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国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

Retail Secrets of the Best Winter Gear Shops

From weighing every binding to throwing ski-club parties, here's how the country's top winter retailers rule the snowy season

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Build community. Hire passionate staff. Know your customer.

Everyone understands that these are the keys to a successful specialty retail business. But they’re also easier said than done. So when we called up some of the nation’s most successful shops, we didn’t just ask for their strategies for selling winter gear; we pressed them to divulge the details. Turns out, running a top winter store isn’t complicated鈥攂ut it does require dedication, long-term strategy, and just plain being a good person.

Read on for inspiration from nine leading retailers across the U.S.

Secret No. 1: Own a Niche

Case study: Outdoor Gear Exchange, Burlington, Vermont

Top-selling winter brands: Salomon, Atomic, Rossignol

Key stat: 50 staffers attended the shop’s employee ski demo day last year.

When Mike Donohue and Marc Sherman added winter gear to Outdoor Gear Exchange (OGE) in the late 1990s, they focused on their passion, telemark skiing. Twenty-five years later, the store has added 140 staff and expanded to just about every category of outdoor gear. Meanwhile, tele sales have plummeted鈥攂ut Sherman and Donohue never abandoned the sport.

鈥淭elemark might be in decline, but there鈥檚 still a dedicated crew,鈥 Donohue said. 鈥淭hey drive from states away to shop here. It鈥檚 an annual pilgrimage.鈥

The draw is expertise. OGE stocks a large variety of telemark gear and employs staff who know the sport and how to service the equipment.

The shop looks for staff with passion and knowledge for tele, and incentivizes them to learn more with demo days and peer-to-peer instruction. That way, the buyers know the best gear to carry, and sales staff can talk minutia with customers.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to sell it, you have to have expertise in the niche,鈥 Donohue said. 鈥淥therwise, it鈥檚 wasted stock.鈥

Secret No. 2: Treat Staff like Gold

Case study: Alpenglow Sports, Tahoe City, California

Top-selling winter brands: DPS, Black Diamond, Arc’teryx

Key stat: The store’s speaker series has raised more than $1 million for local nonprofits.

Nobody wants a revolving door of employees, but figuring out how to retain good people can be a major challenge for retail.

Store owner Brendan Madigan said the reason Alpenglow has such a low turnover鈥攎ost employees stick around for several years, and the buying team averages 15 years of experience鈥攊s a combination of compensation, perks, and culture.

鈥淚 want to buck the idea that you can鈥檛 make a career at a retail job,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e always tried to run Alpenglow like a big business.鈥

That starts with compensating staff at the generous end of the pay scale. Madigan pays as much as he can afford (he declined to share salary numbers), with raises coming at least once a year to keep up with inflation. 鈥淪taff don鈥檛 need to get rich, but they do need to get paid well,鈥 he said. Perks for full-time employees include matching IRA contributions, flex days, paid vacations, a ski pass, and one annual hardgood product of their choice (he works with reps to offset the cost).

Equally important is making employees feel like they鈥檙e part of a team. Everyone is a middle manager, he says, with the power to make customers happy on the fly. 鈥淗aving responsibility leads to them feeling more invested in the business,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e give them room to grow and shine.鈥 That鈥檚 backed up by veteran staff who are tasked with spreading the company culture to the next generation, which they do through staff ski trips and a speaker series.

The payoff comes in the tough times. Seasoned buyers know which companies are only going to fulfill 60 percent of an order and can make the risky call to buy 140 percent to compensate, or find a comparable product to stock instead.

鈥淎 lot of that is by feel,鈥 Madigan said. 鈥淵ou never know if it鈥檚 going to work out, but you feel a lot better about it when it鈥檚 someone with 15-plus years of experience making [the call].鈥

Secret No. 3: Take Customer Service to the Next Level

Case study: Cripple Creek Backcountry, Colorado/Washington

Top-selling winter brands: Salomon, Scarpa, Dynafit

Key stat: 95 percent of gear-related appointments end in sales.

Well before COVID normalized shopping by appointment, Doug Stenclik had already seen the advantage of one-on-one experiences for customers, staff, and the bottom line.

Starting in the fall of 2018, Stenclik, the co-owner and founder of Cripple Creek Backcountry, encouraged his staff to skip the classic 鈥渨alk to the ski wall鈥 sales style in favor of getting to know the customer first. At the company鈥檚 six shops in Colorado and Washington State, employees were trained to ask extensive questions about the customer鈥檚 motivations and interests before they even began to talk about gear. That evolved into a formalized list of questions, and then, shopping by appointment.

Stenclik said he worried about customer and employee buy-in to this labor-intensive process at first, 鈥渂ut I knew if I could get everyone to commit, [one-on-one appointments were] going to provide the best experience for everybody.鈥

Appointments became required at the onset of the pandemic. Today, the shops are happy to have people walk in off the street, but about 70 percent of customers still make an appointment and fill out a questionnaire beforehand, either online or over the phone. The questions ask for data like weight and height, but also dig deeper. For instance, people who want a boot for uphill or fitness skiing would provide their boot size and what other brands of boots they own, as well as attach pictures of their feet. The store then matches the customer with an employee who also likes to tour for exercise. Before the customer even sets foot in the store, the assigned salesperson has figured out their best two or three boot options.

Cripple Creek Backcountry appointments guarantee one-on-one service. (Photo: Cripple Creek Backcountry)

The process saves everyone time. Cripple Creek stores work together to share inventory, moving sizes and models around to where they鈥檙e needed. When the customer walks in, the salesperson is waiting with the preselected boots. The customer doesn鈥檛 have to wait for help because sales staff are busy or come back later because the right size wasn鈥檛 in stock.

鈥淲e鈥檙e closing more sales,鈥 Stenclik said. 鈥淚f we just said, 鈥楬ere are the only two boots for you to try,鈥 customers would want to shop around. But because we鈥檙e making specific recommendations, based on research, we win them over.鈥 And though staffers were initially skeptical, Stenclik says, three years in, they鈥檙e realizing that investing time ahead of the appointment streamlines the overall process, as they don鈥檛 have to choose products on the fly, hunt for inventory, or make special orders.

For all, Stenclik said, 鈥渢he response has been really positive.鈥

Secret No. 4: Sweat the Details

Case study: Skimo.co, Salt Lake City, Utah

Top-selling winter brands: Dynafit, Scarpa, La Sportiva

Key stat: In 2020, sales doubled over the previous year.

Just based on its name, one might suspect Skimo.co is more than its single retail location. Scroll through the website, and you鈥檒l also discover that it鈥檚 much more than an online store. The business鈥檚 goal is to educate customers, said James Roh, marketing and content manager. 鈥淥ur mission statement is to be experts on the topic of backcountry skiing,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t boils down to getting people into the right gear so they have as much fun as we do.鈥

That starts with stuffing the website with information. Staffers write blog articles and in-depth gear reviews. There are detailed descriptions of classic ski tours in ten states from staff and customers. A fill-in form helps buyers sort through the confusion of matching boots and bindings. And an entire section compares packs, skis, poles, and more in data-rich charts.

鈥淲e鈥檙e a bunch of gear nerds,鈥 Roh said. 鈥淲e weigh and measure everything that comes in the door.鈥

All those resources play a role in attracting online customers, who make up about half of Skimo.co鈥檚 business. But they also drive in-person sales. 鈥淢any people come into the store for the first time after using our website as a resource for years,鈥 Roh said. He often sees staff and customers referring to the website on the store floor, going over the different options and comparing specs.

It鈥檚 a lot of work keeping the site up to date, but Roh said it鈥檚 key to their success. 鈥淥nly a few customers are interested in that much detail,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut our attention to the details shows we鈥檙e a resource and the place to go for backcountry ski gear.鈥

Secret No. 5: Figure Out What Your Community Needs

Case study: Bill Jackson’s Shop for 国产吃瓜黑料, Tampa, Florida

Top-selling winter brands: Obermeyer, Spyder, Salomon

Key stat: Ski-related sales declined in 2021 by about 40 percent (because there were no ski club trips)

This South Florida shop played a big part in building the area鈥檚 surprisingly large ski community. But co-owner Darry Jackson knows that nurturing that community requires more than a few movie nights鈥攊t means getting people to join the club, literally and figuratively.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need a ski club if you live in Denver,鈥 said Jackson. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 harder to go skiing from Florida, so clubs are huge here.鈥 Tampa Bay is home to four ski and snowboard clubs, and the largest has more than 4,000 members. Cultivating relations with these clubs has been an essential part of the Jackson family鈥檚 business success.

Jackson鈥檚 parents started the shop as an army surplus store after World War II and, when they noticed people coming in to buy jackets for skiing in the 1950s, they began carrying ski apparel. By 1970 they were stocking skis. Around the same time, a ski club president noted Jackson鈥檚 and his brother鈥檚 growing reputations as outdoor guides (they鈥檇 been leading scuba diving trips to the Caribbean). He asked Jackson to run a club trip to Buttermilk resort in Aspen, Colorado. It kicked off both Jackson鈥檚 passion for skiing and an ongoing relationship with the local ski clubs.

Jackson started holding his pre-trip meetings in the store鈥檚 classroom, then offering space to other ski club leaders for planning sessions, annual parties, and board meetings. Although he doesn鈥檛 lead trips anymore, Jackson thinks it鈥檚 important for the store to stay involved. 鈥淚 try to go to all of their meetings and parties,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s years go by, the leadership with any club keeps changing, and [the shop] must maintain a personal relationship with all of them.鈥

Each club organizes up to 20 trips a year with around 20 people each, plus a couple of parties of 150 or more. Jackson extends store hours to accommodate the meetings. 鈥淏ecause everybody is too busy talking and socializing, we don鈥檛 sell as much as you鈥檇 expect with several hundred people in the shop,鈥 he said. But he knows they鈥檒l be back.

Secret No. 6: Invest in Vendor Relationships

Case study: Peace Surplus, Flagstaff, Arizona

Top-selling winter brands: K眉hl, The North Face, Cotopaxi

Key stat: The store sold two miles鈥 worth of toboggans in 2o21.

Like just about every other outdoor store last winter, Peace Surplus struggled to keep up with the demand for items like gloves, goggles, and helmets. But when many others couldn鈥檛 restock shelves, founder Steve Chatinsky leaned on 40 years of goodwill. As a result, he was getting fresh orders all the way through the pandemic.

鈥淚 had the right connections and relationships to find the products I needed,鈥 Chatinsky said. Instead of calling his sales reps, he went right to the top, talking to national sales managers or even company presidents. They were willing to not only take his call, but also jump through hoops for him, searching inventory, scouring warehouses, and rushing shipping, because Chatinsky had been there for them.

After he founded the shop in 1973, Chatinsky made sure he treated sales reps, suppliers, competitors, and the greater outdoor industry really well. He did the simple things, like pay his bills on time. But he also bought products that reps really wanted him to, even when he wasn鈥檛 that keen. 鈥淲hen you throw them a bone, they notice,鈥 he said. He became a member of buying groups, like Grassroots Outdoor Alliance and Nation鈥檚 Best Sports, and supported them by joining committees and attending their seminars and shows. On his morning walks, he often stops by the other outdoor stores in Flagstaff to shoot the breeze. The local REI sends customers to Peace Surplus, he said.

鈥淭he outdoor industry is a small industry,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople notice if you鈥檙e a good person.鈥

Without all that time and effort, going over his sales reps鈥 heads last winter probably would have backfired. 鈥淚f I was pushy and arrogant, I would have pissed people off and ended up at the bottom of the ladder,鈥 Chatinsky said. 鈥淚 was a good person, and last year, it paid off.鈥

Last November, Chatinsky sold Peace Surplus but agreed to stay on to help the new owners get started. His first lesson: investing in relationships has real value.

3 More Secrets

Case study: Sunlight Sports, Cody, Wyoming

Keep newbies warm:聽If a rookie comes in looking to rent skis, staff will start by talking about the importance of good socks and gloves. “When you start with ‘This is how to be warm and comfortable,’ you’re ensuring they’re going to have a good time,” said co-owner Wes Allen. “That’s a known formula for success. They’re going to trust us and come back.”

Case study: Lahout’s, multiple locations, New Hampshire

Follow your customers:聽This 102-year-old ski shop could have stuck with skis, but when the staff noticed more people coming to northern New England for year-round recreations, it added seven more locations that sell summer gear, too. “Now we see the same skier four or five times a year, instead of just in the winter,” said Anthony Lahout, co-owner and grandson of the founder.

Case study: 国产吃瓜黑料 Brands, multiple locations, Georgia

Use trips to boost sales:聽When customers book a guided kayak or boat trip through 国产吃瓜黑料 Brands, they get an email with detailed info on how to dress for winter excursions and a 15 percent discount code to gear up in one of the shops. “The retail team is trained and knowledgeable about the experiences,” said CEO Mike Overton. “It helps build our clientele and has been really successful.”

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