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Realtree in 1986, very early in the
camouflage revolution, Bill Jordan decided to try his hand at designing a camo
pattern.
Bill had entered the hunting
industry in 1983, when realtree started Spartan Archery Products in a back room of
his father's boat dealership in Columbus, Georgia. Spartan manufactured
t-shirts at a local mill, which were sold to a variety of large retail
customers across the country. But the commodity garment trade was a tough, low-profit-margin
business that depended on high volume—not easy for an established company and
nearly impossible for a startup. Bill was pinching pennies and fishing bass
tournaments on the side to create income. Meanwhile, he was constantly
searching for ways to separate his company from the crowd.
And that is how Bill came to be
sitting in his parents' front yard one day in 1986, with paper and colored
pencils, sketching and coloring the bark of a giant oak tree that grew there.
Bill believed that by layering the images of twigs and leaves over a vertical
bark background, he could create a three-dimensional appearance that would
match a variety of terrain—and make his pattern distinct.
Using local mills, Bill navigated
the printing process until he finally had a set of camouflage clothing to
photograph.
Always the promoter, Bill began
to photograph the garments on bowhunters in tree stands. Every month for about
eight months, he sent the images to hunting clothing buyers across the nation.
But Bill couldn't send sample
garments, because the camo was doing too good a job disappearing. "We
couldn't get the pattern to stay on the pants," he remembers. "It
rubbed off. I had only one suit and no additional fabric, so I kept sending
photos." When December rolled around, the buyers were clamoring for
garments.
"I didn't have any
garments," Bill recalls. "But I couldn’t tell them that, so I just
sent them some more photos."
The problem would be resolved,
but with no time to spare. Bill had begun working with Eastbank Textiles, and
they met the printing challenge just one week before the Shooting, Hunting,
Outdoor Trade (SHOT) Show. At last, Bill was on his way home with about 30
yards of the printed fabric to be made into garments for the show. But the
airline sent the box of fabric to Columbus, Ohio, instead of Columbus, Georgia.
"I finally got the fabric on
Monday, and the show started that Thursday," says Bill. "I rushed it
to the manufacturer and they made the basic garments by Wednesday morning. I
had naked mannequins waiting at the SHOT Show, and I was sitting in Columbus
waiting to get pants sewn."
That afternoon, Bill flew out for
the SHOT Show.
"There we were, dressing
mannequins at midnight, the night before the show started," Bill recalls.
"The anxiety at that point was unbelievable. I had no credibility in this
business, and there I was—after teasing all these buyers—dressing my mannequins
with the only garments I had in the whole world, just hours before the show
started. I had no manufacturer making this clothing—just Spartan, and Spartan
had no money. I couldn't even have sold to the first retailer if I had wanted
to. I had no licensing agreements to work with and no real idea what I was
going to do next. I only knew I had a few pieces of clothing, a
twenty-by-twenty-foot booth, and hopefully some very influential people
stopping by to see me."
"On the opening morning of
the show, at 9:30, here came the Bass Pro Shops buyer. Ten minutes later, the
Oshman's buyer walked into the booth. After another ten minutes, here came the
Wal-Mart buyer. I had all three of them in the booth at the same time. I was
thinking, 'Now what am I going to do?'"
When Wally Switzer from Wal-Mart
asked Bill if he would be able to make the garments to fill their orders, Bill
admitted he could never begin to handle the orders. It takes a lot of money to
fire up a clothing manufacturing business, and Bill was out of cash. Wally told
Bill that Wal-Mart had a company called Walls that made some
of their hunting clothing. The Bass Pro buyer said the same thing, and so did
the Oshman's buyer. The name Walls kept coming up.
"Then they asked me, 'Who's
your hat company? Who's your glove company?'" says Bill. "I said,
'Hmmm, I don't know, who do you want it to be?'"
The three of them stayed in
Realtree's booth for a long time that morning, talking with Bill and asking
questions. Finally Wally Switzer left and returned with his contact from Walls.
Walls wanted to buy the fabric from Eastbank Textiles, manufacture the garments
with it, and then see how well they sold. That's when licensing was born.
Eastbank Textiles had been
responsible for finding a successful printing process, so that company became
Bill Jordan's first licensee. Eastbank Textiles paid the license fee on each
yard of fabric and passed the cost on to the manufacturer. At that time, no one
really knew how to set up such an agreement, so that first contract that Bill hammered
out with Eastbank Textiles became the model for all the licensing agreements he
has made since.
As a humorous aside,
Spartan-Realtree Products (the company's new name) couldn't afford to pay for
the entire 20-by-20-foot SHOT Show booth that year, so Bill had worked it out
so that he could pay half up front and the rest on arrival.
Representatives from the SHOT
Show stopped by the booth several times during show hours to collect, but each
time, Bill was conveniently gone. Bill didn't have the money to pay them, so he
ducked out the back of the booth whenever one of his employees saw the
officials stalking down the hallway. But at the end of the show, Bill finally
found a way to pay his obligation.
There are dozens of stories like
this, because much of Realtree's early growth was financed on a shoestring
budget. In fact, the company's first facility was a rented empty church. Bill
and two or three employees worked in the upstairs office, they stored boxes in
the baptismal room, and the sanctuary was the company's first warehouse. But
those were exciting times, and each small success was celebrated by the entire
staff.
Early in the licensing process,
Bill realized that promotion of the camouflage pattern was important to his
company's success. He also knew that manufacturers would only promote their own
garments, and wouldn't care which camouflage pattern was on them. It became
clear that Bill would have to do all the promotion himself in order to create
demand for the pattern. So he poured his efforts and meager finances into every
possible avenue that could create positive publicity for Realtree ®. In many
ways, he became a pioneer in the way products are promoted in the outdoor
industry.
That early business risk paid
off. As a result, vision has become Bill's greatest attribute
and promotionhis company's greatest strength. Since that fledgling
start in the late 1980s, Realtree has steadily grown to become a household name
and one of the strongest brands in the hunting industry.
Bill Jordan has never stopped
innovating. Today's camo designs are created using sophisticated computers,
digital cameras, and photo-realistic printing. Realtree stays at the forefront
of the latest developments in fabric design and printing in order to advise
customers (licensees who pay a royalty fee to use the camo patterns) about the
best ways to maintain quality and performance.
Today, Realtree employs more than
80 people in Columbus, Georgia, and also has operations in Europe. And from
that first licensee in 1986, the Realtree business has grown to
include more than 1,500 licensees.