Abercrombie & Fitch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abercrombie & Fitch Co.
Image:Abercrombie Logo.PNG
Type of Company Public (NYSE: ANF)
Founded 1892
Headquarters New Albany, Ohio, USA
Key people Tyler Wilcocks: Owner and President, Michael S. Jeffries, Chairman & CEO
Industry Apparel Stores
Products "Casual Luxury" Clothing
Revenue $2.021 Billion USD (2005)
Net income $216.38 Million USD (2005)
Employees 6,900 (incl. retail 75,000+) (2005)
Website www.abercrombie.com
The Abercrombie moose.
Enlarge
The Abercrombie moose.

Abercrombie & Fitch NYSE: ANF, is a "casual luxury" clothing retailer. A&F encompasses four brands: Abercrombie & Fitch, abercrombie Kids, Hollister Co., and RUEHL 925. The merchandise is sold in the brands' retail stores, catalogs, and online. As of 2006, the company operated 350 Abercrombie & Fitch stores in all U.S. states except Wyoming and New Mexico, and five stores in Canada and plans to continue expanding in Europe, Mexico, and Japan. The chain is headed by Mike Jeffries [1]

Founded in 1892, the company was for many decades mainly an elite excursion goods retailer. After many years of success, the company struggled financially from the late 1960s until it was purchased by The Limited in 1988 and revamped as a lifestyle brand.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Early years

During the beginning of the 20th century, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. was one of the most popular retail stores for Britain's elite sporting expeditions. The company was known for outfitting some of America's most influential leaders and celebrities on their sporting excursions. Every president from Theodore Roosevelt to Gerald Ford is said to have been outfitted by the company in some capacity (Teddy Roosevelt was an especially enthusiastic Abercrombie & Fitch customer, and he frequently visited the store in preparation for his famous African affairs). Other famous people to pass through Abercrombie & Fitch's doors include Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart, John Sloan, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Clark Gable, John Steinbeck, and author Ernest Hemingway (who is said to have bought the gun he used to commit suicide at Abercrombie & Fitch).[1]

[edit] Abercrombie & Fitch Co.

The partnership, however, didn't end up well. David Abercrombie was more conservative, content to continue the store as it was, selling professional gear to professional outdoorsmen. Ezra Fitch, on the other hand, was more of a visionary. He was positive that the future of the business lay in expansion, selling the outdoors and its delights to more of the general public. The two quarrelled frequently, even as the company grew increasingly successful. In 1907, Abercrombie sold his share in the company to Fitch and returned to manufacturing outdoor goods. Fitch continued the business with other partners and was, for the first time, able to direct the company in a manner to his pleasing.

Fitch determined that the store ought to have an outdoor feeling. Stock was not hidden behind glass cabinets. Instead, it was displayed as if in use. He set up a tent and equipped it as if it were out in the middle of the wilds of the Adirondacks. A campfire blazed in one corner, where an experienced guide was always in attendance, imparting valuable information to interested customers. Part of Fitch's strategy to expand the company was the creation of a mail-order catalog. In 1909, Abercrombie & Fitch mailed out over 50,000 copies of its 456 page catalog, which included outdoor clothing, camping gear, articles, and advice columns. The cost of the catalog nearly bankrupted the company, but it proved to be a profitable marketing device. By 1913, the store moved to a more fashionable and easily accessible midtown address just off Fifth Avenue, expanding its inventory to include sport clothing. A&F became the first store in New York to supply such clothing to women as well as men. In 1917, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. moved yet again to a twelve-story building on Madison Avenue. The store occupied the entire available space, making it the world's largest sporting goods store. Outside, a sign proclaimed, "Where the Blazed Trail Crosses the Boulevard."

The flagship store included many different amenities. In the basement there was a shooting range, on the mezzanine there was paraphernalia for skiing, archery, skin-diving, and lawn games. The second through the fifth floors were reserved for clothing that was suitable for any climate or terrain. On the sixth floor, there was a picture gallery and a bookstore that focused on sporting themes, a watch repair facility and a golf school, fully equipped with a resident professional. The seventh floor included a gun room, stuffed game heads, and about seven hundred shot guns and rifles. The eighth floor was dedicated solely to fishing, camping, and boating. It also included a desk that belonged to a fly- and bait-casting instructor who gave lessons at the pool, which was located on the roof. The fishing section of the store alone was stocked with over 48,000 flies and over 18,000 fishing lures. The clerks hired at Abercrombie & Fitch were not professional salesmen, but rugged outdoorsmen. Talking was their pleasure and selling was performed only at the customers' insistence.

[edit] Post-Ezra Fitch

In 1928, Ezra Fitch retired from the company. Despite the change in ownership, Abercrombie & Fitch continued to expand. In 1939, it adopted the slogan, "The Greatest Sporting Goods Store in the World." By 1962, the company operated stores in Chicago (formerly Von Lengerke & Antoine, an associated sporting goods retailer since 1928), San Francisco, and a shop in the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, Colorado, as well as wintertime-only stores in Palm Beach and Sarasota, Florida; and summertime-only stores in Bay Head, New Jersey, Southampton, New York, and Hyannis, Massachusetts. The expansion continued through the 1960s, with A&F opening new stores in affluent suburban malls in Short Hills, New Jersey(1963), Bal Harbour, Florida(1966), Troy, Michigan(1969) and its final expansion in 1972 in Oakbrook, Illinois. Despite the chain's apparent success, the company began to falter financially in the late 1960s and went bankrupt in 1977. Oshman's, a sporting goods retailer, acquired Abercrombie soon thereafter, but the company continued to struggle.

[edit] 1990-2000 - Revival of Abercrombie & Fitch

Some information in this article or section has not been verified and may not be reliable.
Please check for any inaccuracies, and modify and cite sources as needed.

During 1988, The Limited Inc. (now called Limited Brands) acquired Abercrombie & Fitch, determined to reinvigorate the ailing brand. The Limited had been successful in rolling out new concept stores, such as Express, which sold women's clothing, and Victoria's Secret, which sold lingerie and beauty products. Over the next decade, Abercrombie & Fitch was carefully rebuilt as a teen apparel merchandiser by CEO Mike Jeffries.[2] In BusinessWeek's May 30 2005 issue, it said, "'Abercrombie's biggest weakness is that it is all about Mike,' says A.G. Edwards & Sons (AGE) analyst Robert Buchanan."

The company began opening stores in upscale malls across America in the early 1990s, beginning primarily in the Midwest and moving out from there, finishing with a major West Coast expansion at the end of the decade, targeting teenagers and college students aged 18-24.[3] Abercrombie & Fitch is a self-proclaimed "casual luxury" retailer. The clothing consists of: woven shirts, denim, miniskirts, cargo shorts, wool sweaters, polo shirts, and t-shirts. The clothing produced in the 1990s was fairly consistent with the brand's preppy image and tended to be less trend-driven than today's offerings, which bear significantly less resemblance to traditional Northeastern prep school apparel. The store quickly became successful, and by the mid-1990s, there were dozens of Abercrombie & Fitch stores in the United States.[4] Careful marketing made the brand synonymous with understated, sexy, classic casualwear.[5] In 1996, The Limited took Abercrombie & Fitch public on the New York Stock Exchange and gradually phased out its ownership of the company.

[edit] 2000-today

A typical A&F storefront.
Enlarge
A typical A&F storefront.

The company has opted to build only large stores, averaging 8,000 to 20,000 square feet (700 to 2,000 m²) in high-volume retail centers around the country. Throughout the 1990s, Abercrombie & Fitch enjoyed sales of over $400/ft² ($4300/m²) —high by retail standards—but that number has dropped significantly in recent years. As of 2003, sales were $345/ft² ($3700/m²).

In 2003, the company expanded its New Albany, Ohio, headquarters (a suburb of Columbus, Ohio)[2]. Set amid acres of forest, the compound features rustic, farm-styled structures with elements of modern architecture, a reflection of the company's outdoorsy roots. The campus includes a mess hall, fire pits, trails, a recreational center, and an Abercrombie & Fitch store, where marketing and design elements are developed. The interior design bears a likeness to the stores, furnished with dark wood and concrete floors, leather couches, and comfortably worn rugs.

In November of 2005, the company completed construction of its flagship Fifth Avenue location in New York City. The store features four-levels of selling space with dark lighting, mannequins grouped together inside glass cases (as well as vintage rifles on another level) and wood shutters that hang inside every window. Fifth Avenue is the largest store in the chain and is located on 56th Street and 5th Avenue, alongside boutiques by luxury retailers such as Fendi, Prada, and Chanel. As of August 2006, the company completed the rennovation of its store in The Grove at Farmers Market in Los Angeles into their second flagship.

The company is developing a fifth concept, currently referred to as Concept 5, which is expected to be introduced in 2007. While the company remains tight-lipped on the latest concept, it is rumored that the Fashion Show Mall in Las Vegas, NV, will be among its first locations. A likely target market would be young college and post-college women, along the lines of Victoria's Secret or aerie stores.

[edit] Abercrombie & Fitch today

Some information in this article or section has not been verified and may not be reliable.
Please check for any inaccuracies, and modify and cite sources as needed.

[edit] Marketing and management

Front view of the previous chain store design.
Enlarge
Front view of the previous chain store design.
Side view of the previous chain store design.
Enlarge
Side view of the previous chain store design.

The original store concept (referred to as the "chain store" concept) hearkened back to the outdoorsy image of company's early years. The store resembled a hunting lodge, with plaid carpeting, dark wood fixtures, and antler chandeliers. However, the company introduced a new store concept (referred to as the "canoe store" concept) in the late 1990s to accommodate its rapid growth. The first canoe store opened in June 1996 in Chesterfield Mall (Store #0634) in Chesterfield (St. Louis), MO. This original canoe store, however, does not have a white wooden front like most of today's A&F stores, but rather a tan stucco front with navy awnings. Common design elements of the canoe store prototype include a moose head mounted above the cashwrap and a canoe is mounted in the main room of each canoe store. Unlike the chain store, which typically has a wider storefront and two entrances, the canoe store has one main entrance and is walled off into at least five rooms. Most of A&F's stores are (or have been remodeled to be) canoe stores, a few chain stores still exist. An example of a chain store location is at South Hills Village mall in Pittsburgh which is still a classic chain store complete with plaid carpeting and preppy wallpaper, although all of the antler chandeliers have been taken down from the ceiling.

Abercrombie & Fitch has complete control over the design and production of its merchandise, stores, and marketing. Because it spends little on external advertising, the company depends upon the store experience to help define the brand. The company strictly regulates the store environment in an effort to provide a consistent, pleasureful experience for customers in a manner that can be replicated in each store. Factors such as visual presentation, music, and fragrance are not left to chance. The company also specifies in painstaking detail how lighting, layout, visual displays, marketing, and fixtures are to be placed and used in every store. Each store is spritzed hourly with men’s cologne in order to ensure a pleasant sensory experience. Every store plays the same pre-produced music segment for a period of four to five weeks and has instructions on how loud the music is to be played at certain times of the day or week.

Merchandising is managed in a similar fashion. Every week, each store is sent a booklet—often over 100 pages long—detailing the exact specifications for placing merchandise on the sale floor. Older merchandise is shuffled around to provide a different presentation for frequent customers each time they enter the store, while new items are generally placed out in the front rooms for display. Apparel is laid out so that customers can feel the fabrics, contributing to the sensory experience offered in-store.

The company manages merchandising, distribution, and sales by assigning each store a tier level (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5) and a volume level (A, B, C, D, E, or F). Tier level determines what selection of the current clothing line is sent to a store. Tier 1 stores receive all of the current items in all styles and colors, for example, while lower tier stores are sent less merchandise in a smaller range of sizes and colors. A store's tier level is independent of its volume, since allocation is often dependent on available area of selling space. Some small stores are relatively high volume, but lack the floor space needed to support the entire line. A store can have different tier designations for its men's and women's sides. (Women's retail normally outperforms men's by a ratio of about 2:1, though in certain markets the difference is greater or less.) The company designates Volume A stores, usually in major cities and tourist destinations, as "elite" or "super-elite." There are three super elite (AA) stores (Ala Moana in Honolulu, Aventura in Miami, and South Street Seaport in New York City) and less than thirty elite (A) stores in the chain including the new international store in West Edmonton Mall, the largest indoor mall in North America in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.[6]

[edit] International expansion

The company marked its expansion into Canada in January of 2006, opening two Abercrombie & Fitch stores and three Hollister Co. stores in that country. This fall (2006) a third Abercrombie & Fitch store opened in the Toronto Eaton Centre. The company will add additional stores in Canada during the next several years and plans to open stores in Europe and Asia. The Company plans to open its first European location in London in the first quarter of fiscal 2007. The company is also considering opening a flagship store in Tokyo, Japan around 2009. As the Abercrombie & Fitch brand reaches its full growth potential in the U.S., the company is depending on Hollister Co., RUEHL, and "Concept 5" to act as its primary growth vehicles in the U.S.

[edit] Flagship stores

Abercrombie & Fitch currently operates two full flagship stores in New York and Los Angeles. A third is being renovated at the Fashion Show Mall in Las Vegas. There may also be plans of a Michigan Avenue flagship but no official word has been released to the public so far. The following is a complete list of flagships:

[edit] abercrombie Kids

Main article: abercrombie Kids

abercrombie is a version of the A&F brand with youth sizes, targeted at ages 7-14. The store uses the same moose logo as the adult store but the name is spelled with a lowercase "a". The merchandise is styled similar to that from the adult A&F stores, but prices are 30-40% lower. There are about 180 stores in the U.S. The store setup resembles that of the parent brand; black hardwood floors, white and grey painted walls and loud, techno/dance/pop music that the company believes creates a "classic cool" (as opposed to casual luxury) atmosphere.

[edit] Hollister Co.

Main article: Hollister Co.

Hollister Co. is a California-inspired apparel brand that attracts patrons ages 13-25 for not only its colorful clothing, but also its moderate prices which were meant to compete closer with (but still not as inexpensive as) other brands such as American Eagle Outfitters and Old Navy. Hollister stores all have a surfing theme, the façade resembling a beach-front shack, dim lighted interior and surfboards mounted behind the cashwrap. When first opened, Hollister had a 'cannibalistic' effect on Abercrombie's customer base. In response, the brand raised its prices to compete better with Hollister and stand out as a lifestyle brand.

[edit] RUEHL 925

Main article: RUEHL 925

RUEHL is a Greenwich Village-inspired brand straight out of the heart of New York City that caters to the post collegiate customer. The store resembles a brownstone with antique windows, iron fencing and even a sidewalk in front of the store. Inside, the store resembles a townhouse with a hallway that separates the men and women's side of the store and ends at the central checkout. Price points at RUEHL are slightly higher than at Abercrombie & Fitch, and they offer an exclusive leather goods line of luggage, handbags, purses, wallets and tote bags.

[edit] CONCEPT "5"

Main article: CONCEPT 5

While the company has acknowledged that plans for this new venture are progressing, they don't expect to release details about the project before 2007. [3]

[edit] Lifestyle brand

Abercrombie & Fitch Winter 2006 Advertisement Model, Mark Carroll.
Enlarge
Abercrombie & Fitch Winter 2006 Advertisement Model, Mark Carroll.

Abercrombie & Fitch aggressively positions itself as a "lifestyle brand "—a brand that tries to embody the values and appeal of a desirable way of living based on popular culture. The stores are plastered with photos of physically "attractive" young models, blast loud dance music through powerful speakers, and smell of the company's signature cologne, Fierce. The stores are also staffed with "attractive" Brand Representatives (models), young salespeople who embody the Abercrombie & Fitch lifestyle: attractive, athletic, popular, enthusiastic, and outgoing. For years, brand representatives were required to wear only Abercrombie & Fitch clothing, but such regulations have been loosened following lawsuits. The term "brand representative" is no longer used, and associates are currently referred to as "models." Also, the "Impact Team" was created in 2004 in order to better control merchandise within each store and maintain company standards. Impact Team members are less responsible for customer service and more responsible for ensuring that the sales floor is appropriately filled with merchandise from stock supply. In 2005, a full-time stock position that had been previously done away with was readded in order to better control back-stocked merchandise. Some speculate that the Impact Team also supplies the company with better equal opportunity employment as style and personality are less important for Impact Team members who interact less with customers.

[edit] A&F Quarterly

Main article: A&F Quarterly

The most conspicuous of the company's lifestyle branding efforts was its now-defunct magazine, A&F Quarterly, which the company published from 1997 to 2003. The publication was a hybrid magazine and catalog (company officials referred to it as a "magalog"), and featured advice columns, articles about college life, and—most famously—the highly sexual work of photographer Bruce Weber. Ironically, the Quarterly contained mostly nude models, while the clothes would often be displayed by themselves, laid on a flat surface. The racy publication made a splash with young customers and had one of the highest circulation rates among young adults of any magazine in the late 1990s. The magazine also gained a certain iconic, coffee-table status among gay men because of its heavy doses of shirtless young men and homoerotic imagery. Print advertisements for the A&F Quarterly appeared in Interview and Out magazines in addition to Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. In 1999, the company rolled out "A&F TV", a feature that spotlights young people engaged in sports and leisure activities. A&F TV was originally developed to run on cable television and on monitors in Abercrombie & Fitch stores, but was offered only on the company's website until recently.

[edit] Controversy and criticism

[edit] A&F Quarterly

Main article: A&F Quarterly

The A&F Quarterly became a lightning rod for controversy shortly after it was published. It featured photographs of male and female models, often nude, posing in pairs or groups. Despite a company policy restricting sale of the publication to adults, critics charged that the publication was readily sold to minors. Several states threatened to pursue legal action, though the company was never charged with violating any related statutes.

The publication was also criticized on moral grounds, for featuring sexually explicit interviews with porn stars, and articles that, according to critics, glamorized alcohol consumption, group sex, homosexuality and autofellatio. In 2003, an array of religious organizations, women's rights activists, and Asian-American groups organized boycotts and protests over the publication, and the "Christmas Edition" of the catalog was removed from stores.[7] In 2004, "A&F Magazine", a comparatively tame collection of photos and essays about rising celebrities, replaced the publication altogether.

[edit] Products

The company's clothing has also been the subject of criticism. In 2002, controversy erupted over shirts featuring caricatures of Asians and other ethnic groups. One shirt featured the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry Service—Two Wongs Can Make It White" with smiling figures in conical hats, a 1900s popular-culture depiction of Chinese immigrants. The company discontinued the designs and apologized after a boycott by Asian-American student groups. That same year, the children's clothing division removed a line of thong underwear sold for girls in pre-teen children's sizes after parents mounted nationwide storefront protests. The underwear included phrases like "Eye Candy" and "Wink Wink" printed on the front.

Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirts caused controversy in 2005.
Enlarge
Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirts caused controversy in 2005.

More T-shirt controversy occurred twice in 2004. The first incident involved a shirt featuring the phrase, "It's All Relative in West Virginia," an apparent jab at incest relations in the rural South. West Virginia governor Bob Wise spoke out against the company for depicting "an unfounded, negative stereotype of West Virginia," but the shirts were not removed.[8]

The second incident involved another t-shirt with the phrase "L is for Loser" written next to a picture of a male gymnast on the rings. The company stopped selling the shirt in October of 2004 after USA Gymnastics president Bob Colarossi announced a boycott of Abercrombie & Fitch for mocking the sport.

In November 2005, the Women & Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania launched a "girl-cott" of the store for selling T-shirts bearing phrases like "Who needs brains when you have these?" in reference to large breasts and dumb blondes. The campaign went national on NBC's The Today Show, and the company pulled the shirts from stores on November 5, 2005.[9]

Bob Jones University and its affiliated precollegiate schools — Bob Jones Academy, Bob Jones Junior High School, and Bob Jones Elementary School — forbid Abercrombie & Fitch clothing to be "worn, carried, or displayed" on its campuses because of "an unusual degree of antagonism to the name of Christ and an unusual display of wickedness" in the company's advertising. [4]

Sometime between 2005-2006, Abercrombie and Fitch and HollisterCo discontinued offering its "clearance" items to international shoppers who were accessing the website from outside the continental United States and Canada. No reasons or comments can be found on their website. Customer Service Representatives at the A&F were not able to provide any answers to this issue.

[edit] Employment practices

For four years, Abercrombie & Fitch has faced accusations of discrimination against minority employees. A 2004 lawsuit — Gonzalez v. Abercrombie & Fitch — accused the company of discriminating against minority employees by offering desirable positions to White American employees. The company agreed to an out-of-court settlement of the class action suit. As part of the settlement terms, A&F agreed to pay US$45 million to rejected applicants and affected employees, institute policies and programs that promote diversity in its workforce and advertising campaigns, appoint a Vice President of Diversity, hire 25 recruiters to seek minority employees, and discontinue the practice of recruiting employees at primarily white fraternities and sororities.[10]

Abercrombie & Fitch brands offer two main part-time positions — Impact Team and Model (formerly "Brand Rep"). Models primarily interact with customers, while Impact Team members work on store presentation. Some people argue that hiring for a modeling position allows the company to discriminate against certain applicants.

[edit] Trivia

  • On a Christmas episode of the animated program The Simpsons, the family, after getting ahold of a large sum of money, is able to go shopping at the upscale mall where A&F is parodied as Abercrombie & Rich for its high prices.
  • In season four, episode 25 of the television show Family Guy titled "Sibling Rivalry", Stewie and Brian find a black Waldo in an Abercrombie & Fitch catalog spread featuring otherwise white models.
  • The band LFO had a song titled "Summer Girls" popular in the summer of 1999 with many references to Abercrombie and Fitch with lyrics such as "I like girls who wear Abercrombie and Fitch," and "You look like that girl from Abercrombie and Fitch," which romantisized the brand.
  • Actors Chris Carmack, Ashton Kutcher and Tom Welling were previous Abercrombie models, who worked in the late 1990s; actress Ashly Tilsdale although not a model used to work at A&F and Hollister stores.
  • MADtv ran sketches parodying the allegations against A&F of homosexuality and racial discrimination. It is implied that the white models in these sketches are gay (especially in the captions to the photos taken of them), only allowing blacks to join their group when they shout epithets against an Asian passerby.
  • In an episode of Winx Club, whoever ruined a dance would receive a gift certificate to Aberzombie and Witch.[citation needed]
  • The slang term "Aberzombie" has come in to use to describe someone obessesed with the brand, looking young, cool, and masculine; particularly an middle aged or gay man.[5]
  • On the sitcom Girlfriends when Joan quits her job as a lawyer to work at the hotdog hut in the mall and is discouraging her 16-year-old manager from quitting after she has stopped Joan from quitting the teen girl exclaims ecstatically, "But I just got a job at Abercrombie & Fitch!"

[edit] References

  1. ^ Grauer, Neil A. "Remembering Papa." Cigar Aficionado, July/August 1999.
  2. ^ Denizet-Lewis, Benoit. "The Man Behind Abercrombie & Fitch." Salon, 24 January 2006.
  3. ^ Mitchell, Dan. "Enough Enron? There's More." The New York Times, 4 February 2006.
  4. ^ Givhan, Robin. "The Fetching Men of Abercrombie & Fitch Aren't the Only Appeal Of New Marketing Campaign." The Washington Post, 7 August 1998.
  5. ^ Elliott, Stuart. "Abercrombie & Fitch Extends a Print Campaign to TV." The New York Times, 6 August 1999.
  6. ^ Earnest, Leslie. "Towering Over Retail Rivals: Abercrombie & Fitch, helped by shifts in its strategy, saw holiday sales jump while other apparel stores dragged." The Los Angeles Times, 17 January 2006; p. C1.
  7. ^ Gross, Daniel. "Abercrombie & Fitch's Blue Christmas." Slate, 8 December 2003.
  8. ^ Dao, James. "T-Shirt Slight Has West Virginia in Arms." The New York Times, 22 March 2004.
  9. ^ "Abercrombie & Fitch to pull tees after "girl-cott." Reuters, 4 November 2005.
  10. ^ "National Clothing Retailer Must Pay For Discrimination, The Defender, Winter 2005, 1. A publication of the NAACP LDF. Description of the settlement of Gonzalez.

[edit] External links

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Brands
Brands Abercrombie & Fitch | abercrombie | Hollister Co. | RUEHL No.925 | CONCEPT 5
Other A&F Quarterly | Limited Brands | Mike Jeffries
Homepages (respectively from brands) abercrombie.com | abercrombiekids.com | hollisterco.com | ruehl925.com
Corporate NYSE: ANF | Revenue: $12.784 billion | Employees: ≈ 56,900
In other languages