Or is there a more significant underlying problem with a business model built on selling fishing poles and rubber pants that cost equivalent to my mortgage payment?
A look at Orvis’s catalog shows that they’re chasing lifestyle brand status beyond just the fishing and hunting gear market, but I don’t see much evidence that it’s working out for them. You hardly ever see somebody rocking an Orvis puffer jacket or fleece or what have you in public.There may be a problem with the business model but I'm not sure it is with the price of rods and waders.
$1,100 for a company's top end rod has become the norm (Sage, Winston, Scott, Loomis, etc). The same is true of $800 waders (Simms, Patagonia, Skwala, etc). Orvis hits all of the price points the other big names in the industry do and even offers less expensive options, ie. Encounter.
The problem may be that people who like to think they are outdoorsy but really only go to football games buy Patagonia and LL Bean jackets, not Orvis. I suspect they don't have the following outside of their core areas to warrant such extensive product lines.
Dear HoboWithAFlyRod,A look at Orvis’s catalog shows that they’re chasing lifestyle brand status beyond just the fishing and hunting gear market, but I don’t see much evidence that it’s working out for them. You hardly ever see somebody rocking an Orvis puffer jacket or fleece or what have you in public.
Sure, the lifestyle thing is definitely a substantial issue. I imagine Patagonia and, hell, even Vineyard Vines ate Orvis' lunch quite awhile ago with soft goods. They can't change that.There may be a problem with the business model but I'm not sure it is with the price of rods and waders.
$1,100 for a company's top end rod has become the norm (Sage, Winston, Scott, Loomis, etc). The same is true of $800 waders (Simms, Patagonia, Skwala, etc). Orvis hits all of the price points the other big names in the industry do and even offers less expensive options, ie. Encounter.
The problem may be that people who like to think they are outdoorsy but really only go to football games buy Patagonia and LL Bean jackets, not Orvis. I suspect they don't have the following outside of their core areas to warrant such extensive product lines.
an issue on top of another issue, I can only assume. No crystal balls here.Were tariffs to blame last summer when this trend started at Orvis?
Or is there a more significant underlying problem with a business model built on selling fishing poles and rubber pants that cost equivalent to my mortgage payment?
Well, we CAN'T. Industrial capital isn't magic. The forces and interests that touts tariffs to force American manufacturing overlap significantly with pushing capital to the lowest cost provider. Trillions of manufacturing have been built up over decades in China to the point that a lot of sectors CANNOT be made without Chinese inputs. As, I believe Stalin said; "They'll sell us the rope we hang them with", or something like that. At this point, you manufacture with the infrastructure you have, not the one you want. We sacrificed $25 T-shirts to have $10 T-shirts, now trump tariffs will give us $40 T-shirts. It's just a material issue. And who, pray tell, will be making all this stuff? Hmmm???????Make your s**t in the USA, problem solved
That's the same dynamic that took down Woolrich, which was then snapped up by foreign VC. Last I looked it was all over priced high fashion garbage.A look at Orvis’s catalog shows that they’re chasing lifestyle brand status beyond just the fishing and hunting gear market, but I don’t see much evidence that it’s working out for them. You hardly ever see somebody rocking an Orvis puffer jacket or fleece or what have you in public.
lol, lmao evenWell, we CAN'T. Industrial capital isn't magic. The forces and interests that touts tariffs to force American manufacturing overlap significantly with pushing capital to the lowest cost provider. Trillions of manufacturing have been built up over decades in China to the point that a lot of sectors CANNOT be made without Chinese inputs. As, I believe Stalin said; "They'll sell us the rope we hang them with", or something like that. At this point, you manufacture with the infrastructure you have, not the one you want. We sacrificed $25 T-shirts to have $10 T-shirts, now trump tariffs will give us $40 T-shirts. It's just a material issue. And who, pray tell, will be making all this stuff? Hmmm???????
Ummmm??? The point ?lol, lmao even
Dear WR,Ummmm??? The point ?
Who will be making this stuff? Robots.Well, we CAN'T. Industrial capital isn't magic. The forces and interests that touts tariffs to force American manufacturing overlap significantly with pushing capital to the lowest cost provider. Trillions of manufacturing have been built up over decades in China to the point that a lot of sectors CANNOT be made without Chinese inputs. As, I believe Stalin said; "They'll sell us the rope we hang them with", or something like that. At this point, you manufacture with the infrastructure you have, not the one you want. We sacrificed $25 T-shirts to have $10 T-shirts, now trump tariffs will give us $40 T-shirts. It's just a material issue. And who, pray tell, will be making all this stuff? Hmmm???????
Programmed by AIWho will be making this stuff? Robots.
on dog beds 😆55% tariffs on tweed?
Yeh, I blame Jack Welch and his idiot adherentsDear WR,
It's a polite way of saying the corporations done sold us out. I said as much in my post above, but it didn't have a neat graph.
We have what many wanted, unfortunately. The current buyer's remorse is just crocodile tears.
Regards,
Tim Murphy 🙂