On Linkedin, Eoin Comerford, Moosejaw’s CEO, wrote an open letter to the outdoor industry asserting that the development of the Premium Outdoor Store on Walmart was done in the spirit of “inclusivity,” and he is “surprised by the vehemence of the attacks by some of our industry’s leading retailers and the threats to drop brands that participated.”
In the letter, Comerford wrote that the industry remains “predominantly male and remarkably white” despite numerous efforts over the years to become “younger, more female, more diverse.” He contends the Premium Outdoor Store curated by Moosejaw offers a path for the industry to broaden its reach.
He wrote, “Walmart.com’s huge traffic offered the ability to expose outdoor brands, activities and products to a massive audience of new and long-term outdoor enthusiasts, including the very groups that are underrepresented in our industry today.”
He further stressed that the site isn’t “just another marketplace focusing on sterile transactions and price shopping,” but one that will enable brands to tell their story through quality imagery and content. Comerford wrote, “We built a destination where the brands could list their product to the highest of their standards.”
He concluded the letter with a challenge to the industry. “At the end of the day, the question becomes, ‘what industry do we want to be?’ A small, exclusionary, slow-growing industry dominated by one or two large retailers that dictate everything from distribution and promotional calendars, or a large, inclusive, fast-growing industry embraced by a growing customer base and populated by many innovative and inspiring outdoor brands?”
Following the launch of the site on August 27, four brands that had been selling on the site in the launch–Black Diamond, Deuter, Katadyn and Leki – had reached agreements with Walmart and Moosejaw to have their products removed from the site as industry backlash developed over selling on the big-box platform.
Comerford’s full letter to the outdoor industry follows:
Open Letter to the Outdoor Industry
By Eoin Comerford, Moosejaw CEO
In the outdoor industry, we like to talk about inclusivity. We recognize the relatively low participation by women and minorities in outdoor activities, so we create slick marketing campaigns and trumpet our moderate successes. And yet the industry remains predominantly male and remarkably white. If we’re going to grow this industry beyond its exclusionary, historical norms, we need to reach new audiences … younger, more female, more diverse.
Moosejaw has always been about inclusion. One of our core mantras is “never take yourself too seriously,” so we welcome beginning backpackers and climbers that are intimidated by other outdoor retailers that greeted them with sighs and eye rolls. It’s part of the reason that Moosejaw’s customers are the youngest of any major outdoor retailer.
At Moosejaw, I have focused on integrity and respect. We treat our brands as partners, working together to build a business based on straightforward and honest communication. Our goal is to do what we say and say what we do.
We developed the Premium Outdoor Store on Walmart with all of these thoughts in mind. Walmart.com’s huge traffic offered the ability to expose outdoor brands, activities and products to a massive audience of new and long-term outdoor enthusiasts, including the very groups that are underrepresented in our industry today. We didn’t want to be just another marketplace focusing on sterile transactions and price shopping. Instead, we built a destination where we could partner with brands to tell their story through their own images, technologies and product families. We built a destination where the brands could list their product to the highest of their standards.
I wasn’t naive enough to think that all outdoor retailers would welcome the Premium Outdoor Store with open arms, but I am surprised by the vehemence of the attacks by some of our industry’s leading retailers and the threats to drop brands that participated.
At the end of the day, the question becomes, “what industry do we want to be?” A small, exclusionary, slow-growing industry dominated by one or two large retailers that dictate everything from distribution and promotional calendars, or a large, inclusive, fast-growing industry embraced by a growing customer base and populated by many innovative and inspiring outdoor brands?
For our part, Moosejaw will continue to push for growth and inclusion.
Photo courtesy Moosejaw