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Performance Splits with Specialized, Giant; Renames Supergo Stores

Carbon Fetish

Monkey
May 6, 2002
619
0
Irvine, CA
Performance Splits with Specialized, Giant; Renames Supergo Stores

AUGUST 01, 2005 -- ASPEN, CO (BRAIN)—Performance, the nation’s largest bicycle retailer, has discontinued its relationship with Specialized and Giant. Performance is also overhauling its 10 Supergo stores into large-scale Performance operations.

Late last week Giant and Specialized announced, individually, that they had terminated their relationships with Performance in agreements with the retail giant. Performance chief executive officer Garry Snook, however, said the decision to end business with both brands was not an agreement between parties, but exclusively a Performance decision.

Performance had been the largest single customer for both brands.

Specialized and Giant both announced the split as positive moves for their remaining dealers.

“Our vision is to be the best bike brand in the world”, said Specialized founder and president Mike Sinyard. “To achieve this vision, we first have to fulfill our mission of becoming the brand of choice of discerning customers and dealers and the supplier of choice for the full-service dealer. We are constantly re-evaluating our channels of distribution and making adjustments to help us fulfill that mission.”

Steve Boyd, Giant USA’s director of sales, said the “decision supports our core goal of remaining dedicated to our loyal dealers while also creating new opportunities for retailers interested in working with Giant.”

Performance’s reason for discontinuing the two brands, according to Snook, was surprisingly similar to an oft-heard complaint from smaller, mom-and-pop retailers: frustration with manufacturers’ demands.

“We believe that we should be the party that decides how to be the retailer in the relationship. We believe that we should decide where a store should be opened, and how they should be merchandized,” Snook said. “Don’t get me wrong, we spend a lot of time working with our vendors in a partnership. But working with them, it absolutely was not a partnership.”

Performance recently opened a flagship 12,000-square-foot store in Atlanta, a decided departure from the company’s traditional 5,000-square-foot operations. Performance has a few other large stores, a format with which it has been experimenting.

“What we wanted to test was whether we could position a Performance store close to where Supergo is in size without the big three of Trek, Giant and Specialized,” Snook said. “And they are working, they are on sales plan.”

Another test in Atlanta was the addition of Schwinn/GT to the mix of Fuji and Iron Horse. Schwinn/GT bikes will soon be carried in all Performance locations.

“They have been like a breath of fresh air,” Snook said, referring to Pacific Cycle, which owns Schwinn/GT.

In addition to the Supergo stores, Performance will convert ten of its largest Performance shops into the large-scale format.

“The larger stores will carry everything that the small ones do, but with more high-end product,” Snook said.

Performance will keep the Supergo Internet and mail order business intact with the Supergo name.

For the complete story, read the Aug. 15 issue of Bicycle Retailer and Industry News
 

sanjuro

Tube Smuggler
Sep 13, 2004
17,373
0
SF
I would imagine they think Weyless can become the next Giant.

Hard to believe, but I saw one of their X single pivots. It did look nice...

But it is hard to imagine turning the LBS into REI. I think bike shops are havens for characters and freaks, and shop customers expect that. Would some old cranky guy make it in REI? But if he is the head mechanic, you respect him...
 

Jeremy R

<b>x</b>
Nov 15, 2001
9,700
1,056
behind you with a snap pop
Ridemonkey said:
The Performance LBS in Boulder sucked arse. They have Jamis too. Yeah - brand powerhouse for sure LOL.
Did it suck worse than their lame arse catalogs they keep sending me, even though I haven't ordered anything from them in 8 years?
Maybe they are holding out that one day I may want to buy a bright orange jersey and a pair of yellow smiley face socks.
 

Carbon Fetish

Monkey
May 6, 2002
619
0
Irvine, CA
sanjuro said:
I would imagine they think Weyless can become the next Giant.

Hard to believe, but I saw one of their X single pivots. It did look nice...

But it is hard to imagine turning the LBS into REI. I think bike shops are havens for characters and freaks, and shop customers expect that. Would some old cranky guy make it in REI? But if he is the head mechanic, you respect him...
Well you don't have to worry. Weyless frames were discontinued in 2005.
 

MTB_Rob_NC

What do I have to do to get you in this car TODAY?
Nov 15, 2002
3,428
0
Charlotte, NC
Jeremy R said:
pair of yellow smiley face socks.
What do you have against Yellow Smiley Faces??


huh? They are some hard working, sign holding Ninja, Firefighting, nut kicking, bald headed bouncing boobies, all around good peeps.

Why must you be a h8r?



:) :nope: :nuts: :drool: :blah:


 

DRB

unemployed bum
Oct 24, 2002
15,242
0
Watchin' you. Writing it all down.
Does anyone wanna bet that the real reason went something like this...

Performance / Supergo: We want to sell your bikes over the internet and via mail order.

Specialized / Giant: No.

Performance / Supergo: No seriously we want to sell your bikes over the internet and via mail order.

Specialized / Giant: NO

Stocking levels are not going to torpedo a big relationship like this. Both sides could have certainly come up with mutually acceptable levels. BUT an issue like internet sales, that would have been a killer.
 

Reactor

Turbo Monkey
Apr 5, 2005
3,976
1
Chandler, AZ, USA
eh.. The new performance store thay opened in scottsdale has to be one of the worse I've ever seen, It's even worse than the Chandler Supergo. They have no parts inventory at all, if some one bought their one BB shell, or one handlebar last week and they haven't been restocked, you are SOL. They have a couple of cheap performance brand wheelsets, almost no parts or tires , and few bikes, amd a pretty large selection of apparel. The supergo in Chandler has a lot of bikes, some parts and apparel, quite a few wheelsets and tires. Specialised is over half of the business at the Chandler store, Giant is a lot of the business at the Scottsdale store.

I think they are making a big mistake. I live near the chandler store and I've seen people from other states "drop in" while they are in town just to buy high end bikes. They are going to loose a lot of business, Some one looking for a Specialized Roubaix, Allez, Enduro, of Demo9 isn't going to buy a mongoose. Ditto for the Giant Reign, Trance, faith ,TCR ot OCR.
 

hooples3

Fuggetaboutit!
Mar 14, 2005
5,245
0
Brooklyn
i was impressed with the supergo in santa monica.. if they take over and keep the stores similar to that i think they will do ok
 

LordOpie

MOTHER HEN
Oct 17, 2002
21,022
3
Denver
Performance sux donkey balls... it's more the staff in the store than anything else. They consistently hire people who don't care and/or are ignorant to offensive depths.
 

Damn True

Monkey Pimp
Sep 10, 2001
4,015
3
Between a rock and a hard place.
DRB said:
Does anyone wanna bet that the real reason went something like this...

Performance / Supergo: We want to sell your bikes over the internet and via mail order.

Specialized / Giant: No.

Performance / Supergo: No seriously we want to sell your bikes over the internet and via mail order.

Specialized / Giant: NO

Stocking levels are not going to torpedo a big relationship like this. Both sides could have certainly come up with mutually acceptable levels. BUT an issue like internet sales, that would have been a killer.
Exactly right but you forgot one:

Performance / Supergo: We want super-special pricing and to wait till year end and buy on closeout then discount below other local retailers.

Glad to see this. It is for the betterment of the industry.

All supergo stores blow, as does performace and bikesource.
 

Angus

Jack Ass Pen Goo Win
Oct 15, 2004
1,478
0
South Bend
I think we are overlooking the big winner here... its obviously Wal-Mart

people will see $300-$500 bikes at Performance and think its the same bike they saw for $189 at WallyWorld, yep for the clueless its a bonanza, a saw a full sus Mongoose w/ disc's for $189 my last trip into WallyWorld, its hard to explain to a moron that its a bad deal..... :devil:
 

oly

skin cooker for the hive
Dec 6, 2001
5,118
6
Witness relocation housing
MunkeeHucker said:
I think we are overlooking the big winner here... its obviously Wal-Mart

people will see $300-$500 bikes at Performance and think its the same bike they saw for $189 at WallyWorld, yep for the clueless its a bonanza, a saw a full sus Mongoose w/ disc's for $189 my last trip into WallyWorld, its hard to explain to a moron that its a bad deal..... :devil:

Dont fotget the Costco buyers as well. They can buy softails with rear air shocks that look like they came from a dump truck, Specialized S-works knockoff frames that look almost exact in color/graphics.... so morons say "yea, i think i saw one of these at "Bike World" and it was $5000 and this one is only $189 ...Score..... and dont forget the Costco Ti hardtail.... a whole 40 lbs of it......

One question though, does this mean specialized will raise their prices more because they arent selling as much product? rAt least for the meantime.....thats gotta hurt to loose such a big customer, no matter how the PR guys spin the story.....
 

Damn True

Monkey Pimp
Sep 10, 2001
4,015
3
Between a rock and a hard place.
In the long run probably not. If you want a Specialized or Giant you will go to the LBS that sells them rather than the BS big-box. It may sting a bit with the sub $500 bikes at first, but it won't hurt them a bit in the $1500+ market.