IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON H&M

Authors

  • Dr.Ruchika Dawar Department of Fashion Management Studies, NIFT, Jodhpur, India
  • Ms. Niharika Bishnoi ,Department of Fashion Management Studies, NIFT, Jodhpur, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/7YHXG

Keywords:

Sales Growth Recovery, Circular Business Models, Innovation Hub, Consumer Expectations, Fashion & Technology

Abstract

The world's second biggest fashion retailer, Sweden’s H&M, cut 250 of its stores globally. Covid-19 pandemic had moved a lot of H&M shoppers online. H&M, which began a gradual reopening of stores in late April 2021 after most of the stores had been shut by the pandemic.

Against this backdrop, and with a goal to have all H&M group’s brands use only recycled or sustainably sourced materials in their collections by 2030, the fashion giant faced COVID-19.

Source -https://www.statista.com/statistics/1133661/h-and-m-sales-growth-coronavirus-crisis

The coronavirus pandemic, which emerged early 2020, has had drastic negative effects on businesses around the world. H&M Group, week 12 of 2020 to week 22, the sales growth was still at -34 percent compared to the year prior. Due to this in 2020 there was a significant decrease in demand, thus causing the shift of the demand curve.

This paper talks about the RECOVERY OF H&M SALES POST PANDEMIC,H&M offered a range of services based on circular business models such as resell, remake, repair and garment rental, as well as the garment collecting in stores globally for textiles recycling. The H&M’s innovation hub ‘The Laboratory’ runs a range of projects focusing on digital services connected to sustainability. How H&M has been able to meet the consumer expectations by incorporating all the sustainable fashion measures. They could also able to incorporate a lot of innovative ideas which include fashion & technology to cater younger segments mainly, these innovative ideas help the brand to increase its demand thus causing a shift in the demand curve.

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References

Fashion, T. B. (2021). The State of Fashion 2021. McKinsey Company.

H&M. (2017). Annual report. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Annual-Report-2017.pdf

H&M. (2018). Annual report. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Annual-Report-2018.pdf

H&M. (2019). Annual Report. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/HM_Annual-Report-2019.pdf

H&M. (2020). Annual Report 2020. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/HM-Annual-Report-2020.pdf

H&M. (2021). H&M Group Annual and Sustainability Report 2021. Retrieved from H&M: https://hmgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/HM-Group-Annual-and-Sustainability-Report-2021.pdf

H&M. (2022). Circular & climate positive. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/sustainability/circular-and-climate-positive/

H&M. (2022). Innovation. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/sustainability/leading-the-change/innovation/

H&M. (2022). Packaging. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/sustainability/circular-and-climate-positive/packaging/

H&M. (2022). Reuse and recycling. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/sustainability/circular-and-climate-positive/recycling/

H&M. (2022). Transparency. Retrieved from H&M Group: https://hmgroup.com/sustainability/leading-the-change/transparency/

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Published

2022-06-08

How to Cite

[1]
Dr.Ruchika Dawar and Ms. Niharika Bishnoi, “IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON H&M”, IEJRD - International Multidisciplinary Journal, vol. 7, no. MGM IOM&R, p. 8, Jun. 2022.