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There's a lot of name dropping in fashion, it makes the money go round in the clothing, footwear, perfume, jewellery and accessories markets.
In fashion the name's the thing, it also helps to have good design, talent and images of models who are easy to look at.
This article joins the merry-go-round and examines trends
and statistics relevant to commercialisation, management and legal practices in the fashion sector in Australia.
Next week's big trade show in Sydney is the 12th Rosemount Australian Fashion Week. It follows last month's 10th annual L'Oreal Melbourne Fashion Festival.
The images, words and gossip stories spun by these fashion events feed
human kind's fascination for fashion.
Fashion events help create an up mood for the Australian fashion
business. It's needed as the textile, clothing and footwear sector has
been battered by decades of decline, largely due to the comparative
advantage of low-cost countries such as China.
1. Responding to competition
Figures from the Council of Textile Fashion Industries of Australia
indicate that product output, levels of employment and sales have all
roughly halved in the five years between 2001 and 2005. The sector's sales for 2005-06 were A$7.1 billion.
According to the
federal Productivity Commission's figures, the sector received A$198.5
million in government subsidies and tax concessions in 2004-05.
Competition has increased. Take the A$635 million perfume retailing sector in Australia for example. Writing in The Australian Financial Review (14 August 2006, p. 51), Neil Shoebridge and Fiona Tyndall reported that: "More
than 200 women's perfume brands jostle for space in stores and ... The
men's perfume category is home to about 100 brands. With perfume
marketers launching an average of 50 brands a year, retailers show no
mercy to slow sellers. New brands have just four months to prove their
value before they are reviewed.".
In the midst of such economic challenges "Fashion Fights Back", a story by James Thomson in the BRW
(5-11 October 2006, p. 28-33) neatly summarised management practices
which form a recipe for survival for Australian players in the sector.
The BRW's headings were:
- "innovate or die"
- "be flexible"
- "go global"
- "serve or be served"
Taking that first point, an example of an innovator is Remo. He and others have gone global and online.
2. More names
Among the Australians who have built profiles or businesses in fashion are Greg
Norman, Pat Rafter, Elle McPherson and Kylie Minogue. Between them they have numerous trade
mark registrations in numerous classes of goods and services.
Registration under the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) adds to the legal
protection available under the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) to
provide Kylie's backers, for example, with protection for her Darling fragrance
launched Christmas 2006. DARLING and KYLIE MONOGUE DARLING are both
trade mark applications awaiting registration in Australia in the name
of KDB Pty Ltd.
As for Elle, she of course has licensed her name to many fashion
labels, including the line of Bendon lingerie which has had annual
growth of more than 40% with sales in the UK alone of more than A$80
million according to The Australian Financial Review Magazine.
Celebrity-based perfume brands have been big sellers globally in recent years
and include products associated with Nicole Kidman, Britney
Spears, Jennifer Lopez, Paris Hilton and Sara Jessica Parker.
The same goes for clothing fashions with Sharon Stone for Christian Dior's beauty
line, Kim Basinger for Prada, Julia Roberts for Gianfranco Ferre, and Demi
Moore and Madonna for Versace.
Care is needed for celebrity licensing contracts. The accompanying ad
shows Charlize Theron wearing a Raymond Weil S.A. watch. In a New York
Supreme Court breach of contract
case begun in 2007 the Swiss watch maker
seeks compensation on the basis that despite her May 2005 celebrity
endorsement contract Ms Theron was seen on Websites and press
photographs wearing and advertising watches and jewellry made by
competitors
like Dior and Montblanc. Paragraph 10 of the Complaint alleges a non-competition restraint exists in the contract as follows: "...Artist
commits not to wear publicly any other watches other than RW [Raymond
Weil] watches during the Term. Additionally, artist hereby agrees that
during the term she shall not endorse or advertise watches or jewelry
for any other person, entity or company."
3. Changing distribution practices and business models
However, the biggest story is not the increased use of big names. It
is the change to distribution practices and business models affecting
bottom lines. As we'll illustrate briefly, law has played a central
role causing or
influencing that change.
For example, luxury perfumes are now sold in increased numbers in Australian pharmacies, discount department stores, direct
sales, speciality stores, grocery retailers and online. They compete with sales at salons, boutiques and department stores.
Specially retailers (such as The Perfume Connection, The Perfume Shop,
The Perfume King, PerfumeMart and Perfume Empire) have eaten into sales
and it is claimed that perfume prices have also dropped 10 to 30 per
cent in the three years to 2006.
Shoebridge and Tyndall report that "The
14-year-old The Perfume Connection, which is part owned by ANZ Banking
Group's private equity division, opened 11 new stores during 2005,
lifting its chain to 54 stores. Founder Pat McCarthy says ... 'The
price drops [by mainstream retailers] have been between 10 and 40 per
cent, so the same margin is not in it for the parallel importers' ".
4. Future developments and legal takeaway
Changing laws in Australia have shifted the ground for the fashion
business and continue to do so as illustrated by items in the further
reading list below.
A series of changes in Australia's copyright and trade mark laws in the
last decade or so have made it easier for those who engage in parallel importation.
We can define parallel importation as the practice of importing
legitimate or non-pirate branded or copyright goods instead of buying
them from an exclusive or authorised domestic distributor. Before these
changes it was easier to use the law to block at customs or elsewhere
the importation into Australia of legitimately produced products which
had packaging or labeling which was subject to copyright and/or trade
mark law.
There remains plenty of scope in fashion to combine marketing and
management
practices with law to legally:
- protect textile,
fashion and perfume innovation using trade mark, design, copyright,
moral rights, trade secrets, trade practices and even patent law (eg in
Australia a perfume scent can be a registered trade mark);
- develop international licensing agreements and practices to secure revenue streams and brand protection;
- develop the business models for talent, retailers, distributors and
other players who need to establish or restructure enterprises or
entities to capture and store value from their creativity; and
- fight products which infringe intellectual property rights, otherwise known as counterfeits, pirate goods and knock-offs.
Emblamatic of many themes in this post is the Gowings
Department Store building in central Sydney. A 1930s photo of the building leads this article.
Since 1868 clothing for men was the focus of the Gowings Department Store. However, in a strategic move in 2001, Gowings Bros Ltd shifted from being a retailing business to being a real property business. In making the change the company licensed out its valuable "Gowings"
trade mark to an unrelated retailer to run with, Gowings Retail Ltd
(now Retail Star Ltd). As the retailer expanded quickly opening several new outlets it seemed its new management knew what it was doing. Instead it fell in a heap, ending up in insolvency in late 2005.
However, since the Gowings name was only used by it under licence, Gowings Bros
Ltd got its name back... for future use. It is registered in six
classes on the Australian trade marks register. In fashion the name's the thing.
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