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Levi Strauss & Co. (LS&CO) is a privately held clothing company
known worldwide for its Levi's brand of denim jeans. It was
founded in 1853 when Levi Strauss came from Buttenheim,
Franconia, (Kingdom of Bavaria) to San Francisco, California to
open a west coast branch of his brothers' New York dry goods
business. Although the company began producing denim overalls in
the 1870s, modern jeans were not produced until the 1920s. The
company briefly experimented (in the 1970s) with employee
ownership and a public stock listing, but remains owned and
controlled by descendants and relatives of Levi Strauss' four
nephews.
Levi Strauss & Co. is a worldwide corporation organized into
three geographic divisions: Levi Strauss Americas (LSA), based
in the San Francisco headquarters; Levi Strauss Europe, Middle
East and Africa (LSEMA), based in Brussels; and Asia Pacific
Division (APD), based in Singapore. The company employs a staff
of approximately 10,500 people worldwide, and owns and develops
a few brands. Levi's, the main brand, was founded in 1873 in San
Francisco, specializing in riveted denim jeans and different
lines of casual and street fashion.
From the early 1960s through the mid 1970s, Levi Strauss
experienced explosive growth in its business as the more casual
look of the 1960s and 1970s ushered in the "blue jeans craze"
and served as a catalyst for the brand. Levi's, under the
leadership of Jay Walter Haas Sr., Peter Haas Sr., Paul Glasco
and George P. Simpkins Sr., expanded the firm's clothing line by
adding new fashions and models, including stone-washed jeans
through the acquisition of Great Western Garment Co. (GWG), a
Canadian clothing manufacturer. GWG was responsible for the
introduction of the modern "stone washing" technique, still in
use by Levi Strauss.
Mr. Simpkins is credited with the company's record paced
expansion of its manufacturing capacity from fewer than 16
plants to more than 63 plants in the United States from 1964
through 1974. Perhaps most impressive, however, was Levi's
expansion under Simpkins was accomplished without a single
unionized employee as a result of Levi's' and the Haas families'
strong stance on human rights and Simpkins' use of "pay for
performance" manufacturing at the sewing machine operator level
up. As a result, Levi's' plants were perhaps the highest
performing, best organized and cleanest textile facilities of
their time. Levi's even piped in massive amounts of air
conditioning for the comfort of Levi's workers into its press
plants, which were known in the industry to be notoriously hot.
2004 saw a sharp decline of GWG in the face of global
outsourcing, so the company was closed and the Edmonton
manufacturing plant shut down. The Dockers brand, launched in
1986 which is sold largely through department store chains,
helped the company grow through the mid-1990s, as denim sales
began to fade. Dockers were introduced into Europe in 1993. Levi
Strauss attempted to sell the Dockers division in 2004 to
relieve part of the company's $2 billion outstanding debt.
Launched in 2003, Levi Strauss Signature features jeanswear and
casualwear. In November 2007, Levi's released a mobile phone in
co-operation with ModeLabs. Many of the phone's cosmetic
attributes are customisable at the point of purchase.
Levi Strauss & Co. is a worldwide corporation organized into
three geographic divisions: Levi Strauss Americas (LSA), based
in the San Francisco headquarters; Levi Strauss Europe, Middle
East and Africa (LSEMA), based in Brussels; and Asia Pacific
Division (APD), based in Singapore. The company employs a staff
of approximately 10,500 people worldwide, and owns and develops
a few brands. Levi's, the main brand, was founded in 1873 in San
Francisco, specializing in riveted denim jeans and different
lines of casual and street fashion.
From the early 1960s through the mid 1970s, Levi Strauss
experienced explosive growth in its business as the more casual
look of the 1960s and 1970s ushered in the "blue jeans craze"
and served as a catalyst for the brand. Levi's, under the
leadership of Jay Walter Haas Sr., Peter Haas Sr., Paul Glasco
and George P. Simpkins Sr., expanded the firm's clothing line by
adding new fashions and models, including stone-washed jeans
through the acquisition of Great Western Garment Co. (GWG), a
Canadian clothing manufacturer. GWG was responsible for the
introduction of the modern "stone washing" technique, still in
use by Levi Strauss.
Mr. Simpkins is credited with the company's record paced
expansion of its manufacturing capacity from fewer than 16
plants to more than 63 plants in the United States from 1964
through 1974. Perhaps most impressive, however, was Levi's
expansion under Simpkins was accomplished without a single
unionized employee as a result of Levi's' and the Haas families'
strong stance on human rights and Simpkins' use of "pay for
performance" manufacturing at the sewing machine operator level
up. As a result, Levi's' plants were perhaps the highest
performing, best organized and cleanest textile facilities of
their time. Levi's even piped in massive amounts of air
conditioning for the comfort of Levi's workers into its press
plants, which were known in the industry to be notoriously hot.
2004 saw a sharp decline of GWG in the face of global
outsourcing, so the company was closed and the Edmonton
manufacturing plant shut down. The Dockers brand, launched in
1986 which is sold largely through department store chains,
helped the company grow through the mid-1990s, as denim sales
began to fade. Dockers were introduced into Europe in 1993. Levi
Strauss attempted to sell the Dockers division in 2004 to
relieve part of the company's $2 billion outstanding debt.
Launched in 2003, Levi Strauss Signature features jeanswear and
casualwear. In November 2007, Levi's released a mobile phone in
co-operation with ModeLabs. Many of the phone's cosmetic
attributes are customisable at the point of purchase.
HistoryJacob Davis was a tailor who frequently purchased bolts
of cloth made from hemp from Levi Strauss & Co.'s wholesale
house. After one of Davis' customers kept purchasing cloth to
reinforce torn pants, he had an idea to use copper rivets to
reinforce the points of strain, such as on the pocket corners
and at the base of the button fly. Davis did not have the
required money to purchase a patent, so he wrote to Strauss
suggesting that they go into business together. After Levi
accepted Jacob's offer, on May 20, 1873, the two men received
U.S. Patent 139,121 from the United States Patent and Trademark
Office. The patented rivet was later incorporated into the
company's jean design and advertisements. Contrary to an
advertising campaign suggesting that Levi Strauss sold his first
jeans to gold miners during the California Gold Rush (which
peaked in 1849), the manufacturing of denim overalls only began
in the 1870s.
Levi Strauss started the business at the 90 Sacramento Street
address in San Francisco. He next moved the location to 62
Sacramento Street then 63 & 65 Sacramento Street. By changing
the location of the store the company began to become more
successful.
Levi Strauss advertising signModern jeans began to appear in the
1920s, but sales were largely confined to the working people of
the western United States, such as cowboys, lumberjacks, and
railroad workers. Levi’s jeans apparently were first introduced
to the East during the dude ranch craze of the 1930s, when
vacationing Easterners returned home with tales (and usually
examples) of the hard-wearing pants with rivets. Another boost
came in World War II, when blue jeans were declared an essential
commodity and were sold only to people engaged in defense work.
From a company with fifteen salespeople, two plants, and almost
no business east of the Mississippi in 1946, the organization
grew in thirty years to include a sales force of more than
22,000, with 50 plants and offices in 35 countries.[7]
In the 1950s and 1960s, Levi's jeans became popular among a wide
range of youth subcultures, including greasers, mods, rockers,
hippies and skinheads. Levi's popular shrink-to-fit 501s were
sold in a unique sizing arrangement; the indicated size referred
to the size of the jeans prior to shrinking, and the shrinkage
was substantial. The company still produces these unshrunk,
uniquely sized jeans, and they are still Levi's number one
selling product. Although popular lore (abetted by company
marketing) holds that the original design remains unaltered,
this is not the case: the company's president got too close to a
campfire, and the rivet at the bottom of the crotch conducted
the fire's heat too well; the offending rivet, which is depicted
in old advertisements, was removed.
By the 1990s, the brand was facing competition from other brands
and cheaper products from overseas, and began accelerating the
pace of its US factory closures and its use of offshore
subcontracting agreements. In 1991, Levi Strauss faced a scandal
involving six subsidiary factories on the Northern Mariana
Islands, a U.S. commonwealth, where some 3% of Levi's jeans sold
annually with the Made in the USA label were shown to have been
made by Chinese laborers under what the United States Department
of Labor called "slavelike" conditions. Today, Levis jeans are
made overseas.
Cited for sub-minimum wages, seven-day work weeks with 12-hour
shifts, poor living conditions and other indignities, Tan
Holdings Corporation, Levi Strauss' Marianas subcontractor, paid
what were then the largest fines in U.S. labor history,
distributing more than $9 million in restitution to some 1,200
employees. Levi Strauss claimed no knowledge of the offenses,
then severed ties to the Tan family and instituted labor reforms
and inspection practices in its offshore facilities.
The activist group Fuerza Unida (United Force) was formed
following the January 1990 closure of a plant in San Antonio,
Texas, in which 1,150 seamstresses (primarily Hispanic women
[citation needed]), some of whom had worked for Levi Strauss for
decades, saw their jobs exported to Costa Rica. During the mid-
and late-1990s, Fuerza Unida picketed the Levi Strauss
headquarters in San Francisco and staged hunger strikes and sit
-ins in protest of the company's labor policies.
The company took on multi-billion dollar debt in February 1996
to help finance a series of leveraged stock buyouts among family
members. Shares in Levi Strauss stock are not publicly traded;
the firm is today owned almost entirely by indirect descendants
and relatives of Levi Strauss, whose four nephews inherited the
San Francisco dry goods firm after their uncle's death in 1902.
The corporation's bonds are traded publicly, as are shares of
the company's Japanese affiliate, Levi Strauss Japan K.K.
In June 1996, the company offered to pay its workers an unusual
dividend of up to $750 million in six years' time, having halted
an employee stock plan at the time of the internal family
buyout. However, the company failed to make cash flow targets,
and no worker dividends were paid. In 2002, Levi Strauss began a
close business collaboration with Wal-Mart, producing a special
line of "Signature" jeans and other clothes for exclusive sale
in Wal-Mart stores until 2006. Levi Strauss Signature jeans can
now be purchased at several stores in the US, Canada, India and
Japan.
According to the New York Times, Levi Strauss leads the apparel
industry in trademark infringement cases, filing nearly 100
lawsuits against competitors since 2001. Most cases center on
the alleged imitation of Levi's back pocket double arc stitching
pattern (U.S. trademark #1,139,254), which Levi filed for
trademark in 1978.[19] Levi's has sued Guess?, Esprit Holdings,
Zegna, Zumiez and Lucky Brand Jeans, among other companies.[20]
By 2007, Levi Strauss was again said to be profitable after
declining sales in nine of the previous ten years. Its total
annual sales, of just over $4 billion, were $3 billion less than
during its peak performance in the mid 1990s.[22] After more
than two decades of family ownership, rumors of a possible
public stock offering were floated in the media in July 2007. In
2009, it was noted in the media for selling Jeans on interest-
free credit, due to the Global Recession.
Levi's marketing style has often made use of old recordings of
popular music in television commercials, ranging from
traditional pop to punk rock. Notable examples include Ben E
King ("Stand By Me"), Percy Sledge ("When a Man Loves a Woman"),
Eddie Cochran ("C'mon Everybody!"), Marc Bolan ("20th Century
Boy"), Screamin' Jay Hawkins ("Heart Attack & Vine"), The Clash
("Should I Stay or Should I Go?"), as well as lesser known
material, such as "Falling Elevators" by MC 900 Ft. Jesus and
"Flat Beat" and "Monday Massacre" by Mr. Oizo.
Many of these songs were re-released by their record labels as a
tie-in with the ad campaigns, resulting in increased popularity
and sales of the recordings and the creation of iconic visual
associations with the music, such as the use of a topless male
model wearing jeans underwater in the 1992 adverts featuring
"Wonderful World" and "Mad about the Boy" and the puppet, Flat
Eric, in the ads featuring music by Mr. Oizo.
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