L.L.Bean
43°50′58″N 70°6′32″W / 43.84944°N 70.10889°W
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1912 |
Founder | Leon Leonwood Bean |
Headquarters | 15 Casco Street Freeport, Maine, United States |
Number of locations | 30 stores[1] |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Shawn Gorman (Chairman) Christopher McCormick (President and CEO) |
Products | Clothing and outdoor equipment |
Revenue | US$ 1.52 billion (FY 2012)[2] |
Number of employees | 5,500 (2010)[2] |
Website | www |
This article contains promotional content. (May 2015) |
L.L.Bean, Inc.,[3] branded as L.L.Bean, is an American privately held mail-order, online, and retail company founded in 1912 by Leon Leonwood Bean and currently based in Freeport, Maine, United States. It specializes in clothing and outdoor recreation equipment. Its annual sales were USD $1.52 billion in 2012.[2]
Company history
The company L.L.Bean was founded in 1912 by its namesake, avid hunter and fisherman Leon Leonwood Bean in Freeport, Maine. L.L.Bean, Inc. is a leading multichannel merchant of quality outdoor gear and apparel. The company began as a one-room operation selling a single product, the Maine Hunting Shoe (aka L.L.Bean Boot). Bean had developed a waterproof boot (a combination of lightweight leather uppers and rubber bottoms) that he sold to hunters. He obtained a list of nonresident Maine hunting license holders, prepared a descriptive mail order circular, set up a shop in his brother's basement in Freeport, Maine, and started a nationwide mail order business. By 1912, he was selling the "Bean Boot", or Maine Hunting Shoe, through a four-page mail-order catalog, and the boot remains a staple of the company's outdoor image. Defects in the initial design led to 90% of the original production run being returned: Bean made good on his money-back guarantee, corrected the design, and continued selling them.[1]
In the past five years, L.L.Bean has donated over $6 million toward conservation and land stewardship. The 220,000 sq. ft. L.L.Bean retail store campus in Freeport, ME, is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and welcomes more than 3 million visitors every year. A privately held company, L.L.Bean does not publicly disclose financials.
Leon L. Bean died on February 5, 1967, in Pompano Beach, Florida. He is buried in Freeport's Webster Cemetery.[4] The company passed into the directorship of Bean's grandson, Leon Gorman, from that time until 2001, when Gorman decided to take the position of Chairman, leaving the position of CEO to Christopher McCormick, the first non-family member to assume the title.[5] On May 19, 2013 Shawn Gorman, 47, a great-grandson of the company’s founder, was elected L.L.Bean’s chairman. Leon Gorman has been named chairman emeritus and remains a member of the family-controlled board.
Product line
Since its inception, the company has branched out not only to variations on its boots but to other outdoor equipment such as firearms, backpacks, tents, as well as producing a full line of clothing, which is now its mainstay.
L.L.Bean is a global company sourcing its products from the U.S. and across the globe. It is one of the last multi-channel merchants to still own and operate a manufacturing facility in the United States. Its Brunswick, Maine factory employs more than 450 people who hand-craft the company's iconic products such as the Maine Hunting Shoe, L.L.Bean Boot, Boat and Totes, dog beds, leather goods and backpacks.
In 2000, L.L.Bean formed a contract with Subaru, making L.L.Bean the official outfitter of Subaru, spawning an "L.L.Bean edition" Subaru Outback and Forester for the USA market. The L.L.Bean trim levels on American Subaru vehicles are the top-spec versions, with leather and wood trimmed interiors and all available options offered as standard equipment. This relationship with Subaru ended June 28, 2008.
In 2010, L.L.Bean established a more stylish sub-brand known as L.L.Bean Signature. The Signature line is a modern interpretation of L.L.Bean classics featuring a more modern fit.
Branches
Along with a number of retail and outlet ("factory") stores, the company maintains its flagship store on Main Street in Freeport. This branch, originally opened in 1917, has been open 24 hours a day since 1951, with the exception of two Sundays in 1962 when Maine changed its blue laws; a town vote reinstated the store's open-door policy.[6] The flagship also closed to honor the death of President Kennedy, as well as that of Bean himself.
L.L.Bean opened its first Outlet store in North Conway, New Hampshire in 1988.
Retail and outlet stores
- United States
- Connecticut: South Windsor and Danbury ; outlet store: Orange
- Illinois: South Barrington and Skokie (Old Orchard Mall)
- Maine: Freeport (Campus of stores open 24 hours/day: Flagship Store with attached Hunting & Fishing Store; Bike, Boat & Ski and HOME store); outlet stores: Freeport, Ellsworth, Bangor
- Massachusetts: Burlington, Mansfield, Dedham; outlet stores: Wareham
- New Hampshire: West Lebanon; outlet stores: Concord, Manchester, Nashua, North Conway, North Hampton
- New Jersey: Marlton, Paramus, Freehold
- New York: Albany, Victor (Rochester Metro), Yonkers, Fayetteville
- Pennsylvania: Upper Saucon Township, Pittsburgh Ross Park Mall, King of Prussia Mall
- Virginia: McLean
- Minnesota: Mall of America [7]
- Vermont: Burlington [7]
- Colorado: Lone Tree [7]
Outdoor Discovery Schools
L.L.Bean has education programs connected to many of its retail outlets to support the outdoor interests of its customers. Customers can sign up to participate in a number of outdoor activities: all equipment and instruction are provided. Activities include archery, clay shooting, fly casting, and sea kayaking. More advanced classes are conducted as well, and must be reserved in advance. Snowshoeing and cross country skiing are available December to March. All of the other retail stores (there are now 20 total outside of Maine) offer fly casting and kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding .[9]
Competitors
The major competitors for its outdoor gear line include Columbia Sportswear, Red Oxx, Patagonia, Marmot, Helly Hansen, The North Face, Orvis, REI, Timberland and many other sporting goods retailers in the United States.
L.L.Bean's clothing line faces a rather different set of competitors. There, they compete with staples such as J.Crew, Lands' End, Barbour, Orvis, Brooks Brothers, Gant, Lacoste, Nautica, Ralph Lauren Corporation, Eddie Bauer, Banana Republic and many others.
In popular culture
- Broadway musicals Rent (1995) and Grey Gardens (2006) both reference L.L.Bean in song lyrics. In Rent it can be heard in the song "Christmas Bells" and "The Revolutionary Costume for Today" from Grey Gardens.
- The Official Preppy Handbook, an ironic description of upper-class and upper-middle-class life in America, describes L.L.Bean as "nothing less than Prep mecca."
- Author Hunter S. Thompson referred to wearing L.L.Bean shorts in a number of his works, most notably during the "Wave Speech" featured in chapter 8 of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
- In the movie Beetlejuice, Otho when seeing one of the rooms in the house says "deliver me from LL.Bean"
- The 1990 Paul Rudnick novel, I'll Take It was a humorous tale of a Long Island mother taking some of her children on a Fall shopping trip through New England with L.L.Bean being the final destination. As the plot unfolds, the mother divulges to her son that she is actually planning to rob L.L.Bean in order to update her and her husband's furniture in their retirement.
- The Muppet series Bear in the Big Blue House satirized L.L.Bean by having the main character Bear order a clock out of a catalog called "L.L.Bear."
- In Gossip Girl season 1 episode All About My Brother young social climber Jenny Humphrey insults his brother Dan (and his choice of pants) while trying to defend his affluent boyfriend: "I understand that you're threatened by him, because clearly he's everything you wanna be. He's good-looking and worldly, a legacy at Dartmouth. But even you should know that jealousy clashes with L.L.Bean pants."
- In the film Best in Show (film), the preppy, neurotic couple Meg and Hamilton Swan laud the way shopping at L.L.Bean lets them buy clothes without actually interacting with other people.
- In an the American Dad! episode "My Morning Straitjacket", Roger is reading an issue of L.L.Bean in the wall cavity.
- The blog Your LL Bean Boyfriend features the male models of the LL Bean Catalog paired with captions that the perfect boyfriend might say.[10]
References
- ^ a b "L.L.Bean - Our Story" (PDF). L.L.Bean. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
- ^ a b c "L.L.Bean 2013 Company Fact Sheet" (PDF). L.L.Bean. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
- ^ "L.L. Bean, Inc.: Private Company Information". Bloomberg Businessweek. Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved November 29, 2011.
- ^ Rogak, Lisa (2004), Stones and Bones of New England: A guide to unusual, historic, and otherwise notable cemeteries, Globe Pequat ISBN 0-7627-3000-5
- ^ "Visit the L.L. Bean Retail Store or Outlet Near You". L.L.Bean. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ^ "95th Anniversary Timeline". L.L.Bean. p. 1962. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
- ^ a b c d http://blog.llbean.com/2014/09/three-new-stores-in-three-weeks-l-l-bean-arrives-in-vermont-minnesota-and-colorado/
- ^ "About L.L.Bean: Company Information". L.L.Bean. Retrieved 2015-03-24.
- ^ Walk On Adventures at LLBean.com
- ^ Murphy, Edward. "Swooning over 'Your LL Bean Boyfriend'". Portland Press Harold. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
Notes
- Abelson, Jenn (September 1, 2006). "6 years later, L.L. Bean gets back in gear for expansion". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
- "#259 LL Bean". The Largest Private Companies. Forbes. November 9, 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
- Gorman, Leon (2006). L.L.Bean: The Making of an American Icon. Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 1-57851-183-6.
- Montgomery, M.R. (1984). In Search of L.L.Bean. Little Brown. ISBN 0-316-57864-9.
- Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (16 November 1984). "In Search of L.L.Bean by M. R. Montgomery". The New York Times.
- Montgomery, M. R. (December 27, 1981). "The marketing magic of L.L.Bean". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
- "African-American Boycott of L.L. Bean Enters 80th Year" (Flash video). The Onion. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
- Reidy, Chris (July 28, 2000). "Journey of discovery". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
- Sharp, David (March 14, 2011). "LL Bean Reverses 2 Years of Sales Declines". Associated Press. ABC News. Retrieved November 29, 2011.
External links
- Freeport, Maine
- Companies based in Cumberland County, Maine
- Privately held companies based in Maine
- Economy of the Northeastern United States
- Privately held companies in the United States
- Online retail companies of the United States
- Retail companies of the United States
- Sporting goods retailers of the United States
- Clothing brands of the United States
- Companies established in 1912
- Camping equipment manufacturers
- Mail-order retailers
- Outdoor clothing brands
- 1912 establishments in Maine