High Country Business Review 2
Transcription
High Country Business Review 2
COVER “We have a high-class clientele here, so if (the pajamas) are good enough for them, they’re good enough for anyone,” Fenn said. MacTavish’s signature prints have a 1950s-kitch feel. For example, her Topless Cowboy pjs feature muscle-bound cowboys wearing worn-out jeans. Customers can pair the bottoms with a knit top that reads: “Je Suis (I Am) Sexy.” For a feminine, playful feel, she sells a Backcountry Babes ensemble, with pin-up girls posed on flannel. As she says, “It’s hard to not look or feel sexy when you’re wearing a pin-up girl. You exude sexiness, and you get a lot of attention.” Her Sassy Kitty offers a classy animalistic feel, with its leopard print flannel adorned with hot pink satin trim and crystal buttons. The glamour leopard robe includes a detachable ostrich feather boa. Her summer silks easily crossover into daywear, with their flowing, glamorous camisoles. She began her business, BRIGI, in the summer, when she wasn’t teaching skiing in Aspen. She showed her wares at Aspen’s Saturday market, where she sold thousands of dollars of pjs. Rather than follow the fashion industry’s norm of creating one new collection every season, MacTavish debuted fresh designs every Saturday, as part of her market research. Her customers’ responses and suggestions for change helped perfect her design. She began receiving custom orders, mostly from second homeowners, and that’s when she knew she had a captive audience. Though she never studied fashion, she took marketing, business, writing and math classes in college. Her belief: If you have a good foundation in any type of education, you know how to learn. A quick class at the Small Business Development Center in Glenwood Springs gave her the knowhow to write a business plan. Wells Fargo has backed her company ever since. Now, her sleepwear sells in boutiques, including Bare Essentials in Edwards; Stein Eriksen’s Clothing in Snowmass and Park City; Pampered Passions in Denver; and Princess Kept the View and T-BAR in Boulder. Her cozy presence extends to stores in Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles and Canada. Soon, she’ll employ about five people, because she’s setting up a distribution center for her online orders. “My customers love my product, and I don’t use that term loosely,” she said. “They have a strong emotional attachment to their pajamas. I get letters saying it’s become a part of their family.” One of the things people love about her product is her commitment to manufacture it in the United States. Workers in Pennsylvania sew her pajamas. The clothing ranges in price from $165 to $330. Though pjs weren’t always in her career plans, she knew she was going to be an entrepreneur at the age of 12, or even younger, she said. Her mother owned small businesses, which inspired her. When she saw an opening in the pajama market, she took it. “I need to rule the pajama world and show people the power of pajamas, because pajamas are so nurturing; they’re so cozy,” she said. “It’s kind of an uncertain world we live in, but you can get in your pajamas and feel safe and you have lots of love. And (I’ve found) a lot of other people feel the same way.” ■ “They have a strong emotional attachment to their pajamas. I get letters saying it’s become a part of their family.” — Bridget MacTavish Commercial Real Estate Expertise in Summit County Is your business looking to lease or purchase space? Call for a FREE CONSULTATION Darren Nakos 970-389-5599 commercial@landmarkregroup.com PEACHEY PHOTOGRAPHY/WILLIS PEACHEY The design on these pajamas is called “Backcountry Babes.” HIGH COUNTRY BUSINESS REVIEW SEPTEMBER 2006 5