
    to improve personal relationship
  • Order forms are very user-friendly, customers
    dont need to go through pages and waste times as
    do B2C customers
  • Rooms for improvement
  • Simplicity of page layout without any advanced
    features
  • Plain outlay
  • Text blocks
  • Color and images design are not professional and
    represent no company image of differentiation
    features
  • Too less information to non-members and might
    exclude prospect customers

7
Example of simplicity This is the main home page
of a knitwear manufacture to attract buying agent
Example of vulgar design This is the page of a
wholesaler listing addresses of domestic
distributors
8
A Good Portal Example www.textileWeb serves as
the hub for all kinds of companies that has
anything and everything to do with textiles. The
site is also very good, user-friendly and
attracts huge site-traffic.
9
A Good Wholesale Example www.llbean.com is an
industry intermediary that both reaches the
customers and conduct B2B to get the products in
whole-sale through the web. The sites are
well-designed and information-rich
10
Textile B2B Operation Model
  • Raw material providers
  • Manufacture of wool www.wool.net.au
  • Sellers of polyester, nylon, goom, etc.
  • www.filatex.com
  • Initial design and fabric components
  • Wholesalers for fabrics
  • www.fabricclub.com
  • Sellers of cotton fabric designs
  • www.hoffmanfabrics.com
  • Manufactures of textile
  • www.unitedfabrics.com
  • Intermediary distributors www.textileweb.com
  • Wholesalers and end users www.llbean.com

11
Textile B2B Operation Chart
Sellers of end products
www.wallace-textiles.com
Wholesalers for fabrics/design
www.webindia.com/gga
www.fabricclub.com
Seller of cotton/design fabrics
www.hoffmanfabrics.com
Intermediary hubs
End-users
www.textileweb.com
12
Textile Industry Leaders
  • Shaw Industries
  • Mohawk Industries
  • Springs Industries
  • Burlington Industries
  • WestPoint Stevens
  • Unifi
  • Interface

13
Player Dominance
  • Incorporating technology that strengthens their
    strategic position
  • We have excellent global resources and growing
    ability to provide consumer-ready products as
    well as fabrics. In addition, we are placing
    strong strategic emphasis on new applications of
    advanced technology.
  • George W. Henderson, III, CEO of Burlington
    Industries
  • Establish global presence in order to expand
    customer base
  • Create complete product ownership by being the
    manufacturer, distributor, and seller

14
Reasons for Player Dominance
  • Establish partnerships with major commercial
    dealers and retailers to increase market coverage
  • Mergers and Acquisition of competitors
  • In addition to the Shaw/Queen merger, there was
    further consolidation in the floor covering
    industry.  Additional mergers and acquisitions
    involving approximately 2 billion in revenue
    occurred within our industry during 1998.  These
    acquisitions represent a rapid acceleration in
    the consolidation process.
  • www.shawinc.com, CEO
  • By strategically positioning itself in the market
  • The Company is vertically integrated and is the
    nation's leading manufacturer and marketer of bed
    linens, towels, comforters and other accessories
    that are sold in retail outlets throughout the
    world.
  • www.westpointstevens.com
  • Has created a brand name due to history of
    company
  • With over 186 years of experience, WestPoint
    Stevens is today the nation's largest producer of
    bed and bath fashions sold in retail outlets
    worldwide.
  • www.westpointstevens.com

15
Value-added in Textile Industry
  • Dedicated service
  • We take Orders to make your brand
    -- www.ydii.com
  • Products are of high quality and competitive
    price
  • Since 1946 we have been committed to satisfying
    our customers, 100, with the highest quality
    fabrics, in the latest styles at competitive
    prices --
    www.hoffmanfabrics.com
  • Easy ordering for you, quick transportation from
    us
  • our friendly, well-trained customer service
    representatives are available between 8A.M. and
    8 P.M., Monday through Fridayno minimum quantity
    requirement for fabrics or vinylscan ship
    lightning-fastship all orders within 24 hours of
    receipt.



    -- www.unitedfabrics.com

16
Value-added in Textile Industry
  • Instant access to the latest information of
    textile industry
  • WebIndias customers reap the benefits of a fast
    and reliable internet connection as well as less
    than 24 hour customer response time
    --
    www.webindia.com
  • TextileWeb provides reliable, up-to-date
    information to encourage business activity among
    buyers and sellers in the global textile
    marketplace
    --www.TextileWeb.com
  • Free membership to the web community
  • Active businesses with many big companies

17
Reasons for Value-added Service
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