Rocky Brands

Rocky Brands, Inc., formerly known as Rocky Shoes & Boots, Inc., designs, develops, manufactures and markets outdoor, work, western and military footwear, and other outdoor and work apparel and accessories.[2] The company was founded in 1932 in Nelsonville, Ohio and still maintains its corporate headquarters there.

Rocky Brands outlet store

Rocky Brands, Inc.
Public
Traded asNASDAQ: RCKY
Russell 2000 Component
Industryfootwear
apparel
Founded1932
FounderWilliam Brooks
F.M. "Mike" Brooks
HeadquartersNelsonville, Ohio, United States
Area served
United States, Canada, Europe
Key people
Mike Brooks
(Chairman)
Jason Brooks
(CEO)
Productshunting boots
apparel
work boots
work apparel
western boots
Revenue US$ 259.54 million (2008)
Number of employees
1,600 (2008)[1]
Websitewww.rockybrands.com

History

In 1932, William Brooks, joined by his brother F. M. "Mike" Brooks, founded The William Brooks Shoe Company in Nelsonville, Ohio. Both men had lost their jobs during the Great Depression when Godman Shoe Co. of Columbus went bankrupt. In search of opportunity, the brothers set up shop in a rent-free factory with lent equipment and what would eventually become Rocky Brands was born.

The company originally employed 50 to 100 workers with a production rate of 300 pairs of shoes per day. With a newly constructed addition and the installation of more equipment, by the mid-1930s the factory employed 225 people and production output increased to more than 2,000 pairs per day. During the 1940s and 1950s business continued to grow. While supplying more than one million pairs of shoes and boots for military conflicts such as World War II and the Korean War, the company built key relationships with leading footwear retailers.

But in 1958, William Brooks decided to sell the business to the Irving Drew Shoe Company of Lancaster, Ohio. His nephew, John Brooks, who had worked in the plant full-time since age 17, attempted to make a play for the family-run business, but his efforts were rebuffed. William Brooks refused to sell, telling his nephew the shoe industry had no future.[3]

In 1975, the new owners were getting ready to sell or shut down the business. John Brooks, who stayed through the Irving Drew years as plant manager, bought the business back for $640,000, re-establishing The William Brooks Shoe Company in Nelsonville.[3] John Brooks then brought his son, Mike Brooks, into the business as a product designer and manager. In 1977, Mike Brooks won an award for what now is called the original "Rocky boot," and the company paid $1,000 for a trademark and launched the Rocky brand.

As the company struggled in the early 1980s, the shoe market bounced back, and in 1983, the company began marketing occupational shoes, such as those worn by police officers and mail carriers, under the Rocky brand. It opened up new markets and new distribution methods. Sales rose and in 1988, the company reached $20 million in annual revenue.

Two years after the retirement of John Brooks in 1991, his son, Mike Brooks took the company public, spending nearly three-quarters of a million dollars in the process, changing the name to Rocky Shoes & Boots and initiating the company's initial public offering.

Rocky Shoes & Boots acquired EJ Footwear on December 6, 2004, for $87.7 million in cash and roughly $10 million in stock.[4] The move brought Georgia Boot, Durango, and Lehigh Safety Shoes brands into Rocky's fold and added a licensed footwear brand in Dickies.

In 2006, Rocky Shoes & Boots changed its name to Rocky Brands, Inc.[5] Following the name change Rocky Brands acquired comfort footwear Zumfoot shoes and Michelin footwear.

In February 2014 the company acquired Los Angeles based Creative Recreation for $11 million. In 2015, Creative Recreation's original owner Rich Cofinco was made creative director.[6][7]

Philanthropy

In 2009, Rocky Brands formed the not-for-profit philanthropic organization Rocky Community Improvement Fund (RCIF), which maintains an endowment and awards grants.[8]

Awards

Rocky was awarded Footwear Plus magazine's Plus Award in the work footwear category for 2010.[9]

gollark: You know, I should probably make it detect if everyone leaves.
gollark: --radio connect
gollark: I mean, at current prices, and with these being fairly common elsewhere, I'll just go harvest one from the [REDACTED].
gollark: Oh, *5* kelvin?
gollark: Again?

References

  1. "RCKY: Profile for Rocky Brands, Inc". Yahoo! Finance. 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  2. "Rocky Brands, Inc. - Company Profile Snapshot". Wright Investors' Service. 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  3. John Case. "Sole Survivor". Inc.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  4. W.D. Crotty. "Rocky Shoe's Knockout Punch". The Motley Fool. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  5. "US: Rocky Shoes announces name change". Just-Style.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  6. "Rocky Brands adds Creative Recreation to footwear line". athensmessenger.com. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
  7. "Rocky Brands to buy fashionable footwear business Creative Recreation". Business Journal. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
  8. "Rocky Community Improvement Fund". Footwear Plus Award.
  9. "Footwear Plus Award". Footwear Plus Award.
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