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1400 Castlefield Ave. Toronto, Ontario M6B 4C4, Canada Tel. 416-781-3574 Toll Free 888-307-6687 |
Type: Private
On the web:
http://www.roots.com
From its original shoot, Roots Canada has branched out into many areas. The apparel chain, known among some as the Canadian Gap, sells outdoorsy clothing and accessories for men, women, and children. Firmly planted in the land of maple leaves and beavers, the company has more than 120 stores in Canada and the US, and about 40 locations in Asia (China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan). Besides apparel, the company offers leather goods, eyewear, watches, and fragrances, even lending its name to a line of furniture. About 40% to 50% of Roots merchandise in manufactured at its factory in Toronto. Roots is owned by Detroit-natives Michael Budman and Don Green, who co-founded the company as a footwear store in 1973.
Officers:
Co-Founder and Co-CEO: Don Green
Co-Founder and Co-CEO: Michael Budman
Senior Director e-Commerce, Digital Marketing and New Media: James Connell
Competitors:
American Eagle Outfitters
The Gap
Hudson's Bay
Incorporated: 1973
NAIC: 44811 Men's Clothing Stores; 44812 Women's Clothing
SIC: 5611 Men's & Boys' Clothing Stores; 5621 Women's Clothing Stores; 5641 Children's & Infants' Wear Stores; 5651 Family Clothing Stores; 5632 Women's Accessory & Specialty Stores; 5699 Miscellaneous Apparel & Accessory Stores; 5661 Shoe Stores; 5948 Luggage & Leather Goods Stores; 4512 Air Transportation - Scheduled
Clothing retailer Roots Canada Ltd.--known universally simply as "Roots"--is a lifestyle marketer inspired by the northern summer camp reminiscences of founders Don Green and Michael Budman. Roots remains a family business: Green's wife, Denyse Tremblay, was one of the company's first salespersons; Budman's wife, Diane Bald, designs the company's retail stores. The vertically integrated company is unique in its ability to handle small runs of custom orders. Its leather business and the fact that nearly all of its products are made in Canada also set it apart. Roots has about 175 stores, almost 60 of them in Asia, and its famous clothing has been donned by heads of state, including former President Bill Clinton and Prince Charles, as well as numerous athletes and entertainers.
Although they became famous exploiting the essence of Canadian style, both Don Green's and Michael Budman's roots are in Detroit. Both Budman and Green had fallen in love with Canada while camping at Algonquin Park's Camp Tamakwa; they moved to Toronto in the late 1960s. In addition, both their fathers were successful Detroit entrepreneurs, giving their future business some hereditary grounding.
The two well-off boys, looking for ways to extend their idyllic existence north of the border, decided to get in on the Earth Shoe craze. Anna Kalso, a Dane, had designed the shoe with a heel lower than the toe to mirror the barefoot posture she admired in Brazilian natives. By 1970, the Earth Shoe was a counterculture footwear smash.
After some discussions about acquiring rights to distribute the Earth Shoe in Canada, Budman and Green began to design their own negative heel shoe. Theirs had a milder incline and less radical design. Geoff Pevere, the "pop culture guru" who published a book-length account of the Roots story in 1998, said the homey shoes capitalized on "anti-fashion." Desert Boot, moccasin, city, and sport variations were soon derived from the original shoe.
Bar mitzvah money and $15,000 borrowed from Green's father provided start-up capital for the venture. Methodically searching for manufacturers through the Yellow Pages, Budman and Green were turned down by footwear giant Bata but soon found a winner.
The Boa Shoe Company was run by a Polish family that had once made boots for Czar Nicholas II. Jan Kowalewski and sons Henry, Richard, Stanley, and Karl agreed to make 120 pairs of the new shoes for Budman and Green, despite the fact that the two hipsters had brought a dog to their inaugural meeting.
Budman and Green then rented an 800-square-foot store on Yonge Street in Toronto for $280 a month. They decided on the name "Roots" to emphasize the "Roots Shoe" as a connection to the earth. The trademark logo soon was created, with a beaver borrowed from the Camp Tamakwa crest. The store moved seven pairs of the shoes, priced at $35 each, on opening day, August 15, 1973.
After another few weeks of modest sales, the Roots team suddenly found people cueing up around the block and signing waiting lists to get a pair of the hot shoes. Soon People would call it "the Gucci shoe of the crunchy granola set." The firm opened 75 stores between 1973 and 1975.
In the next couple of years, Budman and Green created a firestorm of publicity that made Roots a household word in Canada. They started by sending free pairs to celebrities such as Paul McCartney, Cher, Elton John, and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. Roots garnered immeasurable exposure when these famous feet carried the shoes into the national press. The company founders also appeared in Roots advertising, further stretching their promotional dollars.
According to Pevere, Roots was worth a million dollars within six months. Budman and Green soon signed an exclusive agreement with their supplier that would last at least another 25 years; within a year the Kowalewski family was making 2,000 pairs of Roots footwear a week.
Unlike the Earth Shoe, advertising for the Roots Shoe was low on claims of specific therapeutic benefits regarding its negative heel. Comfort, style, and craftsmanship were its key selling points. Following the advice of an early designer, Robert Burns, the firm also had begun adding conventional heel shoes to its offerings, as well as clothes and other items made of leather. Roots began outfitting sports teams beginning with the Blue Jays in 1977, opening another enduring line of business.
All of these factors helped cushion the company after the floor fell out of the negative heel fad in 1976. Fortunately, European sales were only just beginning to boom. (Twenty years later, Japan would be the only surviving market for the company's negative heel shoes.) A Detroit doctor was credited with issuing the contravening medical opinion that signaled the end of the craze.
In 1979, a New Jersey manufacturing company also named Roots sued Budman and Green for trademark infringement. The suit kept Roots Canada products out of the United States for nine years and ultimately cost the company $1 million.
After excitement over the first shoes had died down, Roots moved on to its true business--selling the nostalgia of summer camp to baby boomers. These dreams were embroidered on sweatshirts, hats, and other accessories, adorned with chenille patches touting the virtues of the great Canadian wilderness in the bonding language of athletics. Most important, Roots sold sweatshirts in the 1980s--a decade that emphasized physical fitness as never before. After a forced retreat from the American market, Roots reentered the United States in 1988.
Launched in 1975, the Roots Beaver Athletic sweatshirt--or "RBA" in company lingo--sold modestly until 1985, when it exploded. More than a million RBAs were produced by early 1990. Inspired by the uniforms of collegiate athletes, the sweatshirt appealed not only to baby boomers' health consciousness, but their desire to belong to teams, wrote Pevere. During the late 1980s, "We went from [being] a shoe company to a clothing company to a lifestyle company to a global company," Roots Vice-President Marshall Myles told a textiles industry trade magazine.
A global recession impacted the company in the early 1990s; however, profits continued to rise after 1991. Some of the ventures that did not work out for the company included a Paris-based fashion magazine and an aborted Colorado ski resort. There was still plenty of good news otherwise. Revenues approached $100 million annually in 1992.
One of Don Green's buddies from Camp Tamakwa, Mike Binder, produced a movie about his reminiscences there for Disney in 1993. The film, called Indian Summer, featured Roots gear prominently, and Roots advertising made the most of the connection. As Geoff Pevere noted, the Disney/Roots collaboration was appropriate, for both companies were dedicated to the myth of never growing up.
As the movie and television industry in Toronto grew, Roots took to producing customized clothing for the industry. This ultimately extended to a variety of world-class television shows, movies, and plays produced elsewhere, including Forrest Gump, Seinfeld, Pulp Fiction, and Phantom of the Opera, as well as rock tours for the likes of Janet Jackson. The large number of Canadian actors, beginning with Dan Aykroyd and Gilda Radner (one of Green's Tamakwa camping buddies) on the cast of Saturday Night Live, already had given Roots easy access to numerous celebrities for years. For example, basketball superstar and Nike spokesman Michael Jordan wore a Roots sweatshirt while hosting the show.
By 1997, there were 95 Roots outlets across Canada, six in the United States, and 15 franchises in Asia. The company had 1,000 employees; 225 of them worked at its leather goods factory, still run by the Kowalewski family, which measured 65,000 square feet. In contrast to other lifestyle brands such as Nike and The Gap, 95 percent of the company's wares were made in Canada.
Roots outfitted the Canadian teams for the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan. The distinctive jackets they created were wildly popular, as was the poorboy hat, a kind of oversized beret. Roots also signed endorsement deals with Olympic medal athletes including skater Elvis Stojko.
It took two years for Budman and Green to secure the Olympic uniform contract, but the results were enduring. After the Nagano Olympics, a number of famous figures were seen wearing Roots duds, including Prince Charles and President Bill Clinton, singer Sarah McLachlan, and comedian Rosie O'Donnell. Actor Robin Williams even wore a poorboy cap to the Academy Awards. Green and Budman turned down an offer to sell half the company to clothing giant Dylex Limited.
Roots opened a boutique in the SoHo district of Manhattan in June 1998. Later that summer, Ford Motor Company rolled out its Roots Explorer SUV in Canada, which was equipped with a custom storage bag produced by Roots.
Marshall Myles, a Roots veteran of 25 years, was appointed president and CEO in December 2000. Three months earlier, designer Tu Ly had been picked as the company's creative director.
In 2000, the Wall Street Journal reported the firm was planning a five-year, $70 million expansion drive in the United States and Europe. In the works were 25 outlets at resorts such as Vail, Colorado. Other stores were planned as part of a joint venture with an as yet unnamed partner. An initial public offering was even being considered to help fund the expansion costs.
Very few would have imagined the co-branding venture unveiled in June 2000. Roots agreed to take a 20 percent equity stake in Skyservice Airlines Inc., a Canadian start-up carrier that aimed to begin taking on national carrier Air Canada in Toronto, Montreal, and Ottawa. The Roots Air fleet was to feature the Roots beaver on the aircrafts' livery.
Roots was about lifestyle--or choice--ostensibly the antithesis of the airline industry. The airline planned to reach the United States (Los Angeles and New York) by the summer of 2001, bolstering Roots's presence south of the border. The new airline was marketed with the same emphasis on rural Canadian splendor as the clothing stores. "Business travelers will experience an odd feeling on March 26 (the launch date)," announced one ad. "It's called relaxation." Appropriately, Roots designed the airline's uniforms including--of course--leather bomber jackets for the pilots.
Roots vitamins were introduced in February 2001 in cooperation with pharmaceutical manufacturer Boehringer Ingelheim. Less surprising than the airline or vitamins announcements was the news that Roots was supplying clothes in support of Toronto's (unsuccessful) bid to host the 2008 Olympics.
Principal Subsidiaries
GreenBud Manufacturing Ltd.; Skyservice Airlines Inc. (20%).
Principal Divisions
Roots Air; Roots Athletics; Roots Home; Roots Baby; Roots Custom Products; Roots Kids; Roots Leathers; Roots Men & Women; Roots Passport; Roots Vision; Roots Vitamins.
Principal Competitors
Club Monaco; Banana Republic Inc.; Eddie Bauer, Inc.; The Gap, Inc.
Further Reading
Barrington, Stephen, "Roots Reaches for the Sky," Advertising Age, March 26, 2001, p. 16.
Carlisle, Tamsin, "Canadian Airline, Clothier Set Launch of a New Carrier," Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2000, p. A8.
Greenberg, Larry M., "Marketing the Great White North, Eh? How Two Americans Evoked Quintessential Canada and Plan to Sell It Here," Wall Street Journal, April 21, 2000, p. B1.
Hutchinson, Brian, "Merchants of Boom," Canadian Business, May 1997, pp. 38-48.
King, R.J., "Grunge Trend Makes Pair of Sole Brothers Well-Heeled," Detroit News, October 29, 1993, p. E3.
Pevere, Geoff, "The Roots of Roots," Profit, October 1, 1998, p. 55.
------, Team Spirit: A Field Guide to Roots Culture, Toronto: Doubleday Canada, 1998.
Rabon, Lisa C., "Roots Behind the Brand," Bobbin, August 1998, pp. 150-62.
"Roots Defined," Bobbin, August 1998, pp. 152-56.
— Frederick C. Ingram
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| Type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | Retail |
| Genre | Clothing |
| Founded | Toronto, Ontario, Canada (1973) |
| Founder(s) | Michael Budman and Don Green |
| Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
| Number of locations | Over 120 Canadian and American stores; 65 locations in Asia |
| Area served | Canada, United States, Asia |
| Products | Apparel, Leather goods, active athletic wear, yoga wear, accessories, home furnishings |
| Employees | 2,000 in Canada[1] |
| Website | http://www.Roots.com |
Roots Canada Ltd. (commonly called Roots) is a Canadian clothing and lifestyle products retailer. The retail stores sell Roots' own brand of products in Canada, the United States and Asia. The products on offer consist of leather goods, active athletic wear, yoga wear, accessories and home furnishings.
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Contents
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Roots was founded in 1973 by Michael Budman and Don Green, formerly of Detroit, Michigan. The store concept was based on their experiences at a summer camp called Camp Tamakwa in Ontario’s Algonquin Park during their childhood.
The company originally sold footwear at a single location in Toronto. Its first product was the Roots Negative Heel Shoe (also called the Earth shoe). It has since expanded its line of merchandise to include items such as jackets, bags, watches, luggage, sweatshirts and fashion accessories. Recently,[when?] it became the sponsor of Flick off.
The original logo design was by Joe Spezzano, a grade seven student at Pinecrest Public School who won a school board wide contest in Ottawa, Ontario in 1973. The idea for the design was that of fellow student Ian Williams, based upon the beaver as it appears on the Canadian five cent coin.
The final logo as it appears on Roots apparel was designed by Heather Cooper and Robert Burns.[citation needed]
The brand was noted in Naomi Klein's book No Logo, for its extensive branding: "There is a strong symmetry at work in this branding exercise. The Roots clothing line got its genesis in a place not unlike this one. Company founders Don Green and Michael Budman both went to summer camp in Algonquin Park, Ontario, and were so moved by their experience of active living in the Canadian outdoors that they designed a line of clothing to capture the very best of that feeling: comfortable walking shoes, cozy sweatshirts, Canadian Workman socks, and, of course, the beaver logo..."
And journalist Michael Posner wrote that "Roots is less a company than a summer camp." According to Klein, the company's retail outlets "with the help of wall-mounted canoe paddles and exposed beams, conjure not a chain store but...'summer-camp mess halls and cottages built by caring and callused hands.' Then came the homewear line, featuring blankets and pillows designed to look like oversized workmen's socks."[2]
Larry David can occasionally be seen in a Roots sweatshirt on his show Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Roots Clothing has been seen on slappers across the world including Paris Hilton and Megan Fox.[citation needed]
Roots Canada has also opened up its own Yoga studio in Toronto.[3]
Roots was the official outfitter of clothing for members of the Canadian Olympic team from 1998 to 2004. The same line was sold at Roots stores in Canada.
Roots also clothed the United States (2002, 2004) [4] and British Olympic (2002) teams.
In 2009 A Roots Leather Bag "The Satchel" was famously worn by the character Alan in the 2009 movie The Hangover leading to increased publicity of Roots leather bags. [5]
Characters Matthew (Vincent Spano) and Brad Berman (Kevin Pollak) in the 1996 film Indian Summer are based on the company's founders, who attended Camp Tamakwa, the camp where the movie was filmed, in Ontario's Algonquin park.
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