From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increasingly dominated the domestic textile industry, to some extent arresting its decline. This article uses financial and archival evidence to examine the distribution of costs and benefits in the M&S vertical network. It shows that these benefits became less tangible for textile firms from around 1985, in the context of lower-cost overseas competition. We chart the visible and invisible evolution of network management, demonstrating that retailer-producer collaboration evolved from a bilateral vertical partnership model to a hybrid version that retained partnerships with leading suppliers and an emphasis on domestic sourcing, but also facilitated...
The French apparel industry has always had a distinctive industrial organization based on agglomerat...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
In this paper changes in the relationship between the clothing manufacturing sector and its major cu...
This paper will examine changes in the home market retail and distribution structure for British dre...
This paper will consider the role of family firms, the Chandlerian ‘modern business ent...
© 2022 The Author. Published by the Marketing History Society of Japan. This is an open access artic...
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, it was noted that retailers in Britain had started providing incr...
This article introduces and assesses a conceptual model of institutional and corporate change. In pa...
Purpose The apparel industry has acted as a microcosm of global industrial change, exemplified by ch...
Over the last forty years, manufacturing has witnessed exponential growth in offshoring to low-cost ...
The French apparel industry has always had a distinctive industrial organization based on agglomerat...
The French apparel industry has always had a distinctive industrial organization based on agglomerat...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
In this paper changes in the relationship between the clothing manufacturing sector and its major cu...
This paper will examine changes in the home market retail and distribution structure for British dre...
This paper will consider the role of family firms, the Chandlerian ‘modern business ent...
© 2022 The Author. Published by the Marketing History Society of Japan. This is an open access artic...
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, it was noted that retailers in Britain had started providing incr...
This article introduces and assesses a conceptual model of institutional and corporate change. In pa...
Purpose The apparel industry has acted as a microcosm of global industrial change, exemplified by ch...
Over the last forty years, manufacturing has witnessed exponential growth in offshoring to low-cost ...
The French apparel industry has always had a distinctive industrial organization based on agglomerat...
The French apparel industry has always had a distinctive industrial organization based on agglomerat...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...
There is archaeological evidence of textile production in Britain from the late-prehistoric period o...