Case Study: Blue Nile & Diamond Retailing
Case Study: Blue Nile & Diamond Retailing
Case Study: Blue Nile & Diamond Retailing
Retailing
1 1802074 – Gowtham M
1802075 – Lionel Gracias
1802076 – Venkatesh G
1802077 – Harish N
2
Summary of Case:
Blue Nile
Seattle jewellers Doug Williams & Mark Vadon
Company name changed from Internet Diamonds to Blue Nile in 1999
Offer high quality diamonds and fine jewellery at outstanding prices
Builds customer awareness on Four C’s – cut, colour, clarity and carat
While retail jewellers marked up diamonds by 50%, blue nile kept lower markup of around 20%
To counter quality issues, company offered 30-day money back guarantee on items in original
condition
By February 2014, company offered more than 140000 diamonds of these 50000 were one carat
or larger priced up to $2.9 million and 76000 were priced around $2500
Started offering non-engagement products like wedding bands, necklaces, pendants but
maintains engagement category as its core business
In November 2016, Bain Capital & Bow Street L.L.C acquires Blue Nile for $500 mn
Zales
3
Reasons for Blue Nile to be best suited to deal with weak economic times
Blue Nile Tiffany Zales
Fixed Costs 2.38 13.93 25.46
Blue Nile
It has a strategy that focuses on lower prices on a large variety of high-end stones that aligns very
well with its centralized structure.
Its marketing focus on convincing customers that the four Cs and third-party validation are the
key ingredients when valuing a diamond is also well aligned with its structure, which does not
allow customers to touch and see the stone before buying.
Given its significant cost advantages and customers tendency to try to save money during difficult
times.
Blue Nile has a significant opportunity in this downturn. Blue Nile can take an aggressive position,
emphasizing its lower prices with similar quality to very high-end diamond retailers.
Although this is a difficult message to sell in general, it may be easier in the difficult economic
environment of 2009.
13 Zales
It's positive recommendations are more difficult to make.
From a financial perspective, Zales needs to get control of its inventories.
One way to do this is to centralize more of its expensive diamond inventory, making it available to
stores as needed.
Lower-value diamonds could be stocked and sold from retail stores.
For higher-end diamonds, rings with imitation stones could be used to help customers select a style,
followed by having the real diamond installed later at a central location and shipped to the store for
customer pick-up.
Zales’s ideal situation seems to be one in which it stocks and sells lower-cost products from
decentralized locations with higher-value stones centralized and provided on demand.
It cannot centralize its high-end stones because that would conflict with its brand image.
Pricing pressure at retail is likely to continue with the growth of Blue Nile at the high end and
retailers such as Wal-Mart and Costco at the lower end. As a result, Tiffany has to continue working
hard to maintain its brand image.
Its move into the wholesale part of the diamond business has potential pluses it gives the company
the wholesale margin and could give it some form of exclusivity on its stones.
For now, its sources of stones are very similar to those of its competitors
14
Tiffany
It cannot centralize its high-end stones because that would conflict with its brand image.
Pricing pressure at retail is likely to continue with the growth of Blue Nile at the high end and
retailers such as Wal-Mart and Costco at the lower end. As a result, Tiffany has to continue working
hard to maintain its brand image.
Its move into the wholesale part of the diamond business has potential plus it gives the company
the wholesale margin and could give it some form of exclusivity on its stones.
For now, its sources of stones are very similar to those of its competitors.