They rake in revenues because it's a great product at a great price.
My day/night job is as an ER nurse, and pretty much the only shoes I've worn for the past 3 years are Crocs. I walk an average of 5 miles a shift at work, and I'm standing when I'm not walking. I've been used to spending $80-150 a pair of shoes for years. Now, with Crocs being $35 a pair, I buy them 3 pair at a time. And, the anti-bacterial bit is very nice for the nasty splashes at work.
I worked at the Boulder Country Club, where most of the cofounders of Crocs were members. Those shoes blew up at the club; before I knew it, I was receiving all sorts of pairs in different colors as 'bonuses' or gifts from the members.
It not only takes smart business operations as detailed in that article, but a strong community. Crocs birthed in a community full of power and wealth, and that helped a great deal. Hell, Michael Jordan received a few pairs of Crocs when he came to the club for a golf tournament...
I like the fact that Crocs are anti-bacterial, but it also worries me. The use of anti-bacterial soap and other cleaning products in hospitals has spawned super bugs resistant to known means of combating pathogens. Could Crocs share the same fate?
Is it antibacterial in the same sense as soap? I thought it was a material that just made it harder for bacteria to get a physical foot hold (no pun intended).
There are substances that are bacteriostatic, which mean that they retard the growth of bacteria. Sterile water is actually bacteriostatic, because there is no food for the bacteria to grow in.
Silver and other heavy metals are bacteriostatic as well. Other substances are bactericidal, which means that they actively kill bacteria.
Antibiotics are bactericidal. You don't want to take antibiotic or bactericidal substances on a regular basis, because you end up putting unnecessary evolutionary selection pressure on your normal bacterial flora. That is, you don't want to kill all the good bacteria, otherwise the bad ones will overpopulate because they have no competition.
I'm guessing that the crocs aren't bactericidal, they are probably baceriostatic.
"They nailed down their supply chain. Crocs purchased the supplier of the resin for the shoes and the factories that make Crocs. They also signed contracts with key retailers."
How does this ensure success? Sure, it ensures that they have complete control over their ability to deliver a product, but that has nothing to do with being able to SELL it.
It's a necessary but not sufficient condition. It meant that when Crocs became a market hit, their suppliers couldn't raise prices on them. It meant they could capture all the value that their popularity created.
Well it's not a necessary condition either. Plenty of companies, and indeed plenty of shoe companies, are successful without purchasing their entire supply chain down to the plastic-factory level.
One key to Crocs' success has been their materials. I think they were also keenly aware of how easy their product could be copied and/or have a company clone their product especially in this post-China production world; they're just mold slippers after all. By vertically integrating their entire logistics chain they're ensuring one form of competitive advantage. Those cheap knockoffs at Target or WalMart looks the same but just quite isn't right because they don't have access to the materials manufacturer.
The same strategy wouldn't work for other companies. Apple for example source so many parts it's not feasible for them to own the entire logistics chain.
Non smelly? Have you ever been in a croc store? I went in with a few girls and I had to leave. The overwhelming stench of plastic fumes was making me gag. I felt physically ill just being in their store. I've worked on drilling rigs that smelled less chemically.
Hopefully it's less horrid than your hockey stuff is right now and is a positive trade ;)
Few things smell worse and when you are in a small dressing room with a team of guys and their equipment. Yikes!
Actually some googling after that comment led me to this: http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/429427. These guys claim that the croc-style equipment only masks the problem while their stuff kills the odour-causing bacteria. If the next front in the war between equipment makers is on anti-stink technology I am all for it!
Thank you for pointing that out... if you hadn't, I would have.
Now compare that chart with Heely's HLYS. Or Jones Soda JSDA.
These are fad stocks based off trendy items...however:
The only difference with CROX is that they have a patent on a very good material. They can license it out, but it won't have near the revenue as their ugly plastic shoes.
For more analysis, read the beginning of this article:
I still can't find any aesthetic appeal at all in those shoes, and I simply attribute it to a generation gap. But this story is well worth thinking about.
For some people, function is more important than function. They're great shoes, and considering where they're typically worn, does aesthetic appeal matter?
The ugliness actually appeals to some people, too.
This is an interesting point. It brings out the question: just how far can you make something ugly (assuming I'm not dead wrong about lack of aesthetic appeal in those slippers), provided that they do their non-aesthetic job right?
Certain famous websites come to mind. On a tangential point, it seems like these things must be relatively cheap and easily accessible, and cannot become status symbols. Sushi is an example where aesthetic appeal is as important as its palatability. (I'm typing a bit aimlessly)
So, what about those NIKE Naked shoes (or whatever?)? They are less of a fashion statement because they stand out less, I presume?
The only reason why they're a fashion statement is because they were born into a fashion-aware community. Check out my comment about the Boulder Country Club above.
Other than that, yes they are extremely light and comfortable...
About 1/4 of the article was about how they've been madly diversifying because they know that ugly shoes are a fad. They used the cash and scale that the shoes provided to become a diversified manufacturing company.
There were also a couple cases where people (children, I believe) were severely hurt when their Crocs got stuck in escalators. That's really bad publicity.
I believe crocs sold out to a bigger company as fast as they could. So the original founders have made there money and have been smart because Crocs = LA Gear. Popular one day, burn them the next. Nurses might still wear them, they will have a specialty market.
My day/night job is as an ER nurse, and pretty much the only shoes I've worn for the past 3 years are Crocs. I walk an average of 5 miles a shift at work, and I'm standing when I'm not walking. I've been used to spending $80-150 a pair of shoes for years. Now, with Crocs being $35 a pair, I buy them 3 pair at a time. And, the anti-bacterial bit is very nice for the nasty splashes at work.