Consumers find a personal shopper in the Web
By Alexandria Sage

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060818/tc_nm/column_pluggedin_dc_3

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - As increasingly harried consumers grapple with 
overwhelming fashion choices, inconsistent sizes and expanding 
waistlines, Web-based companies are casting themselves as personal 
shoppers, catering to every body type's special needs.

While shopping for clothes and shoes online is not new, representing 
nearly $14 billion in annual sales, the more sophisticated sizing 
metrics offered by the latest wave of Internet apparel companies and Web 
sites is a selling point that may lure the busy, fed-up or hard-to-fit 
shopper.

Marketing executive Cathy Kim, 33, considers herself a reasonably 
easy-to-fit Size 4 who likes to shop. Still, taking up space in her 
closet is what she calls "useless material," vestiges of past online 
shopping forays gone awry.

"I'm definitely one of those people that finds myself returning things," 
said the Los Angeles resident. "That's the one thing about shopping 
online which is so annoying. It's hard to see how something on a model 
is going to look on you."

Enter an emerging niche of companies attempting to take the guesswork 
out of sizing. While Landsends.com, among the first to offer custom 
clothing online, allows shoppers to choose the type of wash for jeans 
and khakis, as well as details like rise and leg shape, and J.C. Penney 
(NYSE:JCP - news) and J. Crew offer on-line fit guides for bras and 
swimsuits, new Web sites MyShape.com and Zafu.com are taking sizing 
precision one step further.

"They're tapping into the core value of the Internet -- helping 
consumers find products that are most relevant to them," said Forrester 
Research analyst Tamara Mendelsohn, who anticipates the launch of even 
more size-aware Web sites.

MyShape.com, which has signed up nearly 13,000 users, including Kim, in 
advance of its full launch in September, casts itself as personal 
shopper for the busy professional. After entering a series of 
measurements into the MyShape system, the shopper is presented with a 
shape-appropriate wardrobe from MyShape's own inventory.

MyShape Chief Executive Louise Wannier sees it as a "major opportunity" 
geared to women who hate to shop, the ones who are turned off by time 
wasted at traditional retailers with limited selection and sizes, or 
those who live in remote areas.

"We're bringing the elements of a personal shopper to the consumer who 
doesn't have the array of stores at their disposal," Wannier said.

Ever-widening, or extra-slim, waistlines are also increasing the need 
for special sizing. A recent survey by research group Retail Forward 
found that more than 20 percent of plus-size U.S. women are turning to 
the Internet for their wardrobe. But small-frame petites are even more 
frustrated, with 40 percent saying they struggle to find the right size.

And if online searches for well-fitting skirts or pants have 
traditionally proven to be hit-or-miss, the prospect of buying jeans 
online can truly be daunting.

Sizing frustrations, combined with an explosive demand for denim, 
spurred the recent launch of Zafu.com, which matches users' shapes with 
the most flattering cut of jeans.

Zafu has analyzed 200 jeans -- from $15.78 Lee's to a $266 pair by Rock 
& Republic -- and predicts that 94 percent of women can find their 
perfect fit by plugging their preferences, along with their particulars, 
into its system. Unlike MyShape, Zafu -- a venture of Archetype 
Solutions headed by a former Levi Strauss & Co. executive -- links users 
to a third-party site that carries the jeans.

Even though these online apparel companies will still have to contend 
with the shoppers who prefer to see and touch their garments before 
purchasing, the success and value of Web sites like MyShape and Zafu 
will come down to how well they deliver on the promise of clothes that 
truly fit, analysts say.

"The attempt these guys are making could be wildly valuable. The 
question is, 'Do they really work?"' asked Jupiter Research analyst 
Patti Freeman Evans. "You can't really tell that until you go through 
the whole process and receive the product."

And, whether the influx of more size-friendly online sites results in 
better-dressed women remains to be seen, as noted by Nielsen/Net Ratings 
analyst Heather Dougherty.

"You can tell some people what style is appropriate for them till you're 
blue in the face, but they're still not going to listen," she said.

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