Welcome

Welcome to Paradigm Communication's official blog. Our goal is to provide the media with an easy to use resource for stories and credible third-party commentary. The information contained within this blog will be a mixture of information from both non-clients and clients or Paradigm Communications. our overriding goal is to present the media with the information they need to meet their deadlines and to present newsworthy information and stories. Feel free to e-mail me if you want to: 1) see a particular kind of posting or 2) submit a posting.

Here's more information about Paradigm Communications

Paradigm Communications is a full-service marketing, public relations and corporate communications firm with:

* Over 45 years of strategic communications experience

* Capabilities of a big firm with the personalized service of a small firm

* Ability to benchmark and determine ROI of your new PR efforts

Contact Paradigm Communications today to find out how you can leverage our experience and contacts to shift your company toward the future!

To receive a PDF of our new brochure, please click here.

Monday, March 26, 2007

A pitch letter was written based off of Professor Tony Gao's knowledge and comments on Abercrombie & Fitch versus the competition:

"On relative performance of Abercrombie & Fitch vis-à-vis the competition:Abercrombie and Fitch’s (AF) inventory turnover for the nine months ending Oct. 1 2006 is lower than its competitors such as American Eagle Outfitters, Eddie Bauer, and Gap. Its asset turnover for the same time period is comparable to that of the mentioned competitors. The areas where AF’s performance is most remarkable in the whole industry are with the high gross margin and low overhead to sales ratio. Its gross margin, at 66% for 2006, is much higher than all of its competitors examined including Aeropostale (30% in 2005), American Eagle (48% for 2006), Eddie Bauer (44% for 2005), Federated Department (41% for 2006), Gap (35% for 2006), J. Crew (43% for 2006), and Limited Brands (38% for 2006). This contrast shows that AF is doing a better job than the competition at maintaining a healthy difference between its sale price and the cost of goods, which is origin of all profit. This level of gross margin is higher than most specialty apparel retailers, department stores, and is on a par with or reaching the level of gross margin of many luxury jewelry retailers such as Coach (at 77% for 2006). AF’s overhead (selling, administrative, and general expenses) of 2006 is 11% of their sales, also much lower than the percentages of Aeropostale (19% in 2005), American Eagle (24% for 2006), Eddie Bauer (38% for 2005), Federated Department (32% for 2006), Gap (28% for 2006), J. Crew (33% for 2006), and Limited Brands (27% for 2006). What’s driving all of these? I believe the free publicity that AF generates from its controversial hiring practices and provocative promotional images has not played a small role in helping them get more target customers into the store and get more store traffic. This is a case where the negative publicity for a firm may have offended many people in the broader society but has prompted more patronage from their target customers. In a way, free publicity and corresponding saving of advertising dollars may have been components of a deliberate promotional strategy for Abercrombie and Fitch. Once in the store, the combination of its higher end merchandise, “cool” shopping environment, and an adequate amount of in-store service help convert more customers into buyers and further help illicit its buyers to spend more money on a per transaction basis. Even though it doesn’t turn over its inventory as fast as its competitors do, it’s quite possible that the lower inventory turnover performance comes from a lesser need for AF to mark down their merchandise to generate more sales."


Below is Prof. Gao’s bio.
Tao (Tony) Gao, Assistant Professor, Marketing Group. Professor Gao received a Ph.D. in marketing from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, an M.E. in business management from Harbin Institute of Technology (Harbin, China), and a B.E. in industrial and management engineering from Hebei University of Technology (Tianjin, China). Previously, he held faculty positions at Washburn University, Hofstra University, College of William and Mary, and Hebei University of Technology (China). He also worked with the China branch of Mitsubishi Corporation (a general trading company in Japan) in the areas of international trade and joint venture developments. Professor Gao conducts research primarily on the development, governance, and consequences of buyer-seller relationships, customer value and risk perceptions, international business strategies, and business ethics. He has published in Journal of Business Research, Journal of Business Ethics, Research in Marketing, International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, Journal of Relationship Marketing, Journal of International Business and Economy, Latin American Business Review, and Multinational Business Review. For his dissertation work on industrial buyer-seller relationships, he was a former winner of the National Association of Purchasing Management (now Institute for Supply Management) Doctoral Dissertation Competition.

The Cost of New Roads

In a March 11th article in The Dallas Morning News, entitled, “Debate on toll-road reliance in Texas still has miles to go,” by Tony Hartzel, the need to increase the use of toll roads in Texas is addressed. Executive Professor of General Management, Joseph Giglio at Northeatern University believes that there will be “A $2 trillion shortfall in national transportation spending is coming in the next 20 years.” Joseph believes that there is a need for additional highways. "The pressing issue is the need for additional highway capacity," said Professor Giglio. "The challenge is how do we come up with the capital to address that shortfall."

To read the full story, go here:
http://www.paradigmshiftpr.com/debateon.htm

8 Strategies for Selling Apparel to Middle-Aged Women

Assistant Professor of Marketing, Tony Gao from Northeastern University, presents his thoughts on marketing clothing to middle-aged women in the March 14th addition featured story in Apparel. He offers strategies that retailers ought to consider. Middle-aged women have different preferences and lifestyles such as positioning the store near department stores because of their busy schedules as full-time professionals, spouses and/or moms, they are there to fulfill their multiple shopping needs quickly. They have also become more confident in choosing their personal style and less pressured by their peers. Finally, Professor Gao provides 8 tips including focusing on where the consumer will most frequently wear the apparel, planning a merchandise assortment that is less driven by natural and fashion seasonality, and raising prices as necessary to accommodate higher merchandise quality and stronger customer service, such as more multi-channel marketing and less use of stand-alone stores.

To read the full story, go here:
http://www.paradigmshiftpr.com/8strategies.htm