Corante

About this Author
CORANTE John Yunker is founder of Byte Level Research and author of the widely acclaimed book, Beyond Borders: Web Globalization Strategies and editor of Global By Design.

He has covered the emerging field of Web globalization for half a decade and has published a wide range of reports dedicated to best practices in Web localization and internationalization.
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Going Global focuses on the risks and rewards of expanding into new geographic and cultural markets, from Web globalization to international marketing to global usability.
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December 18, 2002

Translating Fashion

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Posted by John Yunker

The French children's clothing store Jacadi is a case study in the craziness that is globalization. Here is a French store expanding into the U.S. market because its fashions are more popular here than at home. Furthermore, it is hiring personnel who speak Tagalog and Korean to better serve its target American audience.

Consider the following from a recent New York Times article:

About 55 percent of revenues are generated outside France, compared with 35 percent five years ago, he said, with the United States contributing about 20 percent of non-French revenue, up from 17 percent five years ago.

Jacadi is reacting to growing competition in its home market as well as to a European trend away from expensive frills and toward less-expensive streetwear. Indeed, while Jacadi still stresses what Mr. Charpentier likes to call "bon chic, bon genre" — roughly, real chic, real style — it overhauled the collection two years ago to accommodate the streetwear trend. "The colors, the style, the cut are more modern," he said.

Still, neither the streetwear trend nor the uncertain economy has yet crimped Americans' taste for the French children's look, and Jacadi has done well with velvet dresses that go for up to $79 or jumpers for up to $89. Part of its strategy is to aim at ethnic groups whose tastes may tend to the frilly. Its Web site, for instance, specifies that Tagalog is spoken at a Madison Avenue store and Korean at several other sites.

Here's the Jacadi global gateway:

jacadi.gif

So if your product flops in your home market, don't give up. You may still have a hit on your hands in some foreign market. The trick is in finding that market. But, like Jacadi, you have to move quickly. Fashion is fickle, and so too is globalization.

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