Surf ethos soaked up globally
Andrew Edwards
Teenagers in Shanghai can dig Orange County surf culture as much as
California dudes, Quiksilver, Inc. chairman Robert McKnight Jr. said
of the local surfwear business.
McKnight spoke to a full room recently at the Sutton Place Hotel
in Newport Beach. During his address, McKnight touched on the
potential for the teenager-centered boardsports industry to use the
allure of beach culture to enhance its worldwide appeal.
“Half of the world’s population lives at or near the beach and the
other half can’t wait to get there,” McKnight said.
Quiksilver, based in Huntington Beach, is one of many surfwear
companies that call Orange County home.
Local clothing companies in and around the boardsports scene
include Costa Mesa’s Volcom, Inc. and Hurley International.
In his introduction to McKnight’s address, Orange County Forum
chairman Bryan Murphy credited McKnight as a driving force behind the
exportation of the local beach image.
“You, as an individual, have taken our Orange County beach
lifestyle and culture and have brought it and taken it to more people
on the globe than any other individual,” Murphy said.
The Orange County Forum hosts monthly events featuring speakers
from the worlds of politics, business and academia.
Since 1999, McKnight said the number of people who surf,
skateboard or snowboard has doubled. Though he is “absolutely amazed
at the growth of our industry,” McKnight asserted Quiksilver and
other surf brands can do more to promote the boardsports world in a
positive light.
“We really want to set an example to the rest of the world that
we’re legitimate companies,” McKnight said. “We make clothes for kids
that are sometimes misunderstood.”
In the youth-driven surfwear market, McKnight conceded Quiksilver
can take pot shots from teenagers for being too old or too big.
Companies trying to market clothing to often iconoclastic boardsports
enthusiasts are constantly challenged to prove their authenticity.
“You put an ad in front of them and they can smell a phony a mile
away,” McKnight said.
Local beaches are not the only reason surf companies have
clustered in Orange County, McKnight said. Other key factors aiding
the industry were access to John Wayne Airport and the presence of
surf magazines in the county.
Quiksilver was founded in Australia in 1970. In the 1970s McKnight
and friend Jeff Hakman obtained a license to sell Quiksilver
boardshorts in the United States.
The company went public in 1986 and Quiksilver has since grown to
include multiple clothing lines. McKnight expects his firm’s buy of
French winter sports company Rossignal Group SA to close in July.
When he started out with Quiksilver, McKnight drove along the
coast marketing clothing to California surf shops.
He said he predicts the company’s 2005 sales will total about $2
billion after the Rossignal deal closes.
“I think the moral of the story is, if you have a kid graduating
from college and they say they want to spend a year at the beach
selling T-shirts, you might want to give that a second thought,”
forum president Jane Samson said.
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