It does speak to the financial health of a company. Check LinkedIn to see the impacted parties. You'll see they probably should not have gotten into footwear and stood for that sash aesthetic, which can get dated pretty quickly.
I think they’re trying to get bought by a bigger company. Shrink to grow situation. Narrow strategic focus, improve the financial situation, lay out a straight forward plan, get acquired, founders go home with money and likely get to continue running the brand from within the acquiring company for a few years. There are dozens of niche activewear brands and very few have been able to survive on their own (Vuori). The downside for Tracksmith is they are limited to running which is a highly concentrated and technical market dominated by Nike, Adidas, etc. , they need to find a way to build rapport with the general fitness/wellness community eventually. That said, I’m kind of an idiot so who knows.
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Your ideas are intriguing to me, and I wish to subscribe to your
Matt's "Chasing" series back in the day set the table for Flotrack. I enjoyed a lot of his stuff.
No joke - I was on a team featured during that series and Matt came over and did a "cribs" video of my house (full of XC guys obviously). Matt was great guy and it was fun to be a part of his project.
I have been casually following Tracksmith, and I like what they are trying to do with their business model. I find it interesting that they have started making shoes now. I don't see how they can compete with the big established shoe companies (Adidas, Nike, NB, ASICS, etc.) in either performance shoes or fashion/lifestyle shoes (most running shoe sales).
Not sure about layoffs, but I know they’re cash starved and noticed they cut back on their selections and inventory.
They are in a weird middle ground of between regular brands and luxury brands. They don't get the economies of scale of regular brands, and they don't get the margins of luxury brands.
I appreciate the attempt to round out into a complete brand with the shoe offering, but thats a tough and expensive market to break into and at $200 price point, its a small market for them. The shoe also didn't distinguish itself from other shoes on the market other than its comfortable and looks good. When Hoka launched, they debuted a shoe that wasn't like anything else in the market.
They have to streamline their options, optimize marketing to lower customer acquisition costs, and probably make a decision if they want to lean luxury or not.
No way they'll make it unless they lower their prices to reflect their labor costs. $55 for a t-shirt, $138 for a sweatshirt, $60 for running shorts???
Nowadays these are prices at Nike outlets, and look how they're doing.
The shoe looks like Pegasus sole with a casual shoe upper. Not sure what they were really thinking with that. It looks like a much better casual shoe than a running shoe.
I think they’re trying to get bought by a bigger company. Shrink to grow situation. Narrow strategic focus, improve the financial situation, lay out a straight forward plan, get acquired, founders go home with money and likely get to continue running the brand from within the acquiring company for a few years. There are dozens of niche activewear brands and very few have been able to survive on their own (Vuori). The downside for Tracksmith is they are limited to running which is a highly concentrated and technical market dominated by Nike, Adidas, etc. , they need to find a way to build rapport with the general fitness/wellness community eventually. That said, I’m kind of an idiot so who knows.
Honestly, they could do great as a more luxury line of gear as part of a larger brand. Sort of like how Nike "owns" Jordan.
They have a lot of athletes going to Worlds, but is anyone going to buy an expensive tracksmith shirt because Cravont Charleston won the 100m and Rudy Winkler won the hammer?
No. Hell no. Their business model is idiotic.
Then why should any brand sponsor athletes?
To be fair, On was a sort of niche brand until OAC came along. Now they're legit.
Their apparel is ugly. Also, how often do you have to replace a running shirt? I have running shirts from 10+ years ago that I still wear and are still comfortable, with no holes.
The shoe looks like Pegasus sole with a casual shoe upper. Not sure what they were really thinking with that. It looks like a much better casual shoe than a running shoe.
I think the idea with the shoe is to sell something that wears out...high quality running apparel will last 10 years so repeat customers are rare...but a shoe lasts only 3-6 months then you have to come back for more.
As for styling, that's in the eye of the beholder. I'm sure many think it's a good shoe.