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James Graham
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They’re focused on expanding the business. At this stage, their growth is focused on geographic expansion of the menswear business – specifically on the East Coast and to a lesser extent in the Mid West. It looks like they ran a Kickstarter campaign in 2012 to expand into women’s clothing but they don’t currently offer women’s products.
I have no doubt that their Chinese manufacturing facilities and tailors have the capabilities to produce women’s clothing and this would be a very logical point of expansion. If you went in today, you may be able to order a shirt, however I would imagine that there would be different measurement specification points for men’s vs women’s shirts and I am not sure that their interface and communication system with their manufacturer would have the ability to deal with that at this stage (in an efficient way). I do not imagine that this would be an intensive addition when they look to expand.
From a business perspective, I think it is a logical area to grow. I am not sure the market opportunity is as big as for menswear, but I’m sure it is meaningful. The last point I would make is that they would obviously be catering to a different market, so would have to reflect these in an appropriate marketing strategy.
Sounds delicious. Do you think their enlightened hospitality priorities could come under pressure now that they’re public – is there a risk that investors start to creep up the pecking order? Thinking especially over the longer term when organic expansions opportunities may become more limited, when the current guys at the top turnover or if they get vocal investors buying in and exerting pressure.
Do you think that JetBlue has used customer loyalty programs (i.e. frequent flyer, credit cards) as effectively as other airlines? Is this something they could use to better overcome some of the pressures they are starting to face?