Burberry to cut 500 jobs worldwide in £55m
cost-saving drive
Plan, which includes 150 UK head office posts, comes
as sales slump in Covid-19 crisis
Sarah
Butler
@whatbutlersaw
Wed 15 Jul
2020 09.07 BSTLast modified on Wed 15 Jul 2020 11.18 BST
Burberry employs 3,500 people in the UK.
Burberry is to cut 500 jobs worldwide, including 150
in its UK head offices, to slash costs by £55m after a slump in sales during
the coronavirus pandemic.
Retail
sales dived by 48% in the three months to the end of June, including a 75% fall
in Europe and the Middle East, as countries closed shops and offices and
severely limited travel to control the spread of Covid-19. Sales in the UK were
particularly hard hit, with tourists staying away and stores remaining closed
for longer than in Europe and Asia.
In the UK,
where Burberry employs 3,500 people, the company said it would keep its
headquarters in both Leeds and central London but would be cutting head office
roles across numerous departments. It said jobs in stores and manufacturing
were safe.
Outside the
UK, no stores will close but the company said it wanted to “improve retail
efficiency” with fewer staff in stores and cut back office space, with a shift
to working from home in some areas.
Julie
Brown, the chief operating officer of Burberry, said the company was also
keeping its portfolio of 13 stores in Hong Kong “under review” after sales were
hit by pro-democracy protests, followed by coronavirus. The territory now
accounts for less than 3% of Burberry’s sales, down from 8%.
Burberry
said it wanted to reinvest the savings in marketing activities including pop-up
stores, digital campaigns, events and improved store displays.
The £55m
savings drive comes on top of £140m of cost cuts already announced.
Brown said
the company would be closing some offices outside the UK as it realised that
staff could work just as well from home. She said: “One of the good things that
has come out of covid is ways of working differently.”
The luxury
British brand, best known for its trenchcoats and signature check, had
previously cancelled its end-of-year payment to shareholders, worth about £120m
last year, and has borrowed £300m via the UK government-backed business support
scheme.
The 500
jobs being axed represent about 5% of the group’s global workforce. The
restructuring, which will pool expertise within three new business units
covering ready-to-wear, accessories and shoes, will lead to one-off costs of
£45m.
Marco Gobbetti,
the chief executive, said: “We are sharpening our focus on product and making
other organisational changes to increase our agility and generate structural
savings that we will be able to reinvest into consumer-facing activities to
further strengthen our luxury positioning.”
The company
said tourist travel, which generates strong sales for luxury goods companies,
was “likely to remain negligible” for the time being while some stores remained
closed or operating with reduced hours under coronavirus lockdown restrictions
around the world.
Burberry
said sales in established stores slid by 20% in June and it expected trading in
the three months to the end of September to show a similar decline of 15% to
20%.
Gobbetti
said: “Sales were severely impacted by the drop in luxury demand from Covid-19
and we expect it will take time to return to pre-crisis levels with the
resumption of overseas travel.”
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