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Four women wearing Marmot gear
国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

As Marmot Approaches 50, the Brand Is Getting a Makeover

The heritage outdoor brand has a new leadership team in place and a new vision for the way it makes and markets apparel and gear

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Four women wearing Marmot gear

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Chris Harges began his outdoor industry career at Eastern Mountain Sports in the 1990s and later held key roles at both The North Face and Mountain Hardwear before an intriguing job opening caught his eye in late 2018.

Marmot, the heritage outdoor apparel and gear maker, was searching for a director of brand. Based on his industry experience working for and with retailers and vendors, Harges knew the decades-old legacy brand well鈥攁nd he knew the career move was too good to pass up.

鈥淔or years, I had been watching Marmot from the outside,鈥 he told 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal. 鈥淏ack in the day, when I was at EMS, if you wanted a good Gore-Tex shell, there were only two places to go鈥擳he North Face or Marmot. And Marmot was cooler because it was more niche. But over the years, the brand drifted a little. At some point, it took its foot off the innovation pedal. It wasn鈥檛 cranking out new shells, insulation, tents, and sleeping bags with the same level of interest that it had previously. When I had an opportunity to come here and help turn it around, I thought, 鈥楾his is an icon, and I want to be part of reengineering it.鈥欌

Harges joined Marmot when it was under relatively new ownership and still trying to find its footing. The Rohnert Park, California-based brand, founded in the early 1970s and officially launched in 1974, had become part of Newell Brands Inc. in 2016 when Newell Rubbermaid acquired Marmot鈥檚 then-parent company, Jarden Corp., for $16 billion. But the new owner appeared to be mishandling what should鈥檝e been a gem in its outdoor portfolio. As Harges saw it, Marmot had lost its way.

鈥淚 came here under the shadow of that acquisition,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was your classic situation in which indications were made to Wall Street that there were going to be wonderful synergies, but they didn鈥檛 necessarily manifest immediately, and the business鈥檚 focus was very much on top-line revenue. For a brand like Marmot, which exists because of specialty dealers, being forced by the vagaries of your parent company鈥檚 financial situation to dip your toe into channels that aren鈥檛 brand accretive and are offensive to your specialty base, that wasn鈥檛 a good moment for the brand.鈥

Joy Over Suffering

Harges believed that with the right guidance and some strategic changes, Marmot could return to its glory days. Sure enough, soon after he joined the company, Newell named Ravi Saligram CEO of the parent company, someone Harges called a 鈥渃onsumer- and brand-focused鈥 executive.

And Newell appointed Jim Pisani鈥攚ho had recently served as global brand president for VF Corporation-owned Timberland鈥攁s president of the company鈥檚 outdoor and recreation division, which includes Marmot, Coleman, Ex-Officio, and several others.

The company brought in more fresh leadership, including new directors of operations, merchandising, and creative. They were soon joined by a new vice president and general manager Marty Roos, giving Marmot the team it needed to get back on track. These C-suite additions also signaled a new relationship between the asset and its parent company.

鈥淭hat change at the top allowed us to see our way forward and know that Newell was behind us, not just with financial shared services but with a team of really smart folks who get the industry in a way that just wasn鈥檛 there two years ago,鈥 Harges said. 鈥淏y the time Marty got here, we had a turnaround strategy in place. We knew where we wanted to go in terms of brand positioning, and we knew where we wanted to go in terms of our product proposition.鈥

Marmot cleaned up distribution and shifted 100 percent of its focus to specialty retail, Harges said, which will remain a priority for the brand moving forward. But there was also a deeper philosophical change brewing.听

The team wanted to stop selling the idea that outdoor endeavors must include 鈥渟uffering.鈥 Gone were the days of the brand鈥檚 insistence that owning a Marmot jacket, tent, or bag meant the user had to punish his or her body on some gnarly ascent. Instead, they thought, it was 鈥渢ime to reach new consumers and celebrate the real reason we all go outdoors: fun and friends.鈥

鈥淚f you think about the early days of The North Face or Mountain Hardwear or even what Arc鈥檛eryx does today, it鈥檚 about a white man on a white mountain conquering summits, often with frost in his eyebrows,鈥 Harges said. 鈥淚t made sense 20, 30 years ago when you had a consumer who might ask, 鈥榃hy would I want to pay $400 for a raincoat?鈥 You needed to prove, as a brand, that you weren鈥檛 fooling around, that your product saves lives and enables people to do amazing things. But the industry never moved away from that.鈥

Harges clarified that statement by pointing out that the industry鈥檚 technical brands never moved away from the top-of-the-mountain adventure ideal. But Marmot knew it could innovate technically鈥攃reate bomber apparel and gear with best-in-class materials and designs鈥攚hile also appealing to the casual outdoor fan who wasn鈥檛 interested in suffering through extreme conditions and bagging faraway peaks.

鈥淲e think the opportunity here is a mash-up of performance and play,鈥 Harges said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got that legacy, we鈥檝e got relationships with Gore, Polartec, 3M, and others. We can make stuff that will get you up Everest, but we can also make stuff that鈥檚 going to get an intermediate outdoors person a much better experience outdoors. We decided that鈥檚 where we want to focus our design and our messaging.鈥

A New Product-Centric Focus at Marmot

Marmot鈥檚 repositioning is about its new people and its newly improved partnership with Newell, but it鈥檚 mostly about the new product lines the brand will debut at retail next spring.

鈥淭he New Outdoors,鈥 as Marmot calls its Spring 2022 collection of apparel and equipment, shows where the brand has focused its efforts over the last year. For example, Marmot said it has 鈥渁 new approach to function and aesthetic aimed directly at the emerging outdoor consumer. Designs are versatile and cross-functional to appeal to today鈥檚 multi-sport athlete.鈥

Other highlights include a 鈥渃ompletely redesigned down bag series with a host of innovative temperature-regulation and comfort features, new tent designs with added usability elements, and an aesthetic approach to equipment that moves far beyond the staid royal blues and forest greens of traditional tents and bags.鈥 Colorful stripes, for example, play a big role in the new designs.

Sleeping bag by Marmot
Marmot’s new Spring ’22 line includes down sleeping bags and tents with fresh, cheerful designs. (Photo: Marmot)

Overseeing the new line is Ruth Beatty, who joined Marmot as creative director in the spring of 2020, just as COVID was hitting. The native of Northern Ireland had previously worked at The North Face, and she was eager to put her stamp on a brand that was looking to honor its past yet lead consumers into the future.

鈥淔or me as a creative, coming into a new company that鈥檚 looking to tap into its heritage and bring that to life in a new and innovative way has been exciting,鈥 she told OBJ. 鈥淭he eagerness and the passion and complete lack of resistance for newness and change have been refreshing.鈥

She knew the story of Marmot鈥檚 founding, how the brand鈥檚 creators wanted to make a community that was open to everybody, so she devised a way to bring that ethos into this next chapter.

鈥淭hat kind of inclusivity spoke to my soul,鈥 Beatty said. 鈥淚鈥檓 someone who鈥檚 into outdoor sports, but for the joy and the fun of it, not necessarily summiting Everest. It captured why people I know go outside, why I go outside. It makes you smile, and it makes you feel good. My starting point was, 鈥楬ow do we bring that to life into the product?鈥欌

Beatty looked to Marmot鈥檚 archives and has retooled much of the brand’s older look, working to infuse a 鈥渓ightheartedness into the product.鈥 While the brand positioning won鈥檛 be fully unveiled until later this year with the Spring 2022 collection, Beatty teased some of the changes coming to Marmot鈥檚 line of apparel and gear.

鈥淲e are aiming for versatility within pieces so that they transition and they adapt into how people are living their lives,鈥 Beatty said. 鈥淔or us, especially on the equipment side, it was all about taking the Marmot spirit and combining it with today鈥檚 technology to bring something new. We want to make people smile with our most technical products. Backpacking doesn鈥檛 have to be serious all the time. It can be fun and joyful.鈥

A New Outlook for the Brand

鈥淔un and joyful鈥 is indeed how Marmot鈥檚 team is viewing this pivot. Even before announcing the repositioning, the brand had enjoyed some much-needed bounce in its top and bottom lines.

On its most recent earnings call, for example, Newell said its Outdoor & Recreation division saw sales improve 7 percent to $336 million and posted a profit of $15 million, up from a loss of $474 million in Q1 2020 (Newell doesn鈥檛 break out sales among its outdoor assets).听

During the earnings call with analysts, Saligram said that while that Marmot has “struggled鈥 in the past, the brand鈥檚 website had a 鈥渢errific [first] quarter鈥 and that the parent company is 鈥渟eeing a minor uptick on consumption鈥 for the Marmot brand, an improvement that should become more apparent later this year.

Another driver of change leading to optimism among brand leaders is how the pandemic has altered outdoor participation. As interest in outdoor activities continues to surge, Marmot believes it has found untapped potential with more casual consumers who still want to buy gear from a technical brand with a rock-solid industry reputation.

鈥淭here are all these new consumers coming to the outdoors and finding the benefits,鈥 Beatty said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good for the body. It鈥檚 good for the soul. We wanted to make everyone feel welcome in the outdoors, to shift away from the 鈥榶ou need to be an expert, you need to be a badass鈥 mentality and instead say, 鈥楥ome join us, let鈥檚 go hike.鈥 We wanted to make gear feel more welcoming and less intimidating for people because I think the outdoor industry has been like that in the past.鈥

The brand is approaching its 50th anniversary in 2024, and it鈥檚 doing so with that new, more welcoming attitude, one that Harges believes is a return to Marmot鈥檚 roots.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just kind of a happy accident that we see the world changing and want to pivot the brand right around the time we鈥檙e about to turn 50,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e very much see it as a ramp. We believe this line that comes out in Spring 鈥22 will turn heads and serve as a keystone moment for us.鈥

And as Pisani told OBJ, the brand is fully committed to targeting all outdoor consumers鈥攏o matter where their ambitions lie鈥攚hile honoring the spirit of innovation that launched Marmot those many decades ago.

鈥淢armot is uniquely positioned to delight these consumers by bringing our purpose to life, which is to make people healthy through the joy of outdoor sports,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have spent the past 12 months building a talented, passionate, and experienced leadership team that is focused on our consumer and delivering sustainable, positive results. From the very beginning, we went outside because it鈥檚 the best playground we can imagine. We will work hard to ensure everyone can enjoy this outside playground through better apparel and equipment solutions.鈥

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