Sports Business/12/17/2018

How Markus Zanier Is Preparing His Company for the Future

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For the Austrian glove specialist Zanier, the last two years have above all meant change: new company headquarters, new employees, new structures. Markus Zanier, son of the company’s founder and new CEO, explains why this has all been necessary shortly before the family business’s 50th anniversary. And he also reveals which traditions the company absolutely wants to hold on to.

Gut in Schuss: Der Kärntner Freerider Alex Huber vertraut auf Zanier-Handschuhe.
Freerider Alex Huber trusts in Zanier gloves.

Gabi and Werner Zanier founded the family business Zanier in 1969, when they started with the production of gloves. The Zaniers themselves were committed, successful athletes who knew what good gloves were all about. That’s why the Finnish alpine and freeskiing team, the Canadian snowboarding team, the Austrian snowboarding team, and British slalom runner Dave Ryding trust in the company’s expertise, which recently moved from Lienz to Innsbruck shortly before its 50th birthday .

Move to the “Sports City” of Innsbruck

Mr. Zanier, you’ve completely rebuilt your parents’ business in recent years and will be presenting a brand relaunch for the 50th anniversary in 2019. Why was this necessary?
Markus Zanier: In recent years we’ve broken up and renewed many old structures, starting with the move to Innsbruck, digitalization with the introduction of a new merchandise management system and the opening of our web shop, to the outsourcing of logistics to a service provider. A lot has changed internally at Zanier, so in view of the anniversary, it was the right time for us to also revise the products and CI and to set ourselves up in fresher, cleaner way. We want to clearly distinguish ourselves as a brand and show where we come from. After our first conversations, we succeeded.

Why did you move to Innsbruck?
We moved our headquarters from Lienz to Innsbruck a year ago because we wanted to expand, which wasn’t possible in Lienz. Innsbruck as a sports city is the perfect company headquarters for us. We’re closer to our customers here and have better opportunities in terms of international connections.

Geschäftsführer Markus Zanier
Markus Zanier is new CEO of the family business.
Image credit:
Zanier

A Coincidence in the US Helped Founding the Company

Your parents founded Zanier – how did it happen that they wanted to make gloves, of all things?
My father managed an Intersport store together with his brother, and was always a very active winter athlete and skier. He also coached skiing teams, so at some point he went to coach in the US, where he – mostly by chance – got the opportunity to have his gloves developed and produced. That evolved into Zanier. It was, so to speak, a beautiful coincidence.

You’ve stuck with the gloves over all these years; why is there no whole clothing line from Zanier?
To date we’ve made 95 percent of our sales with gloves, and have consciously decided to focus on our core expertise in gloves. As a family business, we want to stay with our original product, and we’re able to do so. We don’t have any venture capitalists at our backs trying to breed us away from our origins. Instead, we’re looking for new sports and expanding our product range with gloves for biking, climbing, mountaineering, and aviation to build up business in the summer.

The Winter Sports Trends 2018/2019 in Pictures

The Bludan Crossblades are true all-rounders: in just a few simple steps, they can be transformed from snowshoes designed for climbing into mini skis for downhill skiing or gliding solutions for even terrain.
Phantom Glide offers a solution for easy ski and snowboard waxing.
Burton adapted their Anti Social Splitboards to the female body in terms of weight, size and riding characteristics.
The Hillstrike REV-17 offers perfect control and comfort thanks to carving style steering and flexible suspension.
Grown skis not only look stylish in their wood look, they are also sustainable and reduce the ecological footprint by half.
Tecnica has the perfect hiking shoe for every (!) foot with its individually adaptable Forge S.
Templa brought a hybrid jacket on the market that makes a good show in the city and the mountains.
Helly Hansen's Paradise Heat ski jacket can regulate its heat at the touch of a button, thus preventing freezing muscles and increasing performance.
The Bludan Crossblades are true all-rounders: in just a few simple steps, they can be transformed from snowshoes designed for climbing into mini skis for downhill skiing or gliding solutions for even terrain.
Phantom Glide offers a solution for easy ski and snowboard waxing.
Burton adapted their Anti Social Splitboards to the female body in terms of weight, size and riding characteristics.
The Hillstrike REV-17 offers perfect control and comfort thanks to carving style steering and flexible suspension.
Grown skis not only look stylish in their wood look, they are also sustainable and reduce the ecological footprint by half.
Tecnica has the perfect hiking shoe for every (!) foot with its individually adaptable Forge S.
Templa brought a hybrid jacket on the market that makes a good show in the city and the mountains.
Helly Hansen's Paradise Heat ski jacket can regulate its heat at the touch of a button, thus preventing freezing muscles and increasing performance.

“We Have Put a Lot of Time, Nerves, and Ideas in the New Collection”

What does the brand relaunch mean for the collection? What’s changed?
In the past one or two years, we’ve really taken a close look at and modified every single model. The design claim now runs through the entire collection. We have put a lot of time, nerves, and ideas into our new collection.

It sounds like you’ve really cleared things out...
Yeah, that was a target, too. But we are active in 28 countries, with huge differences in purchasing power levels, tastes, preferred colors, etc. With 130 models in the overall collection, we’ve shrunk slightly now, but not as much as we initially thought.

Ein paar Stücke Handschuh-Geschichte.
Some pieces of glove history.
Image credit:
Zanier

Own Online Store Since 2017 – the Luxury Is Still There

You’ve also opened an online store, why is that?
We didn’t start until 2017, which was certainly quite late. In terms of history, we’ve always seen ourselves clearly as a trade brand; we didn’t want to put any obstacles in our retailers’ way with our own store. But what I do believe today: If you don’t have your own online store, you’re going to go under and you won’t be taken seriously anymore – even by retail. Our online store is a luxury with about one percent of sales, but I don’t see it as a revenue generator either. We need it to make our own experiences and to be present in countries where our distribution network has large gaps. We remain, clearly, a retail brand.

What have you already learned through your shop?
We’re learning more about our customers. We know their ages, whether they’re male or female, the regions they live in, and which sports they practice. That is very exciting for us.

The industry has been demanding more data exchange between industry and retail for some time now. But not all retailers want that. How do you see it?
I think the more networked we are on the market, the more successful we can be. But I also understand the other side. We try to offer support where we can and may.

The 10 Most Successful Alpine Ski Stars on Instagram

10th Sofia Goggia, 188,800 Instagram followers
9th Kjetil Jansrud, 202,500 Instagram followers: Together with Henrik Kristoffersen and Aksel Lund Svindal, Kjetil Jansrud belongs to the Norwegian triumvirate among the world's top alpine athletes. With five Olympic medals - including one in gold - he has been one of the top athletes for years.
8th Ted Ligety, 276,900 Instagram followers: The US-American is the athletic outsider of this ranking: In the overall World Cup 2017/18 he was only 40th, yet on Instagram he outdoes almost all of the top athletes. No wonder: The 34-year-old two-time Olympic champion has a great career behind him and has successfully made his comeback despite protracted back problems. Can he attack the world's best once again?
7th Anna Veith, 345,900 Instagram followers: Anna Veith became a winter sports star under her maiden name Anna Fenninger. The Austrian is the talk of the town with her commitment to animal welfare, but recently she has been less successful in sports: With 15th place in the overall women's World Cup 2017/18 she was behind all other women in the top 10.
6th Felix Neureuther, 354,600 Instagram followers: After all, a German athlete makes it into the top 10 alpine athletes with the most Instagram-Followers: Felix Neureuther remains the German winter sports figurehead number one even at the age of 34. And fans of biathlete Miriam Neureuther (formerly Gössner) will also get an insight into the life of the winter sports couple at his account.
5th Lara Gut, 397,300 Instagram followers: After a long injury break, Lara Gut returned in 2017/18 and was therefore not yet able to follow up on her most successful times. After all, she managed a World Cup victory last season. In the summer of 2018, Gut married Valon Behrami, the Swiss national soccer player.
4th Aksel Lund Svindal, 450.600 Instagram followers: Aksel Lund Svindal is with his 35 years the routine of the men's World Cup. And the Norwegian can end his career very quickly: Already during the season preparation, he announced that he would end his career immediately if he had the impression that it wasn't enough anymore. The overall World Cup winner of 2007 and 2009 is as popular as ever, which shows his remarkable Instagram following. No Norwegian athlete has more Instagram followers than Svindal.
3rd Marcel Hirscher, 476,400 Instagram followers: The dominator of the Men's World Cup in recent years is also the most successful skier on Instagram. The Austrian Marcel Hirscher won the Great Crystal Ball for the overall World Cup in the last seven years.
2nd Mikaela Shiffrin, 607,200 Instagram followers: Mikaela Shiffrin is the rising star of the winter sports scene. At the age of 23, the US American is already two-time Olympic champion and three-time World champion. Shiffrin, who is rather calm and down-to-earth in public, is already an advertising face for world brands such as Oakley, Bose, Longines or Barilla. She is the future of skiing.
1st Lindsey Vonn, 1.6 Mio Instagram followers: At the age of 33, Lindsey Vonn enters her last World Cup season. Above all, she has one goal: to crack the 86 World Cup victories of the Swede Ingemar Stenmark. Until then, the Olympic champion and two-time World champion is still missing four races she has won. On Instagram she is already unbeaten: Vonn, who is often represented in the Yellow Press because of her private life, is by far the queen of winter sports there.
10th Sofia Goggia, 188,800 Instagram followers
9th Kjetil Jansrud, 202,500 Instagram followers: Together with Henrik Kristoffersen and Aksel Lund Svindal, Kjetil Jansrud belongs to the Norwegian triumvirate among the world's top alpine athletes. With five Olympic medals - including one in gold - he has been one of the top athletes for years.
8th Ted Ligety, 276,900 Instagram followers: The US-American is the athletic outsider of this ranking: In the overall World Cup 2017/18 he was only 40th, yet on Instagram he outdoes almost all of the top athletes. No wonder: The 34-year-old two-time Olympic champion has a great career behind him and has successfully made his comeback despite protracted back problems. Can he attack the world's best once again?
7th Anna Veith, 345,900 Instagram followers: Anna Veith became a winter sports star under her maiden name Anna Fenninger. The Austrian is the talk of the town with her commitment to animal welfare, but recently she has been less successful in sports: With 15th place in the overall women's World Cup 2017/18 she was behind all other women in the top 10.
6th Felix Neureuther, 354,600 Instagram followers: After all, a German athlete makes it into the top 10 alpine athletes with the most Instagram-Followers: Felix Neureuther remains the German winter sports figurehead number one even at the age of 34. And fans of biathlete Miriam Neureuther (formerly Gössner) will also get an insight into the life of the winter sports couple at his account.
5th Lara Gut, 397,300 Instagram followers: After a long injury break, Lara Gut returned in 2017/18 and was therefore not yet able to follow up on her most successful times. After all, she managed a World Cup victory last season. In the summer of 2018, Gut married Valon Behrami, the Swiss national soccer player.
4th Aksel Lund Svindal, 450.600 Instagram followers: Aksel Lund Svindal is with his 35 years the routine of the men's World Cup. And the Norwegian can end his career very quickly: Already during the season preparation, he announced that he would end his career immediately if he had the impression that it wasn't enough anymore. The overall World Cup winner of 2007 and 2009 is as popular as ever, which shows his remarkable Instagram following. No Norwegian athlete has more Instagram followers than Svindal.
3rd Marcel Hirscher, 476,400 Instagram followers: The dominator of the Men's World Cup in recent years is also the most successful skier on Instagram. The Austrian Marcel Hirscher won the Great Crystal Ball for the overall World Cup in the last seven years.
2nd Mikaela Shiffrin, 607,200 Instagram followers: Mikaela Shiffrin is the rising star of the winter sports scene. At the age of 23, the US American is already two-time Olympic champion and three-time World champion. Shiffrin, who is rather calm and down-to-earth in public, is already an advertising face for world brands such as Oakley, Bose, Longines or Barilla. She is the future of skiing.
1st Lindsey Vonn, 1.6 Mio Instagram followers: At the age of 33, Lindsey Vonn enters her last World Cup season. Above all, she has one goal: to crack the 86 World Cup victories of the Swede Ingemar Stenmark. Until then, the Olympic champion and two-time World champion is still missing four races she has won. On Instagram she is already unbeaten: Vonn, who is often represented in the Yellow Press because of her private life, is by far the queen of winter sports there.

“I Don’t See a Solution in 3D Printing Yet”

Where do you produce?
We manufacture the complex products in Asia with our long-standing production partners. Our heatable glove, for example, consists of about 100 individual parts, something we could no longer produce in Europe. But our caps and wool gloves come from Austria, and our socks from Italy.

In the course of digitalization, more and more people are talking about automation in clothing production. Do you see any new opportunities in the coming years?
I’m not seeing them yet. It’s already feasible in the field of knitting, but for highly complex, multilayered, and multi-dimensional gloves as we make them, I don’t see any automated solutions that go beyond cutting yet. Even in 3D printing, I don’t yet see a solution for, say, integrating the warming air chambers.

You’re already bluesign-certified. Are there other plans towards sustainability?
If you’re serious about it, you have to improve every year! Sustainability isn’t a one-year project, it’s like skiing: You want to be continuously evolving. Our next goal is to produce in CO2-neutral way. We’re working on that right now.

“Sports and Style Are Evolving, and We Are Learning with Them”

You also work with many professional athletes. Why is that important to you?
We’re all pretty good on skis at Zanier, but we can never test our products the way professional athletes do. We need feedback from the best to make the best products. That’s why we’ve invested a lot in sponsorship in recent years. This feedback is important for us, even more important than the multiplier function of the athletes.

What feedback have you gotten, for example?
It’s very diverse – sometimes it even makes us laugh, because there are things that we never expected. The snowboard gloves’ seams don’t tear, they burn! The snowboarders glide over the slopes with their fingertips, making the materials melt. We’ve learned that snowboarders need function and style; for mountain athletes, anything even closely reminiscent of design is undesirable. Pure function is what counts. Sports and style are evolving, and we are learning with them.

Strong in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland

How will retail and industry continue to develop?
In principle I think that not fear, but optimism should prevail. Stationary retail will also continue. But I also see that everyone has to be able to do multichannel. For our industry, I see that we need to become faster to be able to react to the extremely rapidly changing conditions.

Our dependence on the weather makes that necessary. We had a very good winter last year, and fortunately the retailers ordered carefully, otherwise we would soon have the first discounts in the retail in view of the weather conditions today. We’re investing in more warehousing. This may not be desirable from a classic financial point of view, but it is necessary from an entrepreneurial point of view and for our long-term goals.

In which countries are you strongest?
We’re extremely strong in Austria and generate around 40 to 50 percent of our sales here. After that are Germany and Switzerland, followed by Italy. Other markets include Denmark, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe, and the US. That’s where we’re building up the business.

Handover Successful Economically and in Terms of Family

You come from the fields of finance and management consulting. Have you always wanted to take over Zanier?
No. But I missed contact with the outside world in the financial sector, and in management consulting it always bothered me that I had to leave the implementation of my concepts to others.

When the question arose in the family as to whether Zanier should be continued or should an exit be prepared, we decided to continue. Despite all the stress my father had as executive, I was always very impressed by how much joy he found in his work. A company handover is always a challenge, and therefore associated with ups and downs. Nevertheless, together we’ve managed to master the handover successfully, both in terms of family and business.