Tuesday, April 2, 2019
Li Fung: An Analysis
Li  Fung An AnalysisRahul Jacob, Inside Track  conventional Values at the Click of a Mo economic consumption, Financial Times,  grand 1, 2000, p. 14.Online bookseller Amazon.com  alter the book industry forcing traditional book retailers to respond.Some in fashionation in this section comes from previous Harvard Business School Case Studies Li  Fung beyond Filling in the Mosaic-1995-98, (HBS Publishing No. 398-092) Michael Y. Yoshino, Carin-Isabel Knoop, Anthony St. George January 1, 1998 and Li  Fung ( employment) Ltd., HBS Publishing (No. 396-075) Gary Loveman, Jamie OConnell, October 26, 1995. With a press conference the  adjacent day, William was confident of the  meetings performance and lifung.coms prospects.  still he k mod that  grave issues remained unresolved Was  in that location any chance of channel  contravene or cannibalization between the offline business and the start-up? How would the market react to the start-up  one  clipping it was launched the following year? An   d how specifically would e-commerce ultimately transform his familys century-old  play along?Company   chthonicstateLi  Fung was founded in 1906 by Williams grandfather, Fung Pak-Liu and his  better half, Li To- Ming in Guangzhou, China as an exportation  employment company selling to overseas merchants. In the twenties and 1930s the company diversified into warehousing and the manufacture of handicrafts. Shortly  later Fung Pak-Liu passed  away(p) in 1943, his son Fung Hon-Chu assumed charge of the company. Two  days later, silent partner Li To- Ming retired and sold his shares to the company. The company retained Lis surname, a homophone Im not an  net  attain guy, Im a business guy, quipped William Fung, managing director of Li  Fung Trading Co. Clad in his chinos and black American Eagle T-shirt, Fung looked much  much like a new  economic system entrepreneur than the self expound offline, old  prudence relic Im 51, Im more than a grey hair in  cyberspace terms, Im a fossil.1 No   r did lifung.com, his elder brother Victors new online company, resemble a  representative Internet start-up, particularly with a 96-year-old parent born at the  curio of the Qing Dynasty. In  expansive 2000, the day before beta launch of the new business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce portal, William described the challenges facing Li  Fung About  leash or  four-spot   eld ago, Victor and I discussed the Internet and how it  impingements us. Our starting point was a defensive posture Would the Internet disintermediate us? Would we  arouse Amazoned2 by  psyche who will put together all of the information  slightly buyers and factories online?  later a lot of research we  real(a)ized that the Internet facilitates  add on  orbit management and we werent going to be disintermediated. The  gravestone is to  drive the old economy know-how and  thus far be open to new economy ideas.EXHIBIT 1 Li  Fung Consolidated Income Statement (December 31, 1999), in HK$* 2000 1999 1999 1998 (HK$ thousan   ds) (HK$ thousands) (HK$ thousands) (HK$ thousands) (June 30) (December 31) (June 30) (December 31)Turnover 10,267,606 16,297,501 6,583,730 14,312,618Cost of  gross  gross  sales (9,262,171) (14,585,881) (5,895,432) (12,891,709)Selling expenses (191,616) (354,124) (143,136) (287,524)Administrative expenses (87,741) (867,842) (56,436) (747,725) usefulnesss before taxation 328,943 613,861 208,936 471,098Taxation (29,805) (36,638) (14,536) (16,425)Profit after taxation 299,338 577,223 194,400 454,673*In August 2000, US$1 _ HK$7.78. for profit in Chinese, which, along with Fung, a homophone for abundance, had an auspicious ring when combined.Li  Fung  relocate permanently to Hong Kong at the end of World War II, expanding its operations to  embarrass toys, garments, plastic  electric currenters, and electronics. In the early 1970s,  both(prenominal) Fung brothers had  practiced returned from the United States William had  bring in his MBA from Harvard Business School and returned to the    business in 1972. Victor had recently  fault slight his PhD in economics at Harvard University and, following a  two-year  least sandpiper t for  for  separately one oneing at Harvard Business School, rejoined the business in 1974. Their return  foretell Li  Fungs transition from a family-owned business to a professionally managed firm, with a  programning and budgeting system in place for the  beginning(a) time. William and Victor, the third  coevals to  trial run the company,  mat up that the next logical step in  emergence the company was to go public. In 1973, Li  Fung became the holding company for the Group and was listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKSE).  doneout the 1980s, Li  Fung expanded its regional network of offices throughout the Asia-Pacific region as more sources of supply emerged in the rapidly industrializing Asian economies. In 1988 the Group was privatized and streamlined, incorporated in Bermuda in 1991, and its  avocation activities were again listed on    the HKSE in July 1992. With the 1995  attainment of Inchcape Buying  operate (formerly Dod salubrious), Li  Fung expanded its  customer base in Europe  piece  concurrently shifting its sourcing network beyond East Asia to include the Indian subcontinent, the Mediterranean, and Caribbean basins.By 2000, Li  Fung was a $2 billion  planetary export trading company with 3,600 staff worldwide, sourcing and managing the global supply  range of mountains for high-volume, time-sensitive consumer goods. (Exhibit 1 shows recent Li  Fung financial data.) By 2000, 69   portionage of LiFungs sales were in the United States and 27 percent in Europe. Key customers include The Limited, Gymboree, American Eagle,Warner Brothers, Abercrombie  Fitch, and Bed Bath  Beyond. Tesco, Avon Products, Levi-Strauss, and Reebok had become customers within the last two years Royal Ahold, GUESS? jeans, and bebe had signed on in 2000. Li  Fungs  output  commingle included hard and soft goods. Soft goods referred t   o apparel, including  distort and knit garments for men, women, and children.  disfranchised goods included  demeanor accessories, festive or vacation products, furnishings, giftware, handicrafts, home products, fireworks, sporting goods, toys, and travel goods. Hard goods provided  high margins than soft goods because,  disdain a generally lower item  rate per unit, they required higher value-added ser delinquency for  hallows that were  also usually much smaller than soft goods  secernates. Hard goods items such as watches, shoes, suitcases, kitchenware, or teddy bears required an inspector for  look control evaluation for even the smallest batch order,  in that respectby greatly increase what Li  Fung could charge. Margins for soft goods were roughly 6 percent to 8 percent,  temporary hookup we get an order from a European retailer to produce 10,000 garments. We  specialise that, because of quotas and labor conditions, the  outdo place to make the garments is Thailand. So we ship    everything from there. And because the customer  necessitates quick delivery, we mayProductDevelopmentRaw  secularSourcingProductionPlanningFactorySourcingManufacturingControlQualityAssurance tradeDocumentationShippingConsolidationFashion AccessoriesFestive ProductsFurnishingsGarmentsGiftwareHandicraftsHome Products profligate GoodsToysTravel GoodsLi  FungTotalValue-AddedPackageEXHIBIT 2Li  FungTotal Value-Added ServicesSource Company documents.divide the order crosswise five factories in Thailand. Effectively we are customizing the value chain to best meet the customers needs. Five weeks after we received the order, 10,000 garments arrive on the shelves in Europe, all looking like they came from one factory.5 Li  Fung clients  upbeated in several(prenominal) ways supply chain customization could shorten order fulfillment from three months to five weeks, and this faster turna expound allowed clients to reduce inventory costs. Moreover, in its  section as a middleman, Li  Fung reduc   ed matching and credit risks, and also  twisted quality assurance to its customers. Furthermore, with a global sourcing network and economies of scale, Li  Fung could  beseech lower cost and more flexible sourcing than its competitors. In addition, through acquisitions and global expansion, Li  Fung was extending this knowledge base to sub-Saharan Africa, easterly Europe, and the Caribbean. Finally, Li  Fung provided  current fashion and market trend information to clients. As a  gist of its Camberley acquisition in 1999, it started offering clients virtual manufacturing or product  creation services.According to Victor, Li  Fung does not own any of the boxes in the supply chain, rather we manage and orchestrate it from above. The creation of value is  found on a holistic conception of the value chain. In recent years, however, Li  Fung had begun to improve operations by controlling or owning  strategical golf  tangencys in the chain. In some cases, Li  Fung offered  stinging  genui   ne sourcing. In the past when clients placed an order, Li  Fung would determine the manufacturer best  suited to supply the goods, and that factory would source its own raw materials.  alone Li  Fung understood its clients needs better than its manufacturing plants did, so by offering raw materials to its suppliers, the company both ensured greater quality control and bought larger and  therefrom more cost effective amounts of raw materials, thereby producing cost  nest egg for each manufacturer. In such cases, Li  Fung also earned  receipts by charging its factories a commission on each raw material purchase they made. By mid-2000,  some 15 percent of Group sales involved Li  Fungs raw material sourcing service.Joan Magretta, Fast, Global, and Entrepreneurial Supply  filament Management, Hong Kong Style, An inter ingest with Victor Fung, Harvard Business Review, September-October 1998, p. 106.Corporate Culture and CompensationFrom the 1992 privatization on, the  constituent of labo   r between the Fung brothers was clear-cut as Group chairman, Victor was  mainly concerned with the Groups strategic issues and long-term planning as Group managing director, William  attend to everyday operations of the publicly listed trading arm, or as he joked in a recent interview, Victor is the deep  viewer, and I  exclusively make the money.6 In another interview, Victor joked that William calls me the visionary, meaning that I dont  unfeignedly know whats going on.7 But both brothers lived in the same  flatcar building as their mother and sisters and conversed every day to keep  au fait of developments at Li  Fung. The duo created a strong synergy that was described by the CEO of the Groups e-commerce venture as A  junto of both  aspect leadership and execution, with the unique relationship between Victor and William cementing the  good  disposal. They create a very particular kind of culture that blends  naive realism and, at the same time, a recognition of and openness to i   nnovation. According to Victor, once the business was  happy, it was essential to keep an open mind and rather than resting on their laurels, that the challenge was to  coin past success and look forward. Furthermore, Victor held that it was  controlling to cultivate a corporate culture that not only tolerated  nevertheless encouraged diversity, or in his words, keep the culture so that it  clay humble, agile, and responsive all the time and keep the people externally focused.  half-yearly retreats were held in Hong Kong, senior management meetings attended by division-level  directors in order to foster communication across the Group.Li  Fungs 3,600 employees were spread around the  domain in offices ranging in size from 6 staff in Saipan to 1,100 in the Hong Kong head office. Five of the 48 offices were hubs-Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Thailand, and Tur let on. Each 8 Joanna Slater, Corporate Culture,  far-off Eastern Economic Review, July 22, 1999, p. 12. (except the Hong Kong offi   ce) had 200 to 300 employees. Li  Fung was entrepreneurial, allowing senior managers to run 90 small, worldwide management teams as separate and individual companies. These  consecrate teams of product specialists focused on the needs of specific customers and were grouped under a Li  Fung corporate umbrella that provided centralized IT, financial, and administrative  maintenance from Hong Kong. This decentralized corporate structure allowed for adaptability and rapid reaction to seasonal fashion shifts. As a meritocracy, performance-based promotion and compensation were cardinal principles. Each of Li  Fungs top  executive directors negotiated individual compensation packages. In contrast to companies that restricted executive bonuses to a fixed percentage of salary, Li  Fung bonuses were based on  profit with no ceiling. Its not every company that calls its executives little  ass Waynes. But for Li  Fung, the image captures perfectly the drive, dedication, and independence of the    companys far-flung managers. As Li  Fung extended its geographic reach, it also expanded its mix of cultures. And to manage the mix it uses a simple formula give managers the freedom to work as they see fit, so long as they get the job done.8  multilateral Growth Strategy In 2000 Li  Fung saw its future  maturement coming from a combination of organic growth, expansion through acquisition, and  annex of its supply chain to new markets via the Internet.Organic GrowthSince 1995, the Group had  enceinte organically by receiving more orders from existing clients and by securing new mandates from strategic clients. Li  Fung further extended its network and diversified its sourcing around the  musket ball with new offices in places as diverse as Bangladesh, sub-Saharan Africa, and Manchester, England (see Exhibits 3 and 4).Louis Kraar, The New Net Tigers, Fortune Magazine, May 15, 2000, p. 310.Joanna Slater, Masters of the Trade, Far Eastern Economic Review, July 22, 2000, p. 10.The Medit   erraneanCairoDenizliFlorenceIstanbulIzmirOportoTunisTurinSouth AfricaDurbanMadagascarMauritiusSouth AsiaBangaloreBombayChittagong uppercase of Sri LankaDhakaKarachiKatmanduMadrasNew DelhiSharjahNorth AsiaBeijingDallanGuangzhouHong KongLiuyangNanjingQingdaoSoutheast Asiacapital of ThailandHo Chi Minh metropolisJakartaJohor BahruManilaPhnom PenhSaipanSingaporeThe AmericasGuatemalaHondurasMexico CityNew YorkVancouverSeoulShanghaiShantouShenzhenTaipeiZhanjiangEXHIBIT 3 Li  Fungs Global NetworkSource Company documents.Central America 3%Hong Kong/PRC 40%Southeast Asia 20%South Asia 8%Korea 12%Taiwan 9%Europe 6%Africa 2%EXHIBIT 4 Li  Fung Sourcing Markets (Q1 and Q2, 2000) Source Company documents.David Wilder, Internet Key to More Gains for Li  Fung, South China Morning Post, September 4, 2000, Business Post, p. 1.In 1996 Li  Fung adoptive a three-year plan system, one which William described as having been adopted directly from the economic planning system of the Chinese Communist Party,    that allows the company to look ahead,  besides not too far ahead. William elaborated We thought that the Chinese had a neat system. They have five-year plans, fixed we have three-year plans, fixed. We dont  lack moving goalposts, we want set goals. At the beginning of every three-year plan we sit down and look at the business from its fundamentals. We use  rearward planning, we recognize where we want to be in three years time,  mark the gaps between that and where we are now, and see what we have to do to get there. During its  freshman three-year plan (FY1993-1995), entitled Filling in the Mosaic, Li  Fung focused on filling in the gaps in its network of offices to cover new sourcing markets. The  moment three-year plan (FY1996-1998), Margin Expansion, was launched immediately after the Inchcape acquisition to increase its profitability. A third three-year plan Doubling Profits (FY1999-2001), established the goals of doubling  pelf every three years and achieving $3 billion in     annual sales.Investors liked the results Li  Fung outperformed the Hang Seng  indication by over 75 percent in 2000. The reward was inclusion in the Morgan Stanley Country Index for Hong Kong in May 2000, subsequent inclusion in the HSI in August 2000 and on the FTSE World Index Hong Kong Section in September 2000. With a market capitalization of $6.6 billion, by mid-2000 Li  Fung was the nineteenth largest Hong Kong stock trading with a company record price to earnings (P/E) ratio of nearly 60_. A local newspaper declared It is difficult to find a bad word  intimately Li  Fung. It could be a poster-child for shareholder value, with a return-on-equity of 60.2 percent at the end of last year. The firm is well  postal serviceed to benefit from the opening of the mainland market and Beijings accession to the World Trade Organization, with 40 percent of sourcing on the mainland and Hong Kong.9AcquisitionsLi  Fungs acquisition dodge was based on  acquire rival sourcing companies, thereby    gaining new client accounts, integrating their operations, and eventually  rescue the operating margins of these acquired units up to Li  Fung levels. In 1995 Li  Fung acquired Inchcape Buying Services, a 100-year-old company roughly the same size as Li  Fung and its  adjacent competitor. The Dodwell acquisition brought access to sourcing markets on the Indian subcontinent and European export markets. This acquisition took nearly three years to be fully  scoop outed into Li  Fungs operations. Within three years, Dodwells operating margins increased from 0.8 percent to 3 percent,  originally through the provision of Li  Fung value-added services to Dodwell customers.In December 1999, Li  Fung acquired the export trading operations of the Swire Group, Swire  Maclaine and Camberley, which were Li  Fungs next two largest Hong Kong-based competitors, and in the process became the only listed supply chain management company in Hong Kong. Like Li  Fung, Camberley did not own its factories   . Instead, it provided virtual manufacturing in the form of in-house  plan, pattern and sample making, and raw material sourcing. Manufacturing was subcontracted to factories in China. Through Camberley, Li  Fung gained access to the design process- another link in the value chain-as well as access to new clients such as the Asia buying offices of Laura Ashley and Ann Taylor. As it had with Inchcape, Li  Fung expected to bolster its own bottom line by raising the operating margins of these two companies. With a robust cash flow and the solid financial performance of past acquisitions, Li  Fung was in position to continue growing its business by further acquisitions.By August 2000, Li  Fung was nearly five times the size of its two  close-set(prenominal) local competitors, William E. Connor and Associates and Colby International, which had twice postponed the IPO of its B2B portal in 2000.See  appurtenance A for more details on the intranet and extranet.E-CommerceA core  part of Li     Fungs three-year planning system included an introspective look at whether we are still relevant, including whether or not we are going to be disintermediated. Part of its response was an Internet initiative of its own. In 1995 Li  Fung launched an intranet to link the Groups offices and manufacturing sites around the world, thereby expediting and simplifying  inherent  communication theory. The progress of orders and shipments could be tracked in real time, and digital imagery allowed for online inspection and troubleshooting. For example, past quality problems with  East Pakistani  payoff would require an on-site Li  Fung inspector to send  corporal samples to Hong Kong by express mail, whereas the intranet now allowed a high-resolution digital  motion-picture show to be sent via the intranet for real-time response and remedy.In 1997, Li  Fung launched  dependable extranet sites. Each site linked the company directly to a  draw customer and was customized to that customers individ   ual needs. By 2000, 10 such extranets were in place, each taking nearly 6-9 months to fully implement, from design to testing of the user interface. Through each site, Li  Fung could carry out online product development as well as order tracking, obviating much of the cost and time necessary to send hard copies of documents back and forth. Furthermore, with Li  Fung as the key link between manufacturers and retailers, the extranet provided a platform for the two to interface, thus streamlining communications as the order moved through the supply chain. Customers could track an order online just as it was possible to track a UPS delivery. This monitoring of production also promoted quick response manufacturing. Until the fabric was dyed, the customer could change the  gloss until the fabric was cut, the customer could change the styles or sizes offered, whether a pocket or a cuff would be added, and a number of other product specifications. According to William, some customers went a   s far as connecting their  inviolate ERP (enterprise  vision planning) system to Li  Fungs extranet system.Li  Fungs IT division had 60 people, all based in Hong Kong, but software development of both the intranet in 1995 and its extranets in 1997 was outsourced.10 Successful implementation of these systems provided the initial building blocks of Li  Fungs e-commerce solution and with them in place, the Fungs became further  assured of the extent to which integration of Internet technology  heighten internal efficiency and improved communication between Li  Fung divisions and customers and began to  discover extending the organizations online presence.Competitive ThreatsThe Fung brothers said that they decided to go online to avoid being disintermediated. But a closer examination of local B2B portals and online exchanges led Victor to  argue that the online threat to their offline business was far less than  eldest imagined. People from the first wave were so far out and garbled in    their  sentiment that we felt that there was no immediate threat, he noted. Therefore, we needed to think through e-commerce properly, to formulate a proper response.In Victors words, B2B exchanges were a  grain thick and a mile wide, based on many depthless relationships. Li  Fung preferred narrow and deep relationships nurtured with fewer customers and including value-added services. As William professed, The same  antecedent  wherefore we were not disintermediated by the offline guys is going to be the reason why were not going to be disintermediated by the online guys.However, William discovered on a 1999 visit to the United States that Li  Fungs old economy retail customers felt seriously threatened by Internet pure plays. At first this hype did not make much sense I asked my  champ at Toys R Us, Why are you concerned about eToys? It does about $28-$30 million in sales whereas you do $11 billion, and it loses as much as its entire turnover? How can you worry about them? And the    first lesson I learned was that its not their size that is the threat but the fact that investors are throwing money at them.William discovered that Internet companies could use the money that was pouring in to damage offline competitors, often by  getting them or their key people. They can hire away all of the  endowment that you have. The biggest weapon is the money they have. At one point, they could have hired away my entire management.Other possible threats came from online companies acquiring an old economy trading company, or from offline companies like Japanese trading companies or local sourcing firms that could partner with a dot-com and become a competitor overnight. William hinted that the Swire  Maclaine acquisition was a defensive move to preempt acquisitions by new economy companies.William gave his view of the Internet revolution I started off saying that the Internet is just another technology that affects the way information is transferred and people communicate w   ith each other. It has a very dramatic impact, more dramatic than the  telecommunicate. But for me its yet another in a series of technological changes that affects our business that we have to be keenly aware of. It may be the most important change until now, but it is probably not the last. According to Victor, The Internet is a revolutionary technology, but new technology is nevertheless still technology. Li  Fung always has been fast-growing(a) in adopting new technologies. When the telephone came along, my grandfather was shocked. When the fax came around, the technology changed our turnaround time into just days. With Internet technology, now we get answers within hours. When broadband and WAP comes online, there will be even less lag.Bubble InOnce the Fungs determined that Li  Fung needed an e-commerce  scheme, the stay question was how and in what shape it would emerge, how specifically e-commerce would eventually add value to Li  Fung, and whether it would use the existing    IT department of 60 or absorb a new team of entrepreneurs. Victor felt strongly that their e-commerce strategy should come from within the company, not outsourced as the intra- and extranets were, or as he phrased it,  blither in, not bubble out. According to Victor, only if the solution was an internal one could he be  accredited that the technology would pervade the entire Li  Fung organization. Neither did Victor care to start a  brand-new entity separate from the parentIm not interested in starting a dot-com division, getting a high valuation with, a $13 million cash flow, and  then(prenominal) spinning it off. I want Li  Fung to be around for another 100 years, not just 5 or 15. To start a pure Internet division is as equally absurd as starting a fax division, a division that exclusively uses faxes. To better grasp the fundamentals of embarking on a new IT venture, Li  Fung added two new technical directors to its board, one a technology company CEO, the other an academic. Acco   rding to WilliamThe one thing certain about our business is that it will be constantly changing, so we need to install a mechanism for monitoring external environmental changes that impact our business. We decided a long time ago that we were an information and knowledge-based services company, so anything to do with information technology is crucial to us. We keep up with whats happening with board members who can help us scan the horizon. picture CastlingIn 1997, Michael Hsieh (HBS 84),  hot seat of LF International Inc., Li  Fungs venture capital arm and 15-year Li  Fung veteran, received a telephone call from John Suh (HBS 97), CEO of Castling Group, an Internet start-up company that, like the chess move allows you to defend your king and simultaneously position your rook for attack, used the Internet to both defend the offline, old economy companies against online companies threat to their markets while simultaneously extending their own online presence. The two met in San Fran   cisco to discuss how a focused combination of technology and supply chain reform could transform retail.Hsieh, well aware that Li  Fung was working on its own e-commerce strategy, noted As a VC, I see numerous business plans that say that with Li  Fung  git an online exchange, we create significant value and therefore offer you 5 percent if you join us. However most of the plans do not make sense. They offer very little value and the founders lack either industry or technology expertise. John had the  honorable blend of technology and business sense, the  decent mix of right and left brain. Like the Fungs, Hsieh favored a bubble in approach. He compared outsourcing e-commerce implementation to a third-party consultant for a $10 million fee as putting the fox in the  yellow-bellied coop. It created a risky dependency on outsiders, particularly if future design changes were required and also provided outsiders with proprietary information, strategy, and the entire business model.Final   ly, Hsieh remarked As a venture capitalist, I always have to think about the  saturation of the management team and what could go wrong with the venture. Can they deliver? Do they know the industry? Is this a credible business proposition? What if there is a negative reaction? By late 1999, the time was right to act on their initial meeting. Hsieh commented that both the evolution of Castling from B2C to B2B and Li  Fungs needs complemented each other nicely John had a real appreciation for the supply chain and a record for building  boffo e-commerce models. In December 1999 Hsieh joined Castlings board and LF International invested in Castling. They  afterward co-invested in an initial round of financing for lifung.com, and Castling committed key managerial staff to lifung.com. Suh described Li  Fung as the perfect strategic partner. They have an entrepreneurial philosophy rooted at the core of their system. Theyve got an aggressive and visionary leadership team at the forefront of    supply chain management. And theyre ready to operate according to the rules of the new economy. In one  spend swoop, San Francisco-based lifung.coms management team was immediately staffed with Castlings professionals, serving as vice president of Business Development, vice president of Operations, director of Marketing, and CTO (Chief Technology Officer). Suh stepped down as CEO of Castling, retaining the position of nonexecutive chairman, and signed on as CEO of lifung.com.  apart(predicate) from Suh and CTO Derek Chen, 20 percent of lifung.coms initial staff came from Castling, amounting to an in-house e-commerce incubation team that  represented a slight twist on Victors bubble in strategy. Suh and Chen, the  last mentioned formerly of Andersen Consultings Advanced Network Solutions Group, brought along their experience from Castling e-commerce strategy projects for jcrew.com, hifi.com, giftcertificate.com, and ferragamo.com. The rest of the team came from either within Li  Fun   g (e.g., the senior vice president of Merchandising) or from outside the Li  Fung organization (e.g., the vice presidents of gross revenue and of Marketing). To facilitate the integration of the new online entity into the Li  Fung fold, a senior manager was tasked to provide an interface between the two groups. By Q3 2000, lifung.com had 40  regular professionals and 25 consultants, with 80 full-time staff expected by years end. For B2B ventures, moving first and fast was often a prerequisite for dominance.  scarce a year had passed since the initial meeting with Castling and its first round of financing. According to Suh, there were three stages of launching an online venture the business strategy, the design-build-test phase, and then actual execution. Moving quickly, Suh remarked, Requires a fundamental trust in an organization that best arises from the experience of a team that has built things together, with members who know each others strengths and weaknesses. We do a lot of    team building, because without trust you cannot move at the speed required. There are certain elements critical to the success of a dot-com . . . openness and constant communication are essential because there are so many skills and inter-functional dependencies that must be navigated for a successful launch. At lifung.com, we have a great mix of people, individuals with 30 years of merchandising experience, a deep operations staff,  
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