The U.S. Footwear Market

Nov 1, 1998
227 Pages - Pub ID: LA525
Attention: There is an updated edition available for this report.
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I EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The Products

  • Four Product Categories
  • Casual Shoes
  • Athletic Shoes
  • Dress Shoes
  • Rugged Shoes
  • Classification by Gender and Age
  • Classification by Price

The Market

  • Retail Sales Approach $39 Billion in 1998
  • Market Share by Product Category
  • Unit Sales vs Price Points
  • The Boomer Factor
  • Sales to Reach $449 Billion by 2001
  • Table 1-1: The US Market for Footwear: Retail Sales by Category, 1994-2003 (dollars): Casual, Athletic, Dress, Rugged, Total

The Marketers

  • Nike Leads With 11% Share
  • Figure 1-1: Top Marketer Shares of US Footwear Market, 1998 (percent): Nike, Reebok, Nine West, Other
  • Consolidation Around Top Marketers
  • Genesco, Rockport, Stride Rite Team Up with Designers
  • Shake-Out in Sports Endorsements
  • What Everyone Is Wearing
  • Footwear Advertising at $400 Million

Distribution and Retail

  • Direct vs Wholesaler Distribution
  • Mass vs Authorized Distribution
  • Department Stores Lead in Sales
  • But Discounters Do the Most Volume
  • Low-End Retailers Take Dollar Share
  • Retail Consolidation

The Consumer

  • Casual Leather Shoes Most Popular for Both Genders
  • Almost Three-Fourths of Adults Purchase Athletic Footwear
  • Casual Sneakers Are Most Popular Type
  • Demographics Vary by Athletic Shoe Type
  • One-Third of Adults Purchase Dress Shoes
  • Female Purchasers of Dress Shoes
  • Male Purchasers of Dress Shoes
  • Purchasers of Hiking Shoes

Scope and Methodology

  • Market Parameters
  • Report Methodology

II THE PRODUCTS

Introduction

  • Scope of Report

Product Classifications

  • Seven Historical Styles
  • Manufacturing History
  • Four Product Categories
  • Casual Shoes
  • Athletic Shoes
  • Dress Shoes
  • Rugged Shoes
  • Classification by Gender and Age
  • Classification by Price

Product Components

  • Two Major Components for All Shoes
  • The Upper
  • The Bottoms
  • Performance Features
  • Newer Component Features
  • If the Shoe Fits

Product Sizing and Packaging

  • Shoe Sizes and Widths
  • Packaging

Federal Regulations

  • FTC Monitoring
  • Footwear Packaging and Country of Origin
  • The CPSC and Product Recalls
  • NAFTA Assistance for Displaced Workers

III THE MARKET

  • Figure 3-1: US Retail Sales of Footwear, 1994- 1998 (dollars)

Market Size and Growth

  • Note on Methodology
  • Retail Sales Approach $39 Billion in 1998
  • Table 3-1: US Retail Sales of Footwear, 1994-1998 (dollars)
  • Casual Shoe Sales Grow at Expense of Smaller Categories
  • Table 3-2: US Retail Sales of Footwear by Product Category, 1994- 1998 (dollars): Casual, Athletic, Dress, Rugged, Total
  • Sales of Athletic Footwear Stagnate
  • Athletic Sales Trends by Segment
  • Dress Shoe Growth Continues Decline
  • Robust Gains in Rugged Footwear

Market Composition

  • Imports Account for 90% of Sales
  • China Leads in Imports, But Slips
  • Athletic Shoe Imports Up Significantly
  • US Exports Declining
  • Market Share by Product Category
  • Figure 3-2: The US Footwear Market: Share of Dollar Sales by Product Category, 1996 vs 1998 (percent): Casual, Athletic, Dress, Rugged,
  • Department Stores Capture Most Dollar Sales
  • Low-End Retailers Garner Ever-Higher Share of Unit Sales
  • Sales by Season
  • Sales by Region
  • Table 3-3: Regionality of Footwear Purchasing by Product Category and
  • Segment, 1998 (percent): Casual Footwear/Women's and Men's, Athletic, Dress, Rugged

Factors to Market Growth

  • Unit Sales vs Price Points
  • Poor Economy Could Stall Market
  • The Boomer Factor
  • Aging Feet and Feel-Good Shoes
  • Table 3-4: Projections of US Households by Age of Householder,
  • 1999- 2003 (percent and number): Age Under 25 to 75 and Older
  • Falling Between the Generation Gap
  • Title IX and Targeting Women
  • Room for Growth in Children's Shoes
  • Shifting Consumer Habits Lead to Low-End Sales
  • The Quest for Quality
  • The Power of the Brand
  • Going Casual at Work and Leisure
  • If the Shoe Fits
  • Walking and Running Sales
  • Athletic Shoes Going to Extremes
  • Golf Shoe Sales Should Rise with Participation
  • Outdoor Gains for Athletic and Rugged Shoes
  • Figure 3-3: Projected Growth in US Retail Sales of Footwear, 1998- 2003 (dollars)

Projected Market Growth

  • Sales to Reach $449 Billion by 2003
  • Table 3-5: Projected Growth in US Retail Sales of Footwear, 1998- 2003 (dollars)
  • Distribution of Market Growth
  • Table 3-6: Projected US Retail Sales of Footwear by Product Category, 1998-2003 (dollars): Casual, Athletic, Dress, Rugged, Total

IV THE MARKETERS

Marketer Overview

  • Over 175 Marketers of Footwear
  • The Front-Runners: Nike and Reebok
  • Other Principal Marketers
  • Second-Tier and Specialty Marketers
  • Table 4-1: The US Market for Footwear: Top Marketers by Brand Line (8 Marketers)
  • Table 4-2: The US Market for Footwear: Selected Marketers by Brand Line (115 Marketers)

Marketer Shares

  • An Extremely Competitive Market
  • Nike Leads with 11% Share
  • Figure 4-1: Top Marketer Shares of US Footwear Market, 1998 (percent): Nike, Reebok, Nine West, Other
  • Reebok Holds on to Second
  • Nine West Challenges Reebok's Place
  • Adidas, Brown Group, Genesco, and Timberland Follow
  • Rockport Close Behind Timberland
  • Top 10 Athletic Marketers
  • Market Shares Vary by Region
  • Brand Equity in Women's Sector

The Competitive Situation

  • Consolidation Around Top Marketers
  • Marketers/Retailers
  • Comparing Cultures: Nike and Reebok
  • Nike vs Oakley: A New Equation?
  • More Courtroom Drama
  • The Olympics and Marketer Jockeying
  • Close-Outs Affect Athletic Category
  • Designer Names, Apparel Makers Provide Stiff Competition
  • Footwear Marketers Transgress Apparel Territory
  • Luxury Brand Resurgence
  • Eyes Cast Overseas for Continued Growth
  • Chasing the Soccer Crowd

Competitive Profile: Nike, Inc

  • Nike Dominates Athletic Shoe Category
  • From Sneakers to Sports Management
  • Footwear Slump
  • Apparel a Strong Front
  • Backlash Against the Swoosh
  • Nike Beset with "Sweatshop" Criticisms
  • Michael Jordan Becomes a Brand
  • The Swoosh Has Company
  • Prospects for a Rebound

Competitive Profile: Reebok International Ltd

  • Reebok Competes in Sports and Casual
  • Sports Division's Shoe Sales Down
  • Focus Slow in Coming
  • Rockport and Polo Sport
  • Reebok Streamlines, Looks Overseas

Competitive Profile: Nine West Group, Inc

  • Nine West Leads in Women's Shoes
  • From Upscale to Affordable Glamour
  • Executives Leave Amid SEC Investigation and US Customs Probe
  • Marketer Slashes Expenses to Stay Competitive
  • Strict Management + Pursuit of Accessories Market

Competitive Profile: Adidas-Salomon

  • Adidas Merges with Sports Equipment Giant
  • Adidas Gains Ground in United States
  • Team Sponsorship, WNBA Deal Raise Brand Awareness
  • Future May Include Stronger Efforts in Retail and Team Sports

Competitive Profile: Brown Group, Inc

  • Women's Shoes a Specialty
  • Retail Outlets Cover the United States
  • Brown Shoe, Pagoda Market the Brands
  • Brown Group Rides Waves of Change
  • Increased Sales Strength Likely

Competitive Profile: Genesco, Inc

  • Focus on Men's Dress and Casual
  • Journey's Targets Youth Market
  • Johnston & Murphy Has New Image
  • New Store Launch Schedule Ramped Up

Competitive Profile: Timberland Co

  • Timberland Fuses Style with Function
  • From Single Boot to Lifestyle Brand
  • Building Through Retail, Advertising, and New Products
  • Outfitting the Entire Outdoor Lifestyle

Competitive Profile: Wolverine World Wide, Inc

  • A Litany of Brands
  • Hush Puppies Ride Wave of Success
  • Brand Strategy Grows Wolverine Stable

Competitive Profile: Fila Sport SpA

  • Fila Slips
  • Fila USA
  • Future Strategies

Competitive Profile: Stride Rite Corp

  • Athletic, Casual, and Children's Shoes
  • Salvation for Keds?
  • Alliances and Takeover Rumors

Competitive Profile: Airwalk

  • Airwalk Angles for Broader Share of Youth Market
  • Extreme vs Mainstream

Marketing Trends

  • Brand Names Make the Sale
  • Genesco, Rockport, Stride Rite Team Up with Designers
  • Making Names Stick
  • Segmentation to the Extremes
  • Seasonality Giving Way to Mid-Term Offerings
  • Athletic Shoe Marketers: What Happened?
  • Shake-Out in Sports Endorsements
  • Star Power Remains Integral
  • Team Spirit
  • Teen Spirit
  • The Gate-Crashing Option
  • Other Placement Tricks
  • Home Shopping and Shoes Sales
  • Working the Web

New Product Trends

  • What Everyone Is Wearing
  • New Technologies
  • Comfort Blurs Lines Between Casual and Dress
  • Fantasy Vies with Fit
  • The Female Focus
  • Junior Achievement
  • Full Attention to Kids
  • Walking Shoe Marketers Get Hip
  • Cashing In on Adventure Sports
  • Table 4-3: The US Market for Footwear: Selected New Product Introductions, 1997-1998

Consumer Advertising and Promotion

  • Footwear Advertising at $400 Million
  • The Top Advertisers
  • Variety of Positioning
  • The Nike vs Reebok Effect
  • Athletic Ads Celebrate Technology, Downplay Celebrity
  • Nike Ads Win with Black and Urban Consumers
  • Nike Experiments with E-Mail Billboards
  • Reebok Tries to Find Itself
  • Nine West: Function, Fashion, Information
  • New Balance Takes on TV
  • The Candie's Coalition
  • Extreme Sports Marketers Diverge on Advertising Strategies
  • Sideout Shoes in Unlikely Places
  • Samples of Consumer Advertising

Trade Advertising and Promotion

  • Trade Ads: Products on Parade
  • Trade Shows: A Cost-Effective Venue
  • The Super Show
  • Trade Promotions: Standard Approaches
  • Samples of Trade Advertising

V DISTRIBUTION AND RETAIL

At the Distribution Level

  • Direct vs Wholesaler Distribution
  • Mass vs Authorized Distribution
  • Two Distributor Classes
  • The Gray Market
  • Insurance Protects Cargo Through the Distribution Chain
  • Software Ubiquitous but Temperamental
  • Success with Internet Sourcing?
  • New Technology May Transform Distribution-to-Retail Dynamic

At the Retail Level

  • The Retail Channels
  • Department Stores Lead in Sales…
  • …But Discounters Do the Most Volume
  • Low-End Retailers Take Dollar Share
  • Retail Consolidation
  • Profit Despite Weakness
  • Consumers More Sensitive to Price, Convenience
  • Retailers Use Price-Point Brands to Lure Consumers
  • Discount Pricing May Backfire
  • Plusses and Minuses of Personal Shopping
  • The Inventory Balance
  • Excess Inventory Marks Footwear Slump
  • Consumer Needs and Future Strategies

Retail Focus: By Outlet Type

  • Growth of the Branded Concept Store
  • Alternative Sizes an Opportunity for Independent Retailers
  • The Custom Shop
  • Athletic Store Expansion May Be Slowing
  • New Retail Formats Emerging
  • Athletic Stores, Superstores Focus on Fun
  • Slices of the Athletic Shoes Pie
  • Mass Discounters Offer Convenience of One-Stop Shopping
  • Impulse Purchases Drive Mass-Discounter Sales
  • Merchandising Enhancements by Mass Discounters
  • Slices of the Children's Shoes Pie
  • The Direct-Sales Scene
  • Prospects for the Internet
  • Operators on the Internet
  • Hurdles for the Internet
  • Marketing Direct Sales

VI THE CONSUMER

Introduction

  • Note on Simmons Consumer Survey
  • Simmons Data on Footwear

Consumer Overview: Casual Shoes

  • Casual Leather Shoes Most Popular for Both Genders
  • Table 6-1: Purchaser Overview by Casual Shoe Type: Women vs Men, 1998 (percent and number): Casual Leather, Canvas,
  • Western/Cowboy Boots, Rain/Snow Boots (rubber), Other Boots (leather), Slippers

Consumer Focus: Women's Casual Shoes

  • Casual Leather Shoes
  • Canvas Shoes
  • Western/Cowboy Boots
  • Rain/Snow Boots
  • Other Leather Boots
  • Slippers
  • Table 6-2a: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Women's Casual Shoes: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adult Women): Casual Leather, Canvas, Western/Cowboy Boots
  • Table 6-2b: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Women's Casual Shoes: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adult Women): Rain/Snow Boots, Other Boots, Slippers

Consumer Focus: Men's Casual Shoes

  • Casual Leather Shoes
  • Canvas Shoes
  • Western/Cowboy Boots
  • Rain/Snow Boots
  • Other Leather Boots
  • Table 6-3a: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Men's Casual Shoes: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adult Men): Casual Leather, Canvas, Western/Cowboy Boots
  • Table 6-3b: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Men's Casual Shoes: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adult Men):
  • Rain/Snow Boots, Other Boots, Slippers

Consumer Overview: Athletic Footwear

  • Almost Three-Fourths of Adults Purchase Athletic Footwear
  • Casual Sneakers Are Most Popular Type
  • Table 6-4: Purchaser Overview for Athletic Shoes: By Product Type, 1998 (percent and number): Any, Casual Sneakers,
  • Exercise/Walking, Cross-Training, Jogging/Running, Basketball,
  • Tennis, Aerobic, Bowling, Golf, Aerobic/Step, Soccer
  • Nike and Reebok Most Popular Athletic Footwear Brands
  • Table 6-5: Consumer Purchasing of Athletic Footwear by Brand, 1998 (percent and number): 25 brands
  • Demographics Vary by Athletic Shoe Type
  • Marital Status and Age
  • Gender and Product Preferences
  • The Race Factor
  • Regional Differences
  • Casual Sneakers
  • Exercise/Walking Shoes
  • Cross-Training Shoes
  • Jogging/Running Shoes
  • Basketball Shoes
  • Tennis Shoes
  • Aerobic Shoes
  • Bowling Shoes
  • Golf Shoes
  • Aerobic/Step Shoes
  • Soccer Shoes
  • Table 6-6a: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Athletic Footwear: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adults): Casual Sneakers, Exercise/Walking, Cross-Training
  • Table 6-6b: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Athletic Footwear: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adults): Jogging/Running, Basketball, Tennis
  • Table 6-6c: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Athletic Footwear: By Product Type, 1998 (US Adults): Aerobic, Bowling, Golf
  • Table 6-6d: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Athletic Footwear by Product Type: Aerobic/Step vs Soccer, 1998 (US Adults)

Consumer Overview: Dress Shoes

  • One-Third of Adults Purchase Dress Shoes
  • Female Consumer Profile
  • Male Consumer Profile
  • Table 6-7: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Dress Shoes: Females vs Males, 1998 (US Adults)

Consumer Focus: Rugged Shoes

  • Hiking Shoes
  • Men's Work Boots
  • Table 6-8: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Purchase of Rugged Shoes: Hiking Shoes vs Men's Work Boots, 1998 (US Adults, US Adult Men)

APPENDIX I: EXAMPLES OF CONSUMER AND TRADE ADVERTISING

APPENDIX II: ADDRESSES OF SELECTED MARKETERS

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