Celio, the French fashion retailer is all set
to strengthen its connection with Indian customers. The brand, is eyeing a
bigger pie of India’s organized menswear retail market. Celio brings an
essentially urban European fashion trend through its collection of shirts,
jackets, waistcoats, trousers, suits, jackets and accessories.
In India, Celio offers a wide range of smart casual, business
wear, sportswear, clubwear and denims. Celio had stepped into the country in
2008, the brand opened its first store in R City, Mumbai in 2009. Today the
brand runs 40 exclusive brand stores which are fully company owned and operated
and 128 shop-in-shops. The brand has also
penetrated through large format stores like Pantaloons, Central and Lifestyle.
Celio is looking at rolling out 100 stores by 2016.
Riding the booming
e-commerce wave, the brand has already registered 7 percent of its total
revenue in the domestic market through online sales. It has tied up with
leading ecommerce portals like Myntra, Jabong, Flipkart and Amazon. “The urban
Indian youth is aspiring for fast, effortless fashion. In India the younger
generation is as fashion seeking as their global counterparts. They have
exposure of international trends through the net, TV and mobile. We want people
to come up to us for global fashion,” says Rajiv Nair, CEO, Celio, Future
Fashion.
Driven by a strong
conviction in India market, the brand is eyeing deeper penetration through
retail expansion and a strategic communication plan targeted at young
consumers. “We are essentially a retail oriented company which means our
philosophy or strategy is store, product and customer service centric. We are
exploring various routes to increase our penetration and strongly believe
internet is the way,” he says.
“We have a legacy of two
decades and in India we are just a starter, we are still understanding the
market. We see ourselves as a retailer first, backed by a fantastic
manufacturing set up. We manufacture four crore garments in Asia per annum and
10 lakh of these per annum are for India. We are taking the slow route. We have
set the route and standards. Now, our goal is to get profits at the corporate
level,” adds Nair.
Although the brand is
not in a hurry to open franchisee stores it does plan to slowly tap that route.
“Even though we are looking at franchisee stores for expansion, it won’t be
bigger than our company stores. We understand that we have to take the
franchisee route to get into smaller territories,” sums up Nair.
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