2011年6月25日 星期六

The Adventure of Leadership: An Unorthodox Business Guide

作者賣掉企業 出書 台北版的版者似乎也結束營業



The Adventure of Leadership: An Unorthodox Business Guide by the Man Who Conquered "the North Face" By Hap Klopp, Brian Tarcy . Longmeadow Pr;1992《勇者的領導統御》連毓容譯,台北:絲路出版社,1997



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The North Face, Inc.
Type Subsidiary
Industry Retail
Founded 1968
Headquarters San Leandro, CA, United States
Area served North America, Europe, Asia Pacific
Products Clothing, outdoor gear
Production output China,[1] Bangladesh, Vietnam, India [2]
Parent VF Corporation
Website www.thenorthface.com
The North Face, Inc. is an outdoor product company specializing in outerwear, fleece, shirts, footwear, and equipment such as backpacks, tents, and sleeping bags.
The clothing and equipment lines are catered towards wilderness chic, climbers, mountaineers, skiers, snowboarders, hikers, and endurance athletes.
The company sponsors professional athletes from the worlds of running, climbing, skiing and snowboarding including David Carrier Porcheron and Johan Olofsson.

Contents

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[edit] History

The North Face brand was established in 1966[3] in San Francisco, when Douglas Tompkins and Kenneth "Hap" Klopp created an equipment retail store that eventually acquired the name The North Face.[3] This name was chosen because the north face of a mountain in the northern hemisphere is generally the most difficult face to climb.[3] By the 1980s, skiwear was added to the line of products, and eventually camping equipment was added as well. The North Face is now a wholly owned subsidiary of the VF Corporation.[4]
Today, The North Face is based in San Leandro, California, near its corporate sibling, JanSport.[5] JanSport is the world's largest backpack maker and together, JanSport and The North Face manufacture nearly half of all small backpacks sold in the United States.[5]
The North Face's logo designed by California designer David Alcorn in 1971, consists of a slightly skewed quarter-circle with two lines running within it. This image is an interpretation of Half Dome, a massive granitic monolith in Yosemite National Park,[3] viewed from the west, with the sheer north (or northwest) face of Half Dome to the left.
The North Face maintains strong links with the outdoor community through its sponsored athlete program. Athletes such as Lizzy Hawker who recently[when?] won the Ultra Trail Tour du Mont Blanc have benefited greatly from the program.

[edit] Rise in popularity, counterfeiting, and theft

In the late 1990s and early 2000s with the rise of wilderness chic, The North Face became a well-known brand and its popularity, especially among youth and college students, increased substantially. Due to the high demand for and the high prices of these products, a market developed for counterfeit (illegally replicated) The North Face goods. Sold on eBay or in other unregulated venues, counterfeits can usually be detected by their misplacement of logos and obvious inferiority of craftsmanship. In addition to this, many counterfeit The North Face products are not made of Gore-Tex or HyVent, despite being so marked.[citation needed]
For the same reasons that The North Face products are counterfeited, they are also prime targets for theft. In early 2005, a group of teenagers from Washington D.C. were arrested on charges including the armed robbery of specifically The North Face jackets from randomly picked students on the street.[6] Allegedly, the thieves would then resell the products for a substantially decreased price.
The massive counterfeiting has prompted the creation of a website with information for consumers intending to purchase North Face items online in 2004.[7] In August 2007, Businessweek interviewed the owner and featured the site in one of their articles.[8]

[edit] Stores


The North Face hiking shoe.
In addition to selling through outdoor retailers, The North Face operates 43 retail locations in the United States (as of November 2010), and additional retail locations can be found worldwide. [9]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Made in China".
  2. ^ "TNFG Forum Discussion of Production Origin".
  3. ^ a b c d "The North Face". Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  4. ^ VF Corporation – VF in the News
  5. ^ a b Horovitz, Bruce (2007-08-20). "New 'badge' of cool: High-tech, high-fashion backpacks". USA Today: p. 1A. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
  6. ^ "Suspects nabbed in jacket, car robberies". The Washington Times: pp. 2. 14 February 2005.
  7. ^ The North Face Guru
  8. ^ "Feeling Trashed on the Web?", Businessweek interview
  9. ^ "North Face Store Finder". November 26, 2009.

[edit] External links

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