DRAFT V1 · FOR ALIGNMENT
BRANDS & RETAILING · MARKET STUDY

Knowing the market before we write the plan

A framework for the DETERMINANT market study, for alignment before the research runs.
ALFRED HO · JULY 2026 · IN SERVICE OF THE 3-YEAR PLAN, AUGUST 2026
01
WHY THIS STUDY

The channel math only means something once we choose where to sit

Past plans were built from the supply chain outward. What is missing is the front end: what type of brand DETERMINANT is, and what price tier it holds. That choice decides how much marketing we need, what the channels must deliver, and how many stores make sense.

The mid-market has replaced luxury as fashion's main value creator (34 percent of industry economic profit in 2024, the highest since 2010). Luxury raised prices 61 percent since 2019 and pushed aspirational customers down into the premium and bridge zone. That zone is exactly where DETERMINANT plays. The white space is real, and everyone is elevating into it.

02
THE QUESTION

One question drives everything

THE CORE QUESTIONAt what price tier should DETERMINANT sit, and how much marketing and brand investment does that tier require, given a cost base that rules out competing on price?

Esquel's supply chain makes relatively expensive things, so the cheap-distribution, high-volume path is structurally closed. The brand has to earn its price through brand investment. The real variable is therefore not price alone; it is the marketing cost of holding each price tier, and whether the channel margin covers it.

03
WHAT WE WILL TEST

Four hypotheses, from our own conversations, tested against the market

Rather than boiling the ocean, the research starts from what we already believe and checks it outward against the market. Killing a hypothesis is as valuable as confirming one.

H1

There is no viable position below DETERMINANT's current tier. HOW WE TEST · Tier margins and unit economics.

H2

The winning band sits above the D2C players and below lifestyle luxury, and it demands meaningfully more marketing. HOW WE TEST · What comparable brands at each tier actually spend: listed-company marketing ratios, benchmark ranges, observed brand investment.

H3

A GBA-focused strategy leaves less money on the table than spreading across China. HOW WE TEST · Market level: which brands win in GBA versus the rest of China, combined with our own regional sales data.

H4

The category's growth is in the performance-formal crossover, and DETERMINANT can capture part of it without becoming a casual brand. HOW WE TEST · Formality read against growth across the map. Industry prior: China sportswear grew 9 percent in 2025 while wider apparel stayed muted.

04
HOW THE STUDY WORKS

Four workstreams

The market mapEvery relevant brand captured on eleven comparable data points (price, brand investment, formality, channel mix, growth, region, business model, scale) and plotted on an interactive map with switchable lenses. Filters by region, business model and channel let the GMs interrogate it directly.
How they win: a growing library of deep divesOne page per brand that matters: business model, channel economics, marketing playbook, and a verdict on what it would take for us to do it their way. Starts with a first wave; any mapped brand can be promoted later as questions arise.
Consumer demandWho buys at each tier, what younger customers want, and where spending is shifting: AI consumer panels, cross-border mall walks, and e-commerce data, each checking the others.
The feasibility screenWhite space only counts if we can structurally serve it: collar products, no cheap channel, current team and skills. Positions we cannot execute are noise.

The four workstreams combine into one full market picture in August. No recommendation is attached at this stage; the positioning choice comes after we can all see the same market.

05
THE MAP

One map, four lenses

Price stays on the horizontal axis in the first three views, because every question we have asked is "at a given price tier, what else is true." Growth shows in the fill: blue growing, grey stable, outline fading.

VIEW 1 · THE CRUX

Price x brand investment

How much marketing each tier demands. The core question, drawn.

VIEW 2 · THE THREAT

Price x formality

Where Lululemon and performance-formal eat the middle, and where smart menswear white space sits.

VIEW 3 · THE CHANNEL

Price x offline share

Expensive brands play offline; Tmall data alone misses them. Filtered GBA versus rest of China, this becomes the geography answer.

VIEW 4 · THE ENGINE ROOM

Brand investment x growth

Who converts spend into momentum, who spends big and still fades. This view nominates the deep-dive brands.

VALUE MID-MARKET PREMIUM / BRIDGE AFFORDABLE LUXURY LUXURY PRICE TIER (CORE SHIRT, CHINA-REBASED BANDS) BRAND / MARKETING INVESTMENT Uniqlo G2000 Everlane Youngor COS Nice Rice Lululemon HAZZYS DET PYE Ports Eton Zegna LV GROWING STABLE FADING OUR BRANDS
VIEW 1, ILLUSTRATIVE ONLY. POSITIONS ARE PLACEHOLDERS TO ARGUE WITH; THE RESEARCH FIXES THEM. BUBBLE SIZE = BRAND SCALE.

What we record for every brand on the map: core shirt price, entry price, tier, brand-investment score, formality, offline share, growth, regional presence, business model, segment, and scale. A deliberately short list so we can cover the whole landscape fast; deep-dive brands get the full treatment.

One honest caveat before the data does it for us: the best industry benchmarks (BoF, McKinsey) are built on US and European data. We use their methods, but every number on our map gets rebuilt from China and APAC sources: Tmall data, mall walks, consumer panels, and listed-company disclosures from Anta, Li-Ning, Bosideng and peers.
06
WHERE THE EVIDENCE COMES FROM

Five independent source types, so no claim rests on one dataset

SourceWhat it tells us
Tmall / Taobao data (with Ken)Online prices and volumes; which brands are shifting their assortment upmarket, tracked by price bracket
Mall walks across the borderThe offline brand landscape that never shows up online; store experience; ground truth. Planned as a GBA city plus Shanghai, so the geography comparison has both sides
AI consumer panelsWho buys at each tier, what younger customers want; fast persona signal, checked against the walks
Listed-company reports (Anta, Li-Ning, Bosideng, Samsonite, Giordano)Real marketing spend as a share of revenue, by tier; the hard version of "how much marketing does that tier require"
Our own data + the teamRegional and channel sales, current price architecture; competitor lists and market instincts from Keith, Clement, Kevin and Sting; the wool pricing study

Project Collar (2023) stays as the before picture. Refreshing its market sizing with current data will show exactly how much the landscape has moved, which is itself a finding.

07
THE STARTING BRAND LIST

These are the starting brands

The rule for inclusion: a brand goes on the map if a target DETERMINANT customer would realistically cross-shop it, in our category or adjacent to it. Dashed chips carry older data and will be refreshed.

DETERMINANTPYE Brooks BrothersG2000PortsEtonThomas PinkZegnaCharles Tyrwhitt YoungorJoeoneSaint AngeloHAZZYSVICUTUFull MontyBy CreationsGENTSPACE EverlaneBonobosUntuckitNice RiceIcicleCOS LululemonUniqloFred PerryRalph LaurenLoro PianaLV

I will enrich the list from here: consulting Keith, Clement, Kevin and Sting for their nominations, desktop research across Tmall and social platforms, and whatever the mall walks surface.

08
PLAN

Timed to the 3-year plan

The map has to be in service before the plan is written, so the schedule runs backwards from August.

THIS WEEK
Align this framework; GM and internal data requests go out
WEEKS OF JUL 6 + 13
Tmall pull, listed-company pull, consumer panels, brand list enriched
WEEKS OF JUL 20 + 27
Mall walks; map populated and live; first deep-dive wave drafted
EARLY AUGUST
Full market picture delivered, in service of the 3-year plan writing