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Collaborative Business Alliances … Neiman Marcus and Target Example

By Mike Schoultz · 1 Comment ·

business alliances

A new model of collaborative commerce?

 

Recently we wrote a couple of articles entitled Thoughts on Collaborative Commerce … Elephants Can Dance and Utilize Business Alliances for your Growth Strategy. The premise of these articles was how businesses can avoid being shackled to their past by utilizing business alliances and collaborative commerce.

 

Our discussions with many companies led us to these conclusions. Ask most companies and they will tell you why they’ve given up trying to do everything themselves. It has to do with decision making speed, speed to market, faster expertise, business growth and expansion, and risk reduction. Today we will use these premises to analyze the Neiman Marcus – Target retail alliance.

 

Back in July, the luxury retail chain Neiman Marcus said it will put together a limited collection from 24 American designers this holiday season with an unlikely partner … discounter Target Corp. 

 

Items from fashion houses including Diane Von Furstenberg, Derek Lam, Rodarte and Tory Burch will range from $7.99 to $499.99 and average $60. Each chain will offer the same items, ranging from stationery to sporting goods, at the same price. The label will have both the Target bulls-eye logo and the Neiman Marcus logo. 

 

The Target + Neiman Marcus Holiday Collection includes a mix of more than 50 limited-edition products. The total line will include clothing and accessories, some involving difficult manufacturing using hand-blown glass, fine leather and 18 karat gold.

 

For Target, the benefits of the tie-up are clear. The discounter needs exclusive lines to keep shoppers in its stores, and it gets to bask in the glow of Neiman Marcus. Signing so many designers would probably not have been possible without adding the Neiman’s draw. So Target’s benefit … designer buzz.

 

For Neiman, the benefit is a little more difficult to see. It said it needed Target’s extensive supply chain to produce the goods in bulk. But it already carries designer labels—at true designer prices with far fatter profit margins. What it needs is a way to draw in people who otherwise might not have a motivation to be drawn into the store. So Neiman’s benefit … more and wider range of customers.

 

The partnership is the latest example of business collaboration with both partners seeking business growth  … but these are very different and unlikely dance partners. Let’s examine this collaborative alliance in more detail.

 

As we described in the earlier articles, there are three kinds of business alliances …channel changers, market enablers, and symbiotic relationships. All of these are in play with this collaboration:

 

Channel Changers … give you additional ways to access your customers or as in this case, new customers for each business. They usually involve integrating your products or services with those of supply chain partners and are almost always mutually beneficial … certainly works here, at least on paper, so far. 

 

Market Enablers …  market enabler alliances give partners a capability they don’t already have. In this case, access to high end designers for Target and volume quality manufacturing for Neiman Marcus.  

 

Symbiotic Relationships …perhaps the easiest, but still quite fruitful, potential alliances are built on symbiotic business relationships.  In this case Target gets more access to higher end designers as well as customers and Neiman gets access to the lower end market to draw more customers into its stores … a great symbiotic win-win example. Such examples can be found all around in many, many markets.

 

Who else are in on the collaboration for ultimate good … the designers, of course.  Lela Rose, one of the designers in the project, suspects some of her customers are Target shoppers. Ms. Rose produces bridal fashion and women’s dresses that average $1K apiece.

 

Her core customers are affluent women between 35 to 60 years old who typically shop at Neiman, her biggest buyer. But she figures they shop for other goods at Target, where the median household income of shoppers is $64,000 a year.

 

The dress and shirt she’s making for the holiday collection aren’t made with fabrics she would normally use, but she said the aesthetics are comparable to her regular product. Most important, the line will give her exposure to new customers.

 

The new collection will debut Dec. 1 and run for three weeks at Target and Neiman stores and websites.

 

Our takeaway:

Such business alliances and collaborative commerce are NOT just for big businesses. In fact, small businesses will find more ability to be more creative and quick on their feet. To do so, all they need is a little imagination and the ability to experiment with new ideas.

  

 Please share a story or two from your business alliance experience.

 

Read more:

The Baby Boomer Market … a Significant Business Opportunity

Business Improvements … 10 Key Success Enablers

How Small Business Can Own the Moment Versus Big Brands

 

Call Digital Spark Marketing for a free consultation on your marketing campaign strategy today. We can offer you some good tips on how to creatively engage your customers. More reading on creative marketing tips …

 

 

Related posts:

business alliancesUtilize Business Alliances for Your Company Growth Strategy collaborative commerceThoughts on Collaborative Commerce … Elephants Can Dance Target Market Segmentation … Have You Forgotten Your Non-customers?
Tagged with: business alliances • business collaboration • collaborative commerce • marketplace trends • Neiman Marcus and Target 
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One comment on “Collaborative Business Alliances … Neiman Marcus and Target Example”

  1. mike on November 19, 2012 at 11:03 pm said:

    Thank you.

    Reply ↓

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