Mens Journal

(Steven Felgate) #1

NOTEBOOK


STYLE


&DESIGN


Namaste


Bro


What happens when the
former head of Burton
Snowboards takes over a
polarizing yogawear
brand in rapid free fall?
byMICKEY RAPKIN

I


T SEEMED LIKEthe opportunity of a
lifetime — the chance to lead one of the
most revolutionary brands in sportswear
a company that had virtually redef ined its
market. But when Laurent Potdevin asked
some trusted colleagues what they thought
about the job the response was nearly unani-
mous: Don’t do it.
The warnings were understandable.
The company in question was Lululemon
and it was in free fall. Founded in 1998 the
self-described “underground yoga-clothing
movement” had been a retail phenomenon
seemingly as focused on helping its mostly
female customers harness their inner chi as
on selling them freakishly f lattering work-
out pants — which f it tidily inside those
slogan-covered shopping bags. But in 2013
complaints started rolling in: Some pants
were so sheer they may as well have been
see-through. A $17.5 million product recall
followed. Then when founder Chip Wilson
went on Bloomberg TV to quell investor
fears things only got worse.
“Frankly” Wilson said “some women’s
bodies just actually don’t work for it. It’s
really about the rubbing through the thighs.”
Stephen Colbert likened Wilson’s non-
apology to “lifting your leg to pee on custom-
ers and then blaming them for being wet.”
Lululemon’s once-fervent fan base went
into revolt the company’s stock tanked
and Wilson resigned from the board. “Time
had an article saying Lululemon would be
one of the 10 brands that doesn’t exist at the
end of 2015” says Potdevin who was being
recruited to come in and f ix the mess.
The CEO of Burton Snowboards from
2005 to 2010 Potdevin preferred sports cars
and surf ing to meditation and yoga. And he
was no stranger to controversy himself: He
had infamously caught f lak for producing a
line of snowboards decorated with vintage

images of Playboy Bunnies. (“It was executed
in a very tasteful way” he says. “Our athletes
lovedit.”)Didhereallywanttotakethereins
of a woman-focused brand considered by
many to be doomed?
But the more Potdevin studied Lulu-
lemon’s problems the more convinced he
was of the solution: men.
“When I joined Lulu” he says “the big-
gest surprise was how dry the pipeline of
innovation was. There was nothing.” So he
immediately set to work on the task of push-
ing into the men’s market. Potdevin knew
he couldn’t sell bros $150 yoga pants on the
promise that they’d make their butts look

good. He had to sell them upmarket techni-
cal apparel that was designed to keep them
at the top of their game. In doing so Lulu-
lemon would go head-to-head with brands
like Nike Under Armour GapFit and Rhone
in the so-called athleisure market — apparel
that sits at the intersection of technical ath-
letic gear and leisurewear. (Even Wilson dis-
placed from the company he founded is back
inthegamewithKitandAceanapparelline
started by his wife and son.)
Athleisure wear is now a $97 billion
industry. (See page 43 for our favorites.) But
you won’t hear the term coming from Pot-
dev in’s mout h. “I hate t hat word” he says. “It’s

Potdevin at
Lululemon’s
Vancouver HQ

MEN’S JOURNAL 40 SEPTEMBER 2016 photograph by ANDREW QUERNER

Free download pdf