Haircut bei Burton: Forum Snowboards wird eingestellt!
23. Oktober 2012 - 19:45 von bene
** EILMELDUNG **
Wie Burton Snowboards in einer PR-Meldung mitteilt, hat sich das Managment zu einer weitreichenden Neustrukturierung des Markenportfolios entschlossen. Gravierendster Einschnitt: Mit der Einstellung von "Forum Snowboards" wird ein schillerndes Kapitel der Snowboardgeschichte geschlossen. Das gleiche Schicksal ereilt Special Blend und Foursquare, auch sie werden von der Bildfläche verschwinden. Produkte der Marken werden in der aktuellen Saison 2012/2013 letztmalig ausgeliefert.
Originaltext der Pressmitteilung:
Burton Realigns its Family of Brands
for Long-Term Success
BURLINGTON,
VT (October 23, 2012) Burton Snowboards today announced that its senior
management team has elected to alter the structure of Burton owned brands to
better position the company, its retail partners and stakeholders for the
future. The current family of
brands includes Analog, Gravis, RED, anon, Foursquare, Forum, Special Blend and
Channel Islands. During a company-wide meeting today at its headquarters in
Vermont, Burton Founder and CEO Jake Burton explained the new structure and how
it will allow Burton to focus on what it does best: make and support products that
set the bar for snowboarding development and further progress the sport and
lifestyle.
Specifically,
Burton announced the following changes to its structure and subsidiaries. Over
the next year, Analog will return to its roots of being a pure snowboarding
brand based at its original home in Burlington, Vermont. Analog has a deep
heritage in snowboarding from the day when Greg Dacyshyn (Burton Chief Creative
Officer) and the late Jeffy Anderson (Team Rider) gave birth to the brand in
Burlington, and as such, will revert back to being a winter-only brand.
Burton’s Gravis brand will ultimately move its headquarters to Tokyo, Japan and
moving forward will be solely distributed in Asian markets selling lifestyle
shoes and bags. Gravis was established in 1998 as the company’s first
independent lifestyle brand, and since then, Asia has been by far its most
successful region. As a result, Gravis will now focus purely on this market and
opportunity. Further, in a move that Burton has been planning for several years,
the company will also start developing protective headwear under the anon brand
name. Burton will continue to offer its RED helmets on a limited basis, but the
bulk of helmet and optics product lines will be combined under the anon brand,
which has become synonymous with quality riding accessories.
Also
part of today’s restructure, Burton announced it will transition out of its
Program brands (Foursquare, Forum and Special Blend), which were purchased in
2004 with the intent to keep snowboard companies in the hands of snowboarders.
Burton has supported these brands for eight years and will continue to support
them over the next year through warranty service, dealer support, marketing and
inventory. The company will exit out of The Program brands in winter 2014, in
order to better focus on and invest in Burton.
Finally,
Channel Islands, which was acquired by Burton in 2006, will be unaffected by
this brand realignment and will continue to design, develop and manufacture
best-in-class surf hardgoods products in Carpinteria, California.
In
addressing all of these changes, Jake Burton had this to say: “Burton has
experienced several years of income growth since the recession and paid out
bonuses to employees over the last two years,” said Jake. “That said, the
economy has a voice of its own that we all have to listen to, and the message
is clear: do what you do best and focus purely on it. In our case, that means
to narrow our focus to the sport and lifestyle that got us here – snowboarding.
We will continue to support Channel Islands in its endeavor to make the best
surfboards in the world and Gravis in its new home in Japan, but when you walk
through the front door here in Burlington, Vermont, it will be all snowboarding
and snowboarding lifestyle all the time – driven by the Burton, Analog and anon
brands.”
Jake
went on to share that one of the key factors that led senior management to
these decisions includes the success of Burton’s entry into the apparel and
bag/pack business on a year-round basis, which has grown significantly in all
seasons. The message Burton has taken from the marketplace is that for
long-term success, this is the direction that the company should be pursuing,
along with its core hardgoods and outerwear business.
Increasing
the company’s focus on Burton has also been demonstrated by recent significant
investments in Burton’s headquarters and infrastructure. These include the
acquisition of the building next door to its Burlington, Vermont headquarters
where the company not only built Craig’s, a new 10,000-square-foot R&D and
prototype facility, but also Area 13, a 6,000-square-foot Burton/anon/Analog
wholesale showroom. Craig’s (named after the late Craig Kelly) is known as the
most advanced and sophisticated snowboard prototype facility in the world where
ideas are conceived, built and on-snow in less than 24 hours. Area 13 is
Burton’s marquee showroom where retailers from all over the world can come to
Vermont to see future product lines. Like today’s announcement, both of these
examples demonstrate the company’s commitment to the long-term growth,
progression and success of the Burton snowboard brands.
In
closing, Jake went on to state the following: “I take full responsibility for
the decisions that led to the creation (or acquisitions) of these ancillary
brands, and I similarly am the individual ultimately responsible for the
decision to realign and focus more purely on what made this company from the
start. Clearly, the most difficult aspect of this decision and transition is
the people affected. The employees and team riders associated with these brands
have poured their guts into making it happen. Their level of commitment has
been extraordinary, and we will do everything we can to help support them
through this transition. There is never a good time for moves like this, and we
could have delayed the announcement, but it isn’t our style to perpetuate a
myth. Clearly this transition will pose challenges along the way, but in the
long run, everyone will see the results of our commitment to our core
business.”