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Hennes & Mauritz in 2005: Managing Global Expansion |
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ExcerptsBackground NoteBusiness ModelH&M believed in rapid growth, the norm being 10-15% increase in annual profits and opening several new stores every year. H&M believed in organic growth, financing expansion with its $1.1 billion cash reserves. It was quick to learn from its mistakes. In 1974, H&M decided to introduce shoes as part of its accessories. It soon realized that shoes were a different ball game altogether and involved stricter trade regulations and larger stocks. H&M abandoned the venture... H&M and CompetitionWith annual sales of about $7.26 billion in 2004, H&M was much smaller than Gap Inc. (Gap Inc's sales topped $15 billion, and the Gap brand represented 46% of that) but bigger than its closest rival, Zara, which reported annual sales of just over $4 billion, nearly three-quarters of its parent Inditex's total sales.
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