Thursday, April 23, 2009

Lazy Days of Spring

We have a closing date now for our little summer respite. Our last day for the season will be May 3rd. After that the staff will be heading to Bend Oregon to ski at Mt. Bachelor for a bit. Our traditional trip has been to Mammoth but we decided to change things up this year. The director of Marketing at Bachelor sent us an email with some very attractive lodging and lift rates so we thought- why not?

Right now is a weird time at the shop. Business is very slow when temps outside are in the high 80's. We always have Lot's to do on my lists, but it is hard to get motivated. After going hard all year, it just seems like it's time for a break. That break is coming but it is still a few weeks off so we try to stay motivated and stick to the list of chores. But we get spring fever too and so we lallygag quite a bit along the way. I will admit that this year I am probably the worst offender too!

Overall we had a great year. Business was up a bit from last year making this our biggest grossing season ever. We anticipated more sales in a number of categories so are carrying over more inventory than I would have liked in a few areas but overall I am very pleased. Thanks to all of you for making this a great year. Even more thanks should go to my fantastic employees. Without them I would have very little- they are the best in the business!

After Mt. Bachelor I will keep recreating for a month total trip. There are no real plans but to carry my skis, bikes, fly pole, tent, and golf clubs and see what happens. I will spend a few days in Boise with some ski folk that like to mountain bike. I need to end up in Missouri for a family reunion. I'll pick up my dad in Montrose Colorado on the way. Sounds like fun to me! I will be back in the shop during June. It will be good to get away for a bit, and then I am sure it will be good to be back.

See ya then!

Saturday, April 4, 2009

It's all about the boots...

Snowcovers in Vancouver and Whistler is one of the most advanced boot shops in the industry. They are also the distributors of the foam liners and other products that we sell. They sell fit products and back shop tools that are the best in the business. This group of products is called the Soze group. Over the last year or so I have been talking to them about their philosophies and drooling over some of their tools. They have a boot summit each year at Whistler which has been impossible for me to attend but this year the destination was Salt Lake City which was feasible. John and I traveled there with Jarrod who is our Salomon sales rep and now sells the Soze products as well. Jarrod is one of the good guys. I decided the event would be worthwhile and I thought it would be more fun to road trip than to fly. Good call Greg, as we had a great time! We boot fitted and skied with some serious professionals. We learned a lot and we partied hard with our peers. We had my car towed, skied four days (two powder days), stayed in Sandy at a good friends house, had a great social event, and learned a heck of a lot about boot function and biomechanics within the ski boot. Awesome right? Awesome and then some! I feel like John and I just got back from 4 days at Boot Camp. At 8:30 am in the meeting room, the first day started like this: Pete says “It dumped last night so lets ski and then meet again at 11:00”. Yahoo! Utah powder for all! What a way to start the event! Jarrod provided skis for the trip so I spent the day on some Salomon Rocker skis. Wow! 130mm under foot with a big rockered front end. Fantastic! I skied great and had an amazing time. After the rumpus of a powder celebration in the morning, fit theories were then put forth by the hosts in a lab environment. More fun than skiing? No, but almost! Modifications were done to individual’s boots, and then the afternoon “on snow” session was used to evaluate the changes. Round table discussions were ongoing. Most attendees were already on board with the company, it’s theories, and products. I can’t blame them. Everything was first rate. Overall, I was very impressed with the company and its products.
We also got a visit in at Dale Boot. Dale makes boots right there in Salt ake City. The address has not changed for decades, and they make an interesting boot. Seeing the big plastic injectors and shll molds was a first for me. Their method for hand making custom liners was a new one too. There are the marks of a mad scientist inside this facility! Mike and Adam were very nice to give us the tour. A few other people from our trip that need a shout out are- Jay from the Sozo group. Very Impressed with the man, the mission, and the motivation. Jay is a man with a vision and a plan. He reminds me of my old bike shop partner Dave Bekowich. Both men speak with intelligence and conviction. Ernie from Bootworks in Park City- Ernie, Thanks for the space and the mentoring. You are THE MAN and only you should wear the optic-grab in public. Pete- Thanks for the good time…see you this summer in Boise. John from Colorado Springs- I hope you found your Oakleys…Sorry! Larry- I’ll be mum and not embarrass you. Linda (from Greenwoods in Boise- go see her there if you are in the area)- You weren’t too bad for the token female bootfitter -LOL. Let me know when you want to move to California. I would love to have you on board here! Brian- From Fischer Tech Rep to Shop Owner/Partner is a great move. Good luck in Frisco! Jeremy and his Dad- I would love to visit your shop. You are as technical as it gets. Thanks for the tips. Glen- Dude, No more backwards skiing- OK? That was gross! Willie, Newt, Marielle and Ross- Thanks for letting us hang out. We really enjoyed the time together. Willie, next time you are coming with us. Mandatory. J-Rod- You might make it in this business yet. Thanks for the great trip!

Friday, March 6, 2009

All of the sudden "POW"!

Well I have been terribly remiss in blog work, but I have a great excuse...right in the middle of the ski season, POW! hit the Sierra and I have been chasing it ever since. First, we had Demo days in Mammoth with deep powder at the end of last month. It was the first time in a number of seasons that we have had demo days for the next years gear in deep powder. Most years it is hard to evaluate powder skis. This year it was hard to evaluate carving skis. Temperatures around zero and abundant snowfall made this a great year to ski everything super wide. John, Peter, Becky, Paul Karst and myself all had a few days of powder bliss. This was great as there are so many new powder skis out now with "reverse camber', "no camber", "rocker", "semi rocker", "full rocker" and the like, that it was important to get a feel for where this market segment is going and what really works and what doesn't. Then it was off to Utah to ski with my best friend from High School. He brought his son and both my kids came. We stayed with a close girl friend from both High School and Chico State. The three (out of four) musketeers were back together! We skied at Snowbird and got to spend a day with Peter Keelty (realskiers.com), as well as great days with our host family and each other. Hot tub, Snowbird, 6 demo skis waiting to try, and great company. Life is good! One day back, and it was off to Reno for our spring buying show. John and I went and drove over Donner summit last Monday night just before it closed. Driving through a nasty storm we got into Reno at 2:30 after a few hours of whiteout navigation. The show was different than it usually is. The economy has the industry in a stir and everyone seemed nervous. Retail tactics will have to change, and distributors are going to struggle. Nobody is going to avoid the realities of the world economic situation. It's a changing world. None of us is really in it for the money anyway, however, so a lot of people (vendors and retailers alike) were absent from the show on Wednesday as they figured skiing was more important. Can't blame them! John and I hammered out a few contracts and now it's up to me to place all the orders. What to do. what to do... how will next year be? I don't know about the future. All I know is skiers will keep skiing and we will be there to take care of them. I am still unpacking, but soon enough I will post photos of Utah and talk some about next years skis.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Leaving Las Vegas

Typically when I go to a trade show two things happen. One is that I have a great time doing business and "playing" amongst my peers. The other is that I come back totally excited about the new products and worked up about the sport and the entire industry. I usually come back thinking that it was the best trade show ever. Well, this was not the best trade show ever. After 34 years in Las Vegas it is a shame to have this be the curtain call. Why? Because the industry is not in great shape, and many people at the show were depressed about this years business and worried about next season.

We are having a good sales year, so to me it's more or less business as usual around here. Outside of my little CalSkiCo cocoon however, the ski business has taken a big hit. Ski sales in particular have been poor. There are predictions of businesses failing at both the retail and wholesale end of the industry if next year is as bad as this. Many reps said that this is the worst year for the industry that they have witnessed. Some of them had been to all 32 Vegas shows.

So, a bad business climate leads to sour business men and women. This doesn't help with the general mood of the show. There was still a lot of good socializing but not with the usual enthusiasm. There are a lot of people that you meet and like over the years that you see at these shows. It is always good to see people like Wanona from Sports LTD in Redding. Hanging out at the Kastle event one night with the owner of Viking Ski (Chicago) was fun and interesting too. The highlight was probably Moroccan food with a great waiter and wonderful belly dancers. Martin and I went with Dan Dixson (who was our Fischer rep last year and our Head rep this year). Dan is one of the good guys and has become a good friend.

If you know me well, then you know that if belly dancers with friends is the highlight of the show, it wasn't a wild show for me. And generally this was the case for most people I think. Reps would be talking to you about business strategy for next year instead of their cool new products. Behind their eyes you could tell there was some fear. Businesses will be ordering less for next year. Would their product be the one to be left out?

Anyway, as I said, we are having a good year at CalSkiCo. My biggest obstacle has not been the economy but the weather. Always the weather for snow farmers! If we get some good dumps here we will finish strong. If not, we will have a weak last third of the sales season.

And so it goes. Farewell to Las Vegas. I feel bad for the dealers that are struggling this year. I hope that next year turns around, but I fear that this economic slump is not going to be quickly fixed. I am not entirely sure why we have not been impacted as much as most, but I have a pretty good idea. A good part of it is our fantastic loyal customers. I will adjust the buy for next year and play to our strengths a bit more (knowing that there will still be a lot of this years product out there next season). And in the end it will be all about the amount of snow that we get. It's always about the snowfall levels.

So it's goodbye to Vagas and hello to Denver. One thing is sure. Denver will have more snow than Las Vegas. More snow is always good.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Show Time!

Well in the middle of the ski season all of us shop owners get together in Las Vegas. Wierd I know, but that is the location of the yearly Snowsports Industry trade show. This is the first time we will see all of next years clothing, gear, and accessories. Actually, we have seen bits and pieces already, and have been given some hints but this is the total candy store (see Jan. 8 post). I have always thought that Las Vegas is a strange place to have the show and next year after many years of Vegas we will be moving it to Denver. So this is the last hurrah. Casinos, smoky rooms, short pants at night, and beer cups around your neck with a string one last time. I always look forward to it. It is a great chance to spend some time with the distributors and sales reps in a casual environment. All thats missing is skiing. Next year all that will change. Next year instead of slot machines we will have the Rocky Mountains as a backdrop. So Martin and I will be going down one last time. Martin is racing at Mammoth this weekend and will drive to Vegas. I will fly in Monday and meet him.

Having Martin with me has opened up a lot of opportunities. Being the Swiss Ski Meister that he is, he knows most of the company presidents from when they were sales reps or junior racers, and everybody loves Martin. The only drawback is that it is hard to make progress down the rows of vendors when every fifth person you see flags us down and wants to tell old skier war stories with Martin. Not a bad trade off though as I get introductions to all and a friend of Martins is a friend of thiers.

Another aspect of this years show is that there has been some shuffling of sales reps. We will have a new rep for Head, Fischer, Goode, Nordica and others. I will not know who our new Fischer rep will be until I get there. I had to make an appointment with the National Sales Manager to see the line. This may or may not effect my buying decisions from these companies. My attitude is that the product speaks for itself and a good rep only strengthens the brand. Overall I think my reps are a good bunch. Actually I think that ski company reps are all generally in it for the right reasons. They are not getting rich but they are passionate about their trade.

Anyway, that's my week upcoming. I wish I could enjoy the new snow in Tahoe but it will have to wait. Enjoy it for me please if you can make it up. Shortly after the show we will be trying to aggressively test all the new skis and come up with a lineup for next year. Not a bad part of the job. Actually a great part of a great job. Ski demo days, trade shows in Vegas, and days at the shop helping customers choose new toys and I have very little to complain about. I will try to bring back some juicy news for you on new products when I get back. Untill then wish me luck at the gaming tables!

Monday, January 12, 2009

I couldn't have said it better myself...

I was thinking about the Stockli Scot Schmidt ski today quite a bit. I had a regular customer interested in a Schmidt 178cm but we have none left. I have a Schmidt 188cm layaway that's getting "past due" in the back on hold. Hmmm... need to make a phone call. But that's the last one in the store. Brian (employee) wants one, preferably cheap (he wants our Stockli sales reps demo ski). As a favorite of mine I want one too, but I know I cant ski an "old" model. I own a ski shop for God's sake! We had possession of a 178cm Schmidt ski for the entire spring last year on loan from our Stockli rep. Brian and myself both fell in love with it. Now our rep needs to sell it and we both want it. But I have to let her go. So I went to bat for Brian. Got him the killer deal. Hopefully I will ski on her again one day.
I also spoke with Nicholas at Stockli USA about availability, show appointments, business trends and the like. Regarding inventory, not a whole lot left in the key models. Four 188's Schmidts left and that's all. The end of an era. He has some XXXL's which may or may not be the same ski as the Schmidt model in question with a different topsheet. Don't ask. His inventory of Stormrider XXL's is good. Rotor 76's were the number one seller so far this year. The movement next year is towards more "mainstream" skis (in my opinion) from Stockli. As a business owner, I think this may be a good thing. Stockli is at a level of excellence unsurpassed. The new skis are still at the same level. Just more modern in shape and flex. We will sell more than ever before. That's good. Everyone deserves a Stockli!
On the other hand, the Stormrider series has been the last holdout of "old school" flex patterns combined with semi-modern sidecut features. The past few years they have begun mixing more aggressive shapes and flexes into the line. I will miss the Stormrider XL and the Scot Schmidt pro model a lot. They will be the last of the "old school" models. We have about 10 pairs of the XL left and then it's the end. I am also sure that I will love the new ones even more. And in five years I will be writing an obituary for them too. So goes progress. I did a search on the Schmidts to say good bye tonight. Someone on a forum summed it up for me. His review of the Scot Schmidt(SS) is as follows:
Contributed by Goose Tuesday, 11 April 2006 The Stöckli Stormrider "SS" is basically a fattened race ski – a true pro rider ski not a commercial imitation - and true to form with this type they are a heavy couple of planks. Stiff as if they’d just seen Micha Barton step out of the shower and almost as good looking.
Model: Stormrider Scott SchmidtSize(cm) / Radius(m): 160/14.4 168/16.1 176/17.9 184/19.8Sidecut: 122-89-112Length tested: 188
Manufacturer's Description: "Limited Production Ski"
Ski-Review’s verdict:
Skier stats: 170cm, 70kg, skied since 4 and 7 seasons in the French Alps.
Snow condition: Ice to slush on piste, tracked crud off piste.
Not ideal conditions to test a ‘race stock’ off piste ski but I’ve always wanted to try this or it’s big brother – the Stöckli Stormrider DP – especially after I’d just been given the Stöckli Stormrider XL – a legendary ski. The start runs were icy but set an edge and just go. You have to stay on top of them because they are amongst the most unforgiving skis I’ve been on but they are a fast fish and truly stable compared to skis that pretend to be from the same stable (excuse the pun). When things get slushy they just plough through it and do the same in crud. Again, they need to be skied hard the whole way down. I guess the best way to explain them is that you have to get them up to a speed where you need to really concentrate and then they will perform. Prat about on them and you’ll go front side. They are designed to be skied fast with skill and don’t do anything else. I did manage to find some untracked stuff but not enough to really see how they performed, however I’m in no doubt that they would super G through the fluffy stuff with ease. The Stöckli Stormrider Scott Schmidt is truly an awesome ski, one that will do exactly what it is designed for, a true honour to ski it. "
I couldn't have summed it up better! By the way, a little more research found that the XXXL is the same sidecut as the Scot Schmidt Pro model but with the synthetic core and a 20% or so softer flex. Our customer opted to go this route and the skis turned out to be out fantastic. Ride 'em long and hard Guido! Thanks for the business.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Let the buying season begin!

Well you may or may not have done your gear buying for this year. We are about half way through our hardware sales and a little less than halfway through our expected clothing sales. So your buying may or may not be done for this year. For me as a shop owner, the buying season has just now begun...for next year! I spent a day in Sacramento yesterday looking at 09/10 products for the first time. Some lines I saw have deadlines of the 15th of this month. That's right, in about one week. I am only halfway through this sales season and I already have to start deciding what I will stock next year and how much of it I want to order. I have no idea how the weather will be from here on out. It could be drought or storm after storm. The economy could continue to improve or go back down. Yet the manufacturers want to know what I need for next year. No wonder so few people want to be in this business if money is the goal. It's a lot like being a professional gambler.
But you don't care about that and neither do I (well I do but it is secondary). What we care about is- What's New- What's hot? Well I am not one to whisper secrets, but Rebecca snapped the photo above with her iPhone in the Dalbello booth when nobody was looking. It's the new Tanner Hall Krypton. Wanting a stiffer boot than the El Moro, Tanner asked for and got a Krypton Pro level boot with the ratchet buckle on the cuff like the El Moro has. To make it even more wild, they did it in Rasta colors. So there you have a little tidbit of what's to come. Much more will be divulged after the big show in Las Vegas in a few weeks. I will tell no more for now because I need to get busy. I need to crunch some numbers and start making purchasing decisions. Let the buying season begin!