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Davis Smith headshot
国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

Cotopaxi CEO Outlines Goal to Become Billion-Dollar Brand

Davis Smith detailed his ambitious plans for Cotopaxi following a recent capital raise, including the ways top-line growth can help the company better live its mission

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Davis Smith headshot

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Cotopaxi is fresh off a new round of funding that infused the outdoor brand with $45 million in additional private equity. Now the company鈥檚 co-founder and CEO is looking to leverage that investment into much bigger things.

Bigger, as in a billion dollars.

That鈥檚 the annual revenue goal that Davis Smith, who co-founded the outdoor apparel and gear maker in 2014, has targeted for the brand, he told 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal in a wide-ranging interview this week.

Reaching the rarified air of $1 billion in sales would elevate Cotopaxi鈥檚 profile and place it alongside some of the industry鈥檚 most recognizable names鈥攏ames that Smith has long used to benchmark the brand.

鈥淔rom the time I started the business, my goal was to build the next iconic outdoor brand,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淲e look at the Patagonias and North Faces and Columbias of the outdoor industry and we say we can absolutely be that.鈥

Smith shared his lofty goal for Cotopaxi when OBJ checked in with him following the company鈥檚 latest capital raise, which was led by Bain Capital Double Impact, the impact investing strategy of Bain Capital.

Just how ambitious is that sales figure? Smith declined to disclose Cotopaxi鈥檚 current annual revenue, but the company鈥檚 public 2020 Impact Report from earlier this year said the brand posted revenue of聽 鈥渁round $30 million.鈥 If Cotopaxi were to double revenue each year鈥攖he brand鈥檚 current growth rate, Smith notes鈥攊t would hit $1 billion in less than six years. He says he expects to reach the billion-dollar mark in the next decade.

Smith acknowledged that doubling sales will become harder as the brand scales up, but that鈥檚 exactly what this latest investment will allow Cotopaxi to do. From a business perspective, Smith said the funding means the company can hire more talent (his top priority), add more retail partners, bump up its own brick-and-mortar presence, increase marketing, boost e-commerce, and grow distribution in places where he believes the brand sees white space, namely international markets.

Becoming a billion-dollar brand is reminiscent of the revenue goal that Hoka One One鈥檚 parent company, Deckers Outdoors Corp., outlined for that brand. Hoka, however, is much closer to $1 billion. It鈥檚 also owned by a public company while Cotopaxi is PE-backed, though Smith didn鈥檛 rule out an IPO at some point.

Underpinning the aggressive revenue goal鈥攁nd underscored by Smith as the most important component鈥攊s a pair of objectives that go beyond the balance sheet.聽

As it grows, Cotopaxi, a longtime Benefit Corporation, plans to continue investing heavily in sustainability and committing to fight poverty around the globe. Those ideals are ingrained in Cotopaxi鈥檚 DNA, and more money padding the top line means more money to support various environmental and social causes.

Smith said Cotopaxi pledges 1 percent of revenue to charitable giving but winds up donating closer to 3 percent. In its most recent impact report, the company reported $953,982 in total giving last year, which it says was 2.8 percent of 2020 revenue. About half of that dollar amount was the value of donated masks to fight COVID. It estimates the number of people helped in 2020 (through charitable giving and mask donations) at more than 822,000.

Davis Smith
As it grows, Cotopaxi plans to continue investing heavily in fighting poverty around the globe. (Photo: Cotopaxi)

Smith, who grew up in Latin and South America and saw the effects of extreme poverty from an early age, made it his mission from the moment he created Cotopaxi to improve lives around the globe. (His upbringing abroad also inspired the brand鈥檚 name, llama logo, and colorful style.)聽

He believes a brand that sells a billion dollars鈥 worth of apparel and gear each year has a better chance of spreading that mission to more places and impacting more people. At Cotopaxi, #gearforgood isn鈥檛 just a social hashtag. It鈥檚 the brand鈥檚 purpose.

To understand Cotopaxi鈥檚 plans following this latest capital raise, we spoke with Smith about the brand鈥檚 growth goals. Below is an edited version of our conversation.

What will this round of funding do for the brand in terms of making more product, getting into more doors, and reaching more consumers?

This investment allows us to expand our current product offerings. It also allows us to expand our reach with physical retail stores. We have five open stores with two leases signed that we鈥檙e in the process of opening, and we have several other leases that we鈥檙e working on. We look to expand our physical retail store presence aggressively over the next four to five years. International is another area of focus. We recently hired a director of international from another outdoor brand. We think there鈥檚 an opportunity to build a global brand. Over the long term, we think 50 percent or more of our revenue should be international, and right now, it鈥檚 low-single digits, so that鈥檚 an exciting opportunity for us.

Woman petting Cotopaxi llama
Smith’s childhood in Latin and South America inspired Cotopaxi’s name, llama logo, and colorful style. (Photo: Cotopaxi)

How does this latest investment compare with previous funding rounds?

It鈥檚 bigger than all our other rounds combined. It was a great deal bigger than anything we鈥檝e done before. I knew I wanted to build something that could scale rapidly. I believed it was a big opportunity. When you have the capital to accelerate the growth of a business rather than taking on debt, you can go build an amazing team very quickly from the onset. What I love about this round of funding is it shows that this model does work. We鈥檙e a profitable brand and business. We鈥檝e committed to giving away a minimum of 1 percent of revenue, but in 2020 we gave away almost 3 percent. We鈥檙e not looking to give the minimum; we鈥檙e looking to give the most we can possibly give. This investment shows that doing good and doing well are not mutually exclusive. You can do both. This round validates that.

Does this investment affect the ownership structure of the brand?

It didn鈥檛 change the ownership structure significantly. Bain Capital is a minority investor. We still have a cap [capitalization] table that鈥檚 a mix of our management team and our executive team and several outside investors that believe in the brand and the business and have helped fuel our growth.

There are some detractors of private equity in the outdoor space; how do you think PE firms like Bain Capital Double Impact arm benefits not only Cotopaxi but the broader industry?

It鈥檚 a great point. Cotopaxi has always been private equity-backed. We鈥檝e always had outside investors. Instead of raising money with debt, we said, 鈥淲e want to share this pie with other people who believe in what we鈥檙e doing and can help us accelerate the business, whether through money and/or expertise.鈥 Our earliest investor has deep expertise in building consumer brands. It was less about the money and more about having her expertise around the table. That鈥檚 the real difference鈥攏ot just the capital, but having people surround you that understand how to scale and build brands and make better decisions. Having those great people around us has been a big part of our success.

How will the funding help support Cotopaxi鈥檚 sustainable products strategy?

Ninety-four percent of our product last year was made of remnant-recycled or responsibly made material. This investment will allow us to continue to invest in great design and designers and a product team. That鈥檚 a big part of our brand, our mission, and our purpose. But it also helps our efforts to fight poverty. When we started the business, I felt strongly that our mission should not be exclusively environmental. I didn鈥檛 feel like that was a defensible competitive advantage. Everyone should be doing it; it鈥檚 just table stakes. We wanted to go a step further, which was focusing on humanitarian work. This is why we chose this investor [Bain Capital Double Impact]. They have a social impact team that鈥檚 been working with our social impact team on exploring how we can further accelerate our impact and how we can do a better job of tying impact to our brand.

Cotopaxi employees with products
Last year, 94 percent of Cotopaxi products were made of remnant-recycled or responsibly made material. (Photo: Cotopaxi)

So how will the company use this money to address poverty and support community development?

It comes down to two things. No. 1, improving what we鈥檙e already doing. And No. 2, simply using the funds that we鈥檝e been given in this round to expand our business. That鈥檚 how we build a sustainable and scalable impact鈥攂y building a business that continues to do good, and that can scale quickly. If we can build a billion-dollar business, we can have a much bigger impact. And if we can get to a billion dollars faster because of an investment from Bain, then we can have a larger impact. A business without purpose is very shallow, and they invested in a brand like ours that鈥檚 at the forefront of having an impact with our business.

Are you saying the goal is to become a billion-dollar brand?

Yes. From the time I started the business, my goal was to build the next iconic outdoor brand. We look at the Patagonias and the North Faces and the Columbias of the outdoor industry and we say we can absolutely be that. We believe that the DNA and the values of this brand resonate deeply, especially with millennials and Gen Z. They care deeply about the things that we鈥檙e passionate about, so that鈥檚 where we hope to be.

What would the growth rate have to look like for the brand to achieve that goal? Are we talking about doubling sales every year?

We鈥檝e grown, on average, close to 100 percent a year since our inception. That percentage over time will continue to shrink a little bit, but we鈥檙e seeing very strong growth in the business鈥攅ven this year. I haven鈥檛 done the math on how many years it鈥檒l take us to get there, but if we just continue the trajectory that we鈥檙e on with growth, even at a diminishing rate, it feels like in the next decade we could be there.

Some of the iconic brands you mentioned like the North Face and Columbia are publicly traded. Could there be an IPO in Cotopaxi鈥檚 future?

Nothing is off the table. That鈥檚 something that we鈥檝e considered and looked at, but I think going public can be very challenging for a business. There are some great benefits, and if you do it right it can make sense, so that鈥檚 something we鈥檒l explore. All I know is I want to be part of this business for a long time. I can鈥檛 imagine doing anything else more important in my life. This is my life鈥檚 dream and my life鈥檚 passion.

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