Lululemon founder's family bets on casual luxury with new retail venture
Whether it was see-through yoga pants, Chip Wilson’s faux-pas about women’s thighs, or a string of forecast-beating results, Lululemon always gave us something to write about. From the Wilson family’s post-Lulu retail venture, Kit and Ace, to roller-coaster stock rides, here’s a sampling of my stories over the years on all things related to the athleisure wear company.
Lululemon founder's family bets on casual luxury with new retail venture
Lululemon beats forecasts, lifts outlook as online sales jump
Lululemon to close Ivivva stores during online push, profit beats
Fraying Lululemon margins disappoint, shares slump 12 percent
Interview: Canada's Kit and Ace opens first overseas shop, no IPO plans
Lululemon recalls draw cords on women's top due to injury risk
Founder Chip Wilson looking at sale of entire Lululemon stake (Not my byline, but a milestone in the company’s history)
Lululemon shares jump after profit, revenue forecasts raised
Lululemon founder to leave board, keep stake in yogawear chain
More to come…
Lululemon founder's family bets on casual luxury with new retail venture
By Solarina Ho and Julie Gordon
TORONTO/VANCOUVER (Reuters) - Sewing machines hum inside a spacious clothing boutique where the wife and son of Lululemon Athletica Inc’s (LULU.O) founder hope to capture the retail magic that turned the yogawear maker into a stock market darling.
Meet Kit and Ace, the brainchild of billionaire Chip Wilson’s wife, former Lululemon lead designer Shannon Wilson, who started the new streetwear venture with his son J.J.
Backed entirely by Wilson family money, Kit and Ace has started with one store in the heart of Vancouver’s artsy Gastown neighborhood. The shop, which drew a handful of shoppers on a recent rainy weekday, specializes in “technical” luxury: cashmere-blend casual wear that is pre-shrunk, washable and durable.
It remains to be seen whether Kit and Ace’s simple line of basic black, white, navy and gray t-shirts can gain the same traction as Lululemon’s products.
“Where Lululemon was very successful was that they identified a new trend,” said Darren Dahl, a marketing professor at the Sauder School of Business. “With this new brand, it’s not quite as clear that they have pinpointed an identifiable market.”
Lululemon itself has faced significant problems in the last 18 months, including a high-profile recall of overly sheer yoga pants and a tense board scuffle involving founder Chip Wilson.
Kit and Ace, which opened in July, plans five new shops across North America in November, at least 100 there by 2019, and a presence in Australia, Asia and Europe after that.
The global push could come sooner if the right partner comes along, said Shannon Wilson, who searched the world for a luxury fabric with the properties of sportswear. Failing to find it, she developed her proprietary blend of cashmere, viscose and elastane fabric, formulated in Italy and trademarked “technical cashmere.”
“We do have a very aggressive growth plan because we want to be first to market in this,” she told Reuters.
Pop-up style outlets, like Lululemon’s temporary showrooms, are set to open in coming months in six cities, including Toronto, New York and San Francisco. Kit and Ace wants to use these to enter markets quickly while scouting for permanent locations.
THE NEXT LULULEMON?
The company started with just four employees seven months ago and now has about 130.
At least two dozen once worked at Lululemon, according to their LinkedIn profiles. A half-dozen employees, including a senior product developer and designers, came directly from there this year.
Bringing in experienced talent is important if Kit and Ace decides to seek investors who want evidence it can be another Lululemon, said James Smerdon, head of retail consulting at Colliers International.
A noticeable absence is Chip Wilson, who remains on Lululemon’s board. His wife says he is not involved in day-to-day operations, but is a mentor and guide.
“There’s no conflict of interest,” she said. “It’s been cleared through the board and through the company that he can be in conversation with J.J. and I about Kit and Ace.”
An outside spokeswoman for Lululemon could not immediately comment.
Wilson, who was behind some of Lululemon’s more famous designs during her tenure between 1999 and 2003, said the venture was in “no way” interested in competing with Lululemon, which has been expanding into streetwear with apparel that can be worn from yoga to a night out.
The companies share other similarities, like the manifestos adorning their shopping bags, and complementary “muses,” fictional characters that embody their ideal customer. Kit and Ace are athletic and creative, while Lululemon uses a successful thirty-something couple named Duke and Ocean.
Kit and Ace’s Vancouver store opened shortly after Chip Wilson publicly accused some Lululemon board members of focusing too much on short-term growth. He eventually agreed to sell half of his 27 percent stake and refrain from waging a proxy contest.
Lululemon grew from one Vancouver store in 1998 to 270 locations worldwide, and pulls in $1.6 billion in annual sales, but it has struggled since the March 2013 recall.
While Kit and Ace is still in its infancy, it will probably appeal to a core segment of Lululemon consumers, said Liz Dunn, who heads brand strategy at Talmage Advisors.
“Worrying about it as a big competitive threat initially seems a little premature,” she said. “At the same time, Chip Wilson, obviously, and his family have a lot of money.
“So to the extent that they want to grow this brand aggressively, they certainly could.”