A recent article by The Interline explores how Workwear Outfitters built a true digital backbone apparel strategy to support eleven distinct brands. The company faced a common challenge in multi-brand retail operations. Systems were fragmented. Data was inconsistent. Teams had limited visibility.
As the organization expanded, complexity increased. Each brand operated with its own processes, calendars, and supplier relationships. Without shared infrastructure, collaboration slowed and reporting became unreliable.
Leadership recognized that sustainable growth required a unified foundation. The solution was not just another isolated tool. It was a centralized system designed to support long-term scalability across every brand. That mindset shaped the transformation.
“Because the pain points were common – communication bottlenecks, difficulty tracking products through development, and a lack of real-time visibility – we knew that a single platform could bring everyone together and unlock new efficiencies.”
--Jennifer Rowe, Vice President of Merchandising, Design and Innovation
From Fragmentation to a Digital Backbone
The shift toward a connected digital backbone apparel model allowed the organization to standardize workflows and improve governance. Instead of managing information across disconnected spreadsheets and legacy platforms, teams worked within a shared structure.
At the core of this transformation was centralized product data. Product information, development milestones, and supplier communication moved into one controlled environment. This eliminated duplication, reduced errors, and strengthened decision making.
For multi brand retail operations, centralized product data is not optional. It is foundational. When information scatters, growth creates friction. When you structure data, you can manage scale.
Scaling Multi Brand Retail Operations with Confidence
Managing eleven brands introduces operational risk. Without alignment, complexity compounds quickly. A structured digital backbone apparel strategy reduces that risk by creating consistency across workflows and data standards.
The Interline feature highlights how the organization balanced control with flexibility. Each brand maintained its identity, but all operated within a shared system powered by centralized product data and multi brand PLM governance.
“From here onwards, product development will be faster and more agile, collaboration will span teams and partners, and growth will be fuelled by data-driven insights. Our future is bright, bold, and built on a foundation of innovation!”
--Jennifer Rowe, Vice President of Merchandising, Design and Innovation
The result was more than efficiency. It was clarity.
If your business manages multiple brands or product lines, this story is worth your attention.
👉 Read the full article on TheInterline.com to explore how the eleven-brand digital backbone was built and what your organization can learn from it.
The Interline is the free-to-read online destination for fashion and beauty professionals who are tasked with putting digital transformation into practice. From revolutions in design to new models of selling, The Interline covers the complete value chain with exclusive editorial, interviews, reports, worldwide event partnerships, podcasts, and more.
-
Weartek Streamlines Workflow with DeSL PLM
Weartek selects DeSL’s SMB PLM to control its supply chain and drive growth in the performance industry.
September 12, 2019 -
How Digital Transformation is Fundamentally Changing the Fashion Industry
In the form of an internal Q&A, DeSL has provided their answers to some burning questions on the topic.
November 26, 2020 -
Digital Color Approvals for Fashion Brands Explained
Digital color approvals automate processes, and reduce waste. Discover how to improve accuracy and sustainability in color management.
September 26, 2025