Category Archives: Economics and Business

The Domestication of Adventure Travel

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Adventure, excitement, the lure of wilderness exploration; sometimes it can feel like everyone but you is cliff diving, riding dirt bikes in Baja, or bagging 14,000-foot peaks. Whether Millennials are staring in despair at their friends’ Instagram feed, or Boomers and Gen Xers are recalling past exploits, there is an experience gap between people’s self-image, and their daily life. Travel goods products are bridging that gap, crossing over from action sports, adventure travel and the outdoor industry to the travel goods industry. Featuring design cues and innovation from more extreme pursuits, these clever, stylish bags and accessories are making commuters, business travelers and family campers feel a little cooler.

Franz Wieshuber, SVP sales and marketing for LCI Brands, sees this as part of a larger authenticity trend. “Consumers want to feel brand authenticity. I’m not sure many people really need a Yeti ice chest that keeps your beer cold for a week.  Nevertheless, that’s what they’re willing to pay for. The same applies to an Osprey backpack.  Very extreme, but my kid uses it for a school backpack because it’s cool.” Consumers are voting with their wallet to get all the technology and authenticity they can afford, rather than all the technology they need.

In some instances, bags with a rugged style and outdoor credibility appeal to consumers who will never take the road less traveled, just as kids in the Midwest buy surf trunks, boomers own “Born to Be Wild” motorcycle jackets but no motorcycle, and commuters tuck their laptop in a bike messenger bag even if they’ve never delivered a package on a “fixie” bike.

Other travelers remember an adrenaline-fueled life before family and work took priority, and have preserved a taste for brawny products and niche brands. OGIO marketing manager Nathan Adelman calls this a “moto attitude.” Similarly, United by Blue customers have an outdoorsy attitude, whether they are “taking our backpack camping or on the subway, or wearing our flannel for fly fishing or bar hopping” shares United by Blue PR Associate Ethan Peck.

The adventure-crossover trend has spawned best-selling products for companies in the travel goods industry, as well as their retailers. Read on for products that are expanding the appeal of travel goods, and the specific market segments they address.

Attainable Adventure

Wieshuber uses a term from the outdoor industry to describe the weekend-warrior market segment: “outsidesy.” He acknowledges that “the top of the outdoor/adventure pyramid is small and extreme, but the middle/bulk of the market is vastly larger and more moderate. These consumers are called ‘outsidesy’ rather than ‘outdoor extremists.’  We’re the car campers, weekend warriors, etc.  We love the extreme brands, but really don’t need the true extreme functionality of many of their products.”

During weekend trips and active vacations, the outsidesy consumer practices a kind of do-it-yourself (DIY) glamping. Their picnics and car camping trips get them out, but not that far out. And often they are taking all the comforts of home along with them. One key supplier of the DIY glamping set is GSI Outdoors, and their sister company Outside Inside Games. As described by Co-Owner Don Scott, this fun-loving family business “began as a collection of enamelware and has evolved to include everything needed for exceptional food and drink in the outdoors as well as for fun campground games.  We consider ourselves to be at the forefront of glamping and hope our customers will enjoy raising a GSI Outdoors Nesting Wine Glass as they play a fierce game of Outside Inside Backpack Bocce!”

Another key characteristic of the outsidesy consumer is that they see no need to unplug, and are always Instagram-ready. LCI Brands has developed a comprehensive collection of WaterSeals™ pouches and hard cases, allowing their customers to bring all their electronics with them into the great outdoors. Wieshuber shares that “our new WaterSeal magnetic waterproof pouches have really taken off and we’re expecting a big year next year.” The cell-phone size WaterSeals Floating Waterproof Zip Pouch is touchscreen, camera and video usable. And the tablet-size WaterSeals Magnetic Waterproof Phablet Pouch not only allows your tablet to function as an underwater camera, voice and audio function work through the bag. So you can not only record and share video and images, you can take a break from your boating or swimming to watch the latest lol cat video.

The Weekday Style of Weekend Warriors

The outsidesy consumer doesn’t change their identity when they go from the weekend to the weekday. They still think of themselves as adventurous, rugged and attuned to nature, and they want workweek accessories that fit both their sense of self, and have the technical features they’ve come to expect.

The United by Blue 30L Base Backpack is sold in a variety of colors that reference the outdoors, including a topography print that specifically evokes mountaineering adventures (for the former girl scouts and boy scouts who remember learning to count contour lines). Peck describes United by Blue packs as being “durable, functional, and the perfect size to take you from the office to the outdoors” and the 30L Base Backpack is all of that. Voluminous enough to use as luggage (for the experienced packer) and sturdy enough to be a day pack, it also has tech features like a laptop sleeve. And like all United by Blue packs, it’s made from recycled polyester and vegetable tanned leather and comes with a lifetime guarantee. It’s a great multi-use bag for someone whose self-image (but not their full-time occupation) is adventure.

United by Blue’s bags are also intimately connected to their mission to remove a pound of trash from the water for every product they sell. In 2010, United by Blue hosted their first cleanup the same week they sold their first T-shirt. In the seven years since then, they’ve planned 202 cleanups in 27 states, removing 1,039,456 lbs. of trash. The mission of United by Blue has become a way to engage with customers. “We are focused on building relationships with consumers by facilitating incredible experiences through the lens of sustainability and conservation” says Peck. “Our pledge to remove one pound of trash per product sold means rallying our team and like-minded volunteers to pick up plastic bottles, tires, appliances, and even abandoned trucks from rivers, streams, creeks, and beaches. Our commitment has really resonated with our customers, both consumers and retailers who also feel strongly about responsible, durable goods.”

OGIO is known for overbuilt bags aimed at the motorsports industry. In the opinion of Adelman, “picking out a backpack is similar to picking out clothes. People have a style preference, and they value a sense of style. Bags such as the OGIO Rebel Pack LE Benjamins Backpack (with a $100 bill printed fabric exterior) is an example of a strong style statement. It’s a moto attitude that can be carried over into a person’s daily life, whether they’re going to a business meeting or out with the family on the weekend.”

While many bags designed for extreme sports and outdoor applications are more than adequate for work day and commuter use, the workweek is also enhanced by accessories crossing over to the travel goods industry from the outdoor industry. GSI Outdoors has taken the evolution of adventure travel products from classic camping and hardcore backpacking to glamping, and one step further to daily lifestyle items like the Stainless Commuter Java Press. This coffee press can be used to make French press-style coffee while camping or backpacking, but you can also drink out of it in the car like a travel mug. This means the very same, very personal product can be used for a weekend of backpacking as well as a week of commuting.

While LCI has found success with WaterSeals waterproof pouches and cases for electronics, Matador is selling out of the Droplet XL, a fully functional drybag that protects 20 liters of gear, but stuffs down into a palm-size silicon carry bag attached to an aluminum carabiner. While the Droplet XL would function perfectly well on a serious white-water rafting expedition, it also works in everyday life to hold damp clothes or a wetsuit after a gym visit or a pre-work surf session. A drybag is an adventure staple, and by making a drybag this small, light and convenient, anyone can have a Droplet XL clipped to their daily briefcase or laptop bag in case of emergency.

Adventure to Travel Crossover

When the outsidesy consumer does go on a work trip or family vacation, they choose luggage, carry-ons and personal items with innovative outdoor-capable features and an adventurous appeal. One example is the Matador Hydrolite hydration pack, a feature-rich, packable 8L bag which includes a 2L bladder, in-line Sawyer® MINI water filter, and a fully-waterproof main compartment with sealed seams. The water filter is in the tube of the hydration bag, so after you fill up the bladder, the water is filtered automatically as you drink through the tube. Instead of taking a small daypack and buying an endless number of bottles of water while exploring a new city, many travelers are choosing the Hydrolite. Tamara Keller, director of sales for Matador has seen that “travelers want high-end and will pay for quality products, with new technology – and that’s where Matador exceeds. The consumers have spoken, and the travel industry is changing and morphing into a new generation of high-end, amazing quality, hip bags.”

Eagle Creek also excels at developing travel goods versions of outdoor industry staples. As an example, where Matador reimagined the hydration pack, Eagle Creek took an internal frame pack for backpacking and turned it into the perfect piece of luggage. The Deviate Travel Pack 60L is available in a men’s and women’s fit, as well as in a larger-volume model. The Deviate unclips to become a carry-on size 45L travel backpack with a 15L clip-on daypack. The bag has an obvious backpacking lineage, so it will to appeal to a traveler with an outsidesy self-image, as well as the need or desire to carry their own stuff. However, the Deviate is not a dumbed down expedition piece, it’s a been smartened up for travel. Urban-travel features include the Check-in Fly™, Digital Safe-Zone and RFID pocket, as well as full integration with Eagle Creek’s Pack-It™ System. The Deviate is also lockable, with reflective accents for nighttime visibility while walking through a city. The Check-in Fly requires explanation: it’s a rain fly of the type found on some serious hiking backpacks, but it includes a zipper which closes it up over the backpack straps, and two handles to turn it into a duffle. This feature protects the bag from snagging and damage by airline baggage handlers.

Of course, some of the bags consumers choose for vacations and work trips are truly designed to be used for a completely different purpose, like a hike through the Himalayas or schlepping motorcycle gear. But the fact that they are over-built for an extreme user makes them appealing to the average outsidesy traveler, who is attracted to a bag with serious durability and authenticity.

Adelman believes this is a prime strength of the OGIO brand.  “OGIO has always resonated with Moto GP and non-traditional 2-wheel and 4-wheel sports. OGIO is for the on-the-go adventurer, whether they are hiking, dirt biking or on a trip to Paris, they are all adventures for the person who is doing it. It’s a state of mind, that carpe-diem attitude, it’s not an age or an activity. We see OGIO bags as your partner in crime. “

A perennial favorite in the OGIO collection is the Rig 9800 Travel Bag, designed primarily for hauling moto gear to the track. With a completely solid hard-shell bottom called The Sled, and a 7500-cubic-inch capacity, the Rig 9800 tips the scale at 14.2 lbs. But for those who need to take many trips a year and haul a lot of gear, the overbuilt, voluminous Rig 9800 is the way to go.

Adelman reflects on success bred from authenticity: “Between Callaway and OGIO we are involved in a lot of sports that have a really avid, loyal fan base. We are known for golf and moto sports such as dirt biking, but also triathlon: we make a bag for Ironman with wet/dry pockets and space for water bottles and a helmet. Discerning, avid users are the best customer base because they will pay more to buy a superior product, either because they need the features, it fits their self-image, or both. That is where we win.” Adelman’s statement applies to the many brands in travel goods selling product for adventure-minded consumers. Outdoor and adventure style, authenticity and features combine to form a compelling reason to buy that benefits all of us in the travel goods industry.

This story originally appeared in the Winter 2017 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

 

Acquire or Inspire

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TRAVEL GOODS SUPPLIERS JOIN FORCES IN THE AGE OF CONSOLIDATION

Mergers, acquisitions, partnerships and industry consolidation are a fascinating and unnerving part of today’s global economy. In the last decade, we in the travel goods industry have tracked the number of domestic U.S. airlines as they went from 18 carriers to 10. Four of the remaining airlines (American, United, Delta and Southwest) now make up 80% of domestic capacity. The remaining six regional (Alaska, JetBlue, Hawaiian) and budget carriers (Spirit, Frontier, Allegiant) each command less than 5% of the market. While the smaller players may reshuffle, most experts believe that no additional mergers are possible for the big four carriers without violating anti-trust regulations. This, to everyone’s best guess, is the final, mature form of the airline industry, post-consolidation – and we all watched it take shape.

But the airline industry is not the travel goods industry, even if we feel like close cousins. Looking around the travel goods industry, it’s clear that some supplier consolidation is occurring (and has been going on for a while), side-by-side with more unusual and creative partnership. This places us squarely in line with the rest of the global economy, which has seen a surge in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). According to a Forbes article, “The 4 Biggest Trends in Mergers and Acquisitions For 2017,” 2015 was the largest year on record for M&A, with 2016 following as the third largest year on record. The record for most mergers in a month was set in October of 2016.

While it’s widely believed that all mature industries go through a consolidation phase (as with the airline industry), what is driving this current cross-industry international trend? The largest factor is also the simplest: because they can. Companies that survived the recession have been conservatively stockpiling cash. But now that the economy feels more stable and interest rates remain low, executives are looking to put that money into circulation. How much money? Cash balances for the S&P 500 (excluding financial companies) were widely estimated to be at $1.5 trillion at the beginning of 2017. In an informative survey of 1,000 corporate executives by Deloitte, “M&A Trends Report 2016, Year-End Edition,” respondents detail their motivation, strategy and plans for 2017. Executives at 65% of the companies surveyed said their cash reserves have increased, up from 58% at the end of the second quarter of 2016. With those increasing war chests, 75% forecast more deal activity, and 64% believe deal size will also be larger. What is driving these deals? Predictably, expanding and diversifying products and services is the number one reason for M&A activity, at 22%. Right behind it, 19% report technology acquisition as their primary driver, up from 7% in 2015. Also at 19%, executives hope to expand their customer base in a specific, strategically important geographic location. Talent acquisition comes in at 8%, a number that has doubled from the previous year.

While international business trends are fascinating to study, they don’t necessarily apply to our industry, or predict our future. We’re a mature industry with a twist, where new technology, traveler and airline requirements have the power to shake up the status quo. And while our industry has seen its share of traditional M&A activity, travel goods companies seem unusually partnership-oriented. Whether it’s expansion and diversification or technology and talent acquisition, our industry is full of creative collaborations that are successfully achieving M&A goals – without the merger.

mutually assured success

While everyone in the travel goods industry knows Magi Raible, not everyone knows that LifeGear Design was originally conceived of as a quiet, low-profile, private-label design and sourcing company. After founding LifeGear in the summer of 2013, Raible stuck to her private-label plan for a matter of weeks. Then a successful sales pitch to TravelSmith became a gear bag featured on the cover of the 2014 TravelSmith Gear Guide Summer Insert, which in turn inspired a collection, which only six months later was launched at The 2014 International Travel Goods Show.

Raible credits part of her success with seeing unmet market demand at a middle price point for lightweight, recycled-fabric bags. She was one of the first to identify and design specifically for personal-item requirements and under-the-seat space, so as budget airlines began charging for a carry-on, travelers could beat the system. Raible describes that first Show in 2014, when “people were thanking me for developing the products their customers wanted. It was an incredible feeling, getting hugged and getting orders at the same time.” Perhaps as important as finding a niche in the marketplace, Raible’s career at The North Face and Kiva gave her 30 years of innovation inspiration to draw on, working with materials, fabrics and engineering techniques found in the outdoor but not in the travel industry. Talking to Raible does give the sense that her restless curiosity could find inspiration from any source: “One day I got into a conversation with the phone-repair guy about his tool bag. I took pictures, I can see a personal item that we can develop out of that.”

Raible has continued to fuel the success of LifeGear with unconventional inspiration from development partnerships. Private label projects in the last year include an L.A.-stylish luggage collection produced in Italy, an anti-theft tote bag, and a fashionable millennial-focused collection of casual acid-wash denim, canvas and leather bags. LifeGear has also been a silent force behind some of the most technologically creative products in recent years. LifeGear was responsible for the first production runs for industry newbie and 2015 Buzz Award winner ShelfPack by McKaba Luggage. Lifegear also introduced a fledgling Aero-Tray (now aSTAND) to factories and helped them with distribution. As Aero-Tray became more self-sufficient, LifeGear continues to support them with some operational duties. Last year LifeGear signed an agreement to distribute high-technology luggage brand Numinous London™. While development projects provide inspiration and a diversified income stream, as these partnerships evolve LifeGear receives the very benefits sought by the executives in the Deloitte survey: diversification, new technology, and access to new markets and talent. “When Numinous was setting up their distribution I went to China with them, so I could work on building my own distribution network to bring LiteGear product to China’s emerging middle class,” Raible explains. “In addition, Numinous now keeps me in the loop with the most advanced technology on the market.” Finding the benefits of M&As in relationships that are closer to best-friendship than marriage is possible because Raible is able to look at these relationships more creatively. As Raible reports: “Return on my investment is good, but it’s not merely financial, it’s in the form of knowledge, technical know-how, shared talent and connections. The knowledge flow is not one-way, these are mutually beneficial partnerships.”

a winning partnership plan

LCI Brands got its start in the travel goods industry in 1971, with the production of a wheeled luggage trolley. Since those early years, LCI Brands has developed a full accessory line, changed ownership, introduced the Lewis N. Clark brand name, began offering a private label and product development service, and started distributing partner accessory brands. Throughout its evolution, LCI Brands has stayed focused on becoming a complete supplier of travel goods accessories.

In order to achieve their healthy rate of growth, LCI Brands could have chosen to pursue an M&A model rather than a distribution model. (In fact, there is some confusion in the marketplace about which brands belong to LCI and which ones are partners. Only LCI’s two house brands, Lewis N. Clark and UrbanGear, are owned by LCI, while Cabeau, GoGirl, Humangear (GoTube), MosRepel, No-Jet-Lag, Pomchies, and Wrinkle Wiz are distributed to various markets by LCI Brands.) Why has LCI not purchased any of its smaller partners? The answer lies somewhere between a respect for the integrity of the other business, and a shrewd understanding of the psychology of the industry. Travel goods retailers accurately see themselves as travel connoisseurs, curating a collection for their customers. A catalogue full of nothing but Lewis N. Clark-owned product is an anathema to that self-understanding. As Franz Wieshuber, SVP sales and marketing explains, “this is real ‘expert’ business. GoGirl is a great example. If we made that product, it wouldn’t be as cool.”

For a travel goods retailer, the only thing cooler than discovering an unusual niche product is a private label accessory, produced to match the unique value proposition of their specific customer base. And this is where sometimes, with luck, the magic happens. Wieshuber says, “while we do a good business in basic promotional products, like a private-label 3-dial combination lock, there have been times when our retailers’ market-savvy forced us into a different design and development paradigm, and ended up proving concept for us and opening up a whole new area of product development.”

And as with Raible’s experience at LifeGear, LCI Brands as a distributor has received the same technology know-how as a company which pursues an M&A strategy for technology acquisition. Wieshuber observes, “they’re getting the distribution, but we’re getting experience with both technology and the frequent updates to go with technology. I guess we could hire a team to develop that knowledge in-house, but this works so much better for everyone.” Over the course of nearly a half-century of partnerships, LCI Brands has developed a reputation for fairness and integrity that often results in getting the first-pick of interesting new travel accessories. “A lot of people come to us with ideas,” observes Wieshuber. “We could be bigger but we want to choose our partners wisely. We’re in this for the long haul.”

aquiring diversity

Movers and Shakers

While the travel good industry is full of interesting collaborations, it also has experienced its share of recent M&A activity. In the last year, French luxury group LVMH (Louis Vuitton) purchased an 80% stake in Rimowa. Advantus acquired Mercury Luggage in August of last year, attending The International Travel Goods Show for the first time with their new brand in 2017. In May of last year, private equity firm MidOcean Partners picked up Travelpro, including previous Travelpro acquisition Atlantic Luggage. At the beginning of this year, Voltage Valet was purchased by the owner of the Bergman’s Luggage chain of specialty stores, Hardial Gill. These isolated acquisitions represent the recognition of a unique opportunity, rather than a dedicated acquisition strategy. But that also exists in our industry, as practiced by Samsonite, the world’s largest travel luggage company – the largest, and still growing.

Samsonite Takes All?

Samsonite was founded in 1910, and has grown to encompass the Samsonite®, Tumi®, American Tourister®, Hartmann®, High Sierra®, Gregory®, Speck®, and Lipault® brands. American Tourister was acquired in 1993, with a break in acquisitions until 2012, when Samsonite purchased High Sierra and Hartmann. In 2014 Samsonite added Lipault and Speck, and in 2016 Samsonite rounded out its collection of brands with premium luggage leader Tumi.

Samsonite’s latest and most creative acquisition is the largest online luggage retailer, eBags. “As the number one online luggage and bag specialist in the U.S., eBags is an excellent complement to Samsonite’s existing business,” said Ramesh Tainwala, Chief Executive Officer of Samsonite. “The acquisition provides us with a strong platform to significantly expand our direct-to-consumer online presence, not just in North America but around the world. With eBags’ immediate resources and digital expertise, we are able to expand our online retail capabilities in a meaningful way, driving stronger sales growth across all the brands in Samsonite’s portfolio. E-commerce is fast becoming a vital part of our business, and will continue to be central in our strategy moving forward.”

With their most recent acquisitions of eBags and Tumi, Samsonite checked off both the primary reasons for A&M cited in the Deloitte report. They expanded and diversified products and services, and acquired key technology. “Our recent acquisitions of Tumi and e-bags has furthered our capabilities in both e-commerce, direct to consumer and the breadth of our offering to include a more premium price point,” says Tainwala. “Our acquisition strategy has always been led with the success of our global reputation in mind. We choose firms with a similar outlook that complement all our portfolio of brands without ever compromising on quality. With these new additions, we are now very excited by what the future holds.”

While Samsonite’s accelerating purchasing strategy has provoked discussion, some industry insiders are saying that such strategies are not new to the travel goods industry, and are of themselves not necessarily bad for brands or retailers. If handled correctly, an aggressive M&A can improve logistics and increase profits.

putting consolidation in perspective

Ten years ago, VFC (Vanity Fair) bought Eagle Creek. It was the last in a head-spinning series of acquisitions of key outdoor and travel brands over the previous five years, including JanSport, Eastpak, The North Face, and Kipling.

“We forget that one of the most significant events of the past, VF’s acquisition of Eagle Creek, from a retailer perspective was totally seamless,” says Guy Paquette, director of corporate operations, Bagot Leather Goods, Luggage Plus. “In fact, VF made a substantive improvement for us, by allowing me to pay in Canadian dollars.”

Industry observers are nearly unanimous in concluding that the VF long-term strategy has yielded positive benefits to brands and retailers. VF’s divisions run on their own, and brands are allowed a large degree of autonomy. VF backroom support has yielded efficiencies that are estimated to have reduced operating expenses by as much as 10%, increasing profits that are split between VF and retailer margins.

But at the time the acquisitions were taking place, VF M&A were the stuff of legends.

Tim McGuire, director of sales, North America for Eagle Creek, does not dispute this industry assessment. McGuire had a unique front-row view of the path to VF acquisition followed by Eastpak, JanSport, and Northface.

“While I was at Eastpak, we were sold to Coleman,” McGuire explains. “’Chainsaw Al’ Dunlap, author of Mean Business, was then the CEO of Sunbeam. When Sunbeam, in turn, purchased Coleman, I jumped on a flight to meet with Dunlap to see if I could save the jobs of the people at Eastpak, or if I needed to tell everyone to polish their resumé, pronto.” Tucked in McGuire’s briefcase was a copy of Mean Business hastily highlighted by his wife, who admonished him, “don’t say any of these things or he’ll fire you immediately.” Seeing Dunlap’s obvious disinterest in Eastpak, McGuire made a career move to JanSport (which had been recently purchased by VF), and from there led the acquisition team that rescued Eastpak from “The Chainsaw.”

McGuire summarizes VF’s culture, saying “they only pursue conservative brands with slow steady growth, and don’t interfere with their core competency. Eagle Creek today is very autonomous, we can compete with JanSport and The North Face if we want to.” McGuire believes “the beauty of VF lies in their back-office functions and supply chain. VF Asia has enabled us to qualify for green manufacturing certifications.”

His overall assessment? “Acquisition can be extremely positive, it certainly was for Eagle Creek. VF has supported us while allowing us to stay true to our DNA, to tell our story.”

This story originally appeared in the Fall 2017 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

 

Leading the Conversation

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Travel Goods Manufacturers Create Travel Trends, Not Just Travel Goods

Travel trends are born online, and consumers look for inspiration in blogs written by people like themselves, pore over and “like” photos on adventure-oriented Instagram feeds, and create Pinterest boards of their dream vacations. Some travel brands have joined the conversation by creating their own aspirational travel content in websites, blogs, social media, and real-world consumer clinics and events, establishing authenticity and demonstrating how their products solve real-world problems. And joyful vacation posts prime consumers to be excited about purchasing luggage and accessories for their next trips.

Paint a Picture, Tell a Story: Promoting Travel to Promote Travel Goods

Atlantic’s website is product focused, but its social media is positioned as the voice of the family vacation. The Atlantic Luggage Instagram account is filled with photos of real family trips, entries in the #becauselifesatrip photo contest. The most popular Atlantic Facebook posts link to the Atlantic Luggage blog, by humor writer and travel journalist Erik Deckers. Recent topics include “The Generation X Guide to Millennial Travel,” a surprisingly hot-button issue with 122 likes, and “A Complete Guide to U.S. Amusement Parks: Northwest,” with 147 likes.  As Deckers puts it, Atlantic posts about “the things we do with luggage, rather than talking about luggage.” A typical post, “How to Drive 1,000 miles to Florida in a Single Day,” gets real, providing driver nap schedules, the best time to leave to optimize kid car-sleeping (3 a.m.), and the advice. “first, understand that you’re going to be dead tired.” Consumers will gravitate to a blog that acknowledges that getting a family of five to Disney World within budget may mean only one travel day in each direction (a big endeavor with correspondingly big savings on vacation days, hotel rooms, and airplane flights). Atlantic succeeds because it is authentic.

Eagle Creek’s web presence is filled with attainable adventures, like paddleboarding or running a recreational half-marathon. Most of the banners and links on Eagle Creek’s site are action photos featuring brand ambassadors and relatable sports models. Alli Noland, PR spokesperson for Eagle Creek, explains: “Eagle Creek has always considered itself to be not only a manufacturer but a travel category ambassador, showing people where, how and why to travel.” Eagle Creek’s website features the Travel Hub travel blog, which mixes travel destination inspiration, travel tips, and practical packing advice. A recent article, “Hidden Gems: Eight Riviera Maya Spots Unknown to Tourists” received dozens of shares on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. With 32,000 likes, the Eagle Creek Facebook page provides plenty of social media traction, but Eagle Creek’s Instagram account also averages 40-50 likes per post. The most popular posts include a collaboration with the Rock ‘n’ Roll marathon series, and an inspiring quote (and link to a blog post) from a cancer survivor and Eagle Creek Ambassador. Off-line, Eagle Creek ambassadors hold packing demos in partnership with retailers, showing consumers how to use bags, packing cubes, and other accessories in person. (Read more about Angel Castellanos’ packing seminars in the Retailer Trend story on page ??) A core company value is that all employees have a visceral understanding of foreign travel, so that product development, marketing and sales are all driven by personal, real world experience. “Eagle Creek focuses on travel as an experience, both the destination and the journey. It’s not only point A and point B, but everything in between,” says Nolan. Eagle Creek even provides a “voluntourism” program benefit to employees, who receive paid time off every year to volunteer locally or go on a volunteer trip, in order broaden their perspective and immerse themselves in another culture.

Dialogue and Development

An eBags hallmark has always been consumer feedback-driven development. This year eBags collaborated with TripAdvisor to create a new essential travel collection, using TripAdvisor input from millions of real travelers.  eBags’ new collection shows how a company can fully integrate consumer feedback into product development in an authentic way. The next step for eBags is to continue the conversation with the new eBags Escapist portal, with Editorial Director Staci Amend at the helm. Described on its blog as “an interactive travel expertise portal,” eBags Escapist will feature destination-specific packing lists and buying guides, informed by Travelers’ Choice best-of lists compiled by TripAdvisor. “Though we’ve been selling bags since 1999, we are first and foremost a travel company,” says Peter Cobb, eBags founder and EVP. “Our goal with partnerships with global companies like TripAdvisor, as well as the launch of our new eBags Escapist portal, is to inspire wanderlust and help our customers gear up for a great journey.”

TripAdvisor inspires strong feelings of trust because of its status as the top “peer review” travel site, while National Geographic is associated with seeing the world, exploration, and extreme environments – which Craghoppers is leveraging with its National Geographic collection. Partnering with National Geographic magazine also conveys a halo of reliability and hard science. The Craghoppers insect-protection clothing using NosiLife fabric technology has been explicitly cited as helping prevent the spread of the Zika virus on websites from the National Geographic store to adventuretravel.com, establishing Craghoppers as a trusted solution to a dangerous travel problem.

Craghoppers also distinguishes itself on social media with strong Pinterest and Instagram accounts. Craghoppers curates Pinterest boards on everything from backpacking snacks to the travel-inspiration board “Adventure Awaits.” “We want to support those who travel with a purpose, and Benjamin Sadd’s inspirational work he is raising awareness of conservation issues across the world,” says Jim McNamara, CEO of Craghoppers. “If we can make sure he travels safely with the help of our insect repellent clothing, then we have done our job!” You can see photos from Sadd’s “The Trail to Anywhere” photo and film project on the Craghoppers Instagram account.

“The key to our success has been that, as well as designing fabulous product, we focus on the needs of our consumer,” McNamara explains, “similarly with the partners we work with, such as National Geographic, we sit together and work out what product would be right for them. It works so much better when we work collaboratively.”

HEX is the undisputed social media star of the travel goods industry. The HEX Instagram feed averages 300 likes per image from its 32,000 followers. You’ll rarely see a straight product photo, but you will see images inspired by the hashtags #HEXplore and the #HEXCLAMEET photo contest (also documented on Snap Chat). The HEX website is full of aspirational images of the coolest imaginable Gen Y lifestyle. A typical blog post on the Culture page documents an L.A. concert by brand ambassador Saint Motel. Product collaborations and capsule collections include a widely lauded sneaker backpack (playing on hip-hop’s sneaker-obsessed fan base), skate-oriented products developed with skaters like Guy Mariano and Theotis Beasley, and collections with illustrators, pop and graffiti artists like Jahan Loh, Eric Haze and Cole Gehrst. “We always want our products to be every bit as functional as good-looking. So we work with leaders in various fields to develop, test and refine product ideas,” says HEX Co-founder Trent Valladaras. What began as the constant impulse to collaborate is becoming an industry trend, as consumers respond to bags with cross-over features. “We are experiencing traction in our space because we are bringing multi-functional travel pieces, like gym bags or backpacks with sneaker compartments as well as tech compartments to market.” The newest HEX collaboration is the Raven Camera Collection of camera bag backpacks. (Kim I have pictures, photo credit Travis Jensen) “This is a good example of product where we worked closely with top photographers to create, test, and refine product ideas that ultimately featured in these bags” said Valladaras.

The press has responded, featuring Hex in mainstream media outlets like People, Men’s Health, Maxim, Seventeen, and InStyle. HEX bags and accessories receive monthly mentions on trend-setting lifestyle sites like hypebeast.com, coolhunting.com and highsnobiety.com. If you haven’t heard of some of these lifestyle sites, that doesn’t mean they lack influence – People has 2.4 million Instagram followers, while Hypebeast.com boasts 2.9 million Instagram followers.

Cabeau sells the fun of travel in order to sell travel goods products, with a 10:1 ratio of travel stories and pictures to product pitches on its blog and social media. While the blog itself focuses on destinations and travel hacks, the Instagram account is filled with aspirational photos reflecting the promoted hashtags #travelpic #travelupgrade #traveltheworld. The Cabeau Facebook page features beautiful photos and links to in-depth travel articles, while the charmingly quirky global musical collaboration, Radio Cabeau, gives Cabeau a literal voice as a world citizen. “As an extension of the travel experience, Cabeau connects with a community of travelers through our social media channels, says John Hanna, senior director of brand marketing.  “We provide travel tips, aspirational destinations, playlists, and news on our latest award winning products – all in an effort to make each trip a first class experience.”

Cabeau’s mission to lead the travel comfort conversation is aligned with a strong “travel comfort hacks” trend, one that yields pages of Google search results. Hanna says, “we’ve built a lifestyle brand to help make each of life’s journey’s easier, more manageable and infinitely more comfortable.” Recent PR stories equating Cabeau products with the travel comfort-hacks trend are found on the “Today” show, Travel + Leisure, Business Insider, Teen Vogue, and USA Today. Cabeau has achieved not only award-winning product innovation and excellence in marketing, they are also thought leaders in the larger consumer travel sphere.

Cheerleaders, Advocates, Trend-Setters and Ambassadors

The commonality between Atlantic Luggage, Eagle Creek, eBags, Craghoppers, HEX and Cabeau is not just a marketing focus on travel, rather than travel goods. It’s that all of these companies see themselves as ambassadors for travel. Whether their goal is thought leadership, advocacy, or creating and driving trends, they are part of an active, ongoing conversation with consumers, that is advancing both the travel goods industry and the experience of travel itself.

This story originally appeared in the Winter 2016 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

Profit, Trust and SKU Control

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Supply Chain Management in the Age of Unreal Experience

The Internet has conditioned consumers to expect huge selection and instant gratification, while obsessive online research into available options has created major purchasing and inventory dilemmas for travel goods retailers. Retailers have to carry a larger range of products (more dollars tied up in inventory), with lower average turns, to maintain the same sales volume. Marilyn Janisch of Going in Style, in Palo Alto, CA, shares what seems to be a universal experience, that “retail has become more of a challenge because of online shopping and consumer expectations.” There’s a lot more pressure on everyone’s forecasting ability, as well as the perception of less margin to go around – less margin and more risk – which makes SKU control an increasingly valuable skill for retailers and manufacturers alike.

Market Intelligence: Winning Through Sharing

When manufacturers and retailers share market intelligence, forecasting and purchasing get less risky and everyone wins. Brian Thompson, general manager of ExOfficio, believes that for a retailer, “new product introductions don’t need to be a shot in the dark,” and the key component of researching new product and new department options for a store is asking manufacturers for intel, based on what they’ve seen succeed. Robert Williams, president at BOCONI Bags & Leather, puts in a plug for experimenting with revolutionary product. “We understand firsthand how important it is to manage inventory and to turn stock, however if retailers do not try new products with fresh ideas they will miss new incremental business opportunities. Case in point: BOCONI was the first trade-up brand to introduce RFID protection in premium wallets and bags…now, we have introduced Kylie with RFID, so that women can have the same RFID protection without losing style or quality. Simply put, if you don’t try it…you will lose it.”

Market intelligence is not just finding a new best-seller, it’s understanding what it takes to expand a department, or create a new one. Is that a choice that is right for your store? Thompson gives an example of the market intelligence a manufacturer can share with a retailer. “If you are going to do apparel you have to be serious about it. You need to stock apparel for both genders, train employees to cross sell to the other gender (generally male employees need the most help learning to sell to women), fitting rooms, mannequins, and merchandising that tells a story. Canvas your customer base. Are they looking to you for travel clothing? What’s your competition in your local market, and is that a battle you want to fight? Can you build a partnership with another specialty retailer and cross promote, do some events together?”

Everyone agrees that today’s technology-driven, rapidly changing retail climate is a challenge, even for the most seasoned retailer. Thompson’s key message to retailers: “don’t think you have to go it alone. This is the time to challenge your suppliers and ask ‘what are you going to do help me sell this product?’ You need to know, are you engaging with a partner? Or engaging with someone who will just sell you stuff?”

Cooperative Forecasting

Specialty items have more sales variability than core items, and the Internet is only making it worse. One obsessed consumer’s hunt for an unusual size, color, or model online can create the artificial perception of a trend, as a sizeable percentage of those retailers contacted go back to their manufacturer and ask about availability. Lisa Heth Rappley, of Groskopf’s Luggage & Gifts, in Grand Rapids, MI gives the retailer perspective: “the Internet and Amazon are our big competitors, and we’re always battling them.” But the internet is not merely a different sales funnel for brands, it also distorts the appearance of demand, introducing pure noise into manufacturers’ forecasts. If only the manufacturer could see real-time sales data, they could see that all those inquiries only resulted in one sale, and they could avoid the very human tendency to forecast based on chatter.

When manufacturers are able to make the right product at the right time, it’s a win for both suppliers and retailers. “If we only had that ‘crystal ball,’ life would be good” says Marcy Schackne, vice president of marketing at 24-7 International. “Some manufacturers are really good at closely monitoring warehouse programs, and then you see other boutique brands selling off-price to liquidate seasonal and in-and-out colorways to make room for the next trending color.” While no one can see the future, knowing what is happening in the present is almost as good. Seeing what is turning and what is sitting at retail is a tremendous advantage to a manufacturer trying to forecast demand and plan production. There is a wide range of access to real-time retail sales data found in the travel goods industry. Many manufacturers want to be able to see actual retail sales as they happen, and they despair of a system where the best they can do is go to The International Travel Goods Show, analyze every word and reaction of their retailers to new product – like a junior high school girl with a crush – and then go home and wait for the phone to ring, i.e., the pre-book orders to come in. And then the pre-books ship, and they wait again. What’s selling? When is it selling? Who knows? They have to order from their factories without knowing what is really happening at the consumer level.

The predictable outcome of all this uncertainty is that manufacturers, spooked by a lack insight into what is selling now and in the future, have pulled back on stocking inventory. Heth Rappley expressed a common observation; “every year more and more companies are not keeping inventory in their warehouse like they used to. We definitely have had to adjust to that, but it’s a big change.”

Looking for inspiration outside the industry, mega-retailer Walmart has embraced complete sales and inventory openness with its manufacturers by adopting a Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) system: real-time sales reports from all stores, plus warehouse inventory levels are all fed into a centralized database. The data is pushed out to suppliers who are responsible for analyzing it and deciding when to ship more product. Most supply chain experts believe that just-in-time inventory IS possible – but only with the use of VMI systems. So why isn’t this holy grail of supply chain management more prevalent in the travel goods industry? James Krueger, CEO of EPIC Travelgear, cautions that “retailer and manufacturer integration demands really good systems and follow up.” A true VMI system requires a substantial up-front investment, both in technology and in trust. Of the two, coming to a shared agenda is a bigger upfront challenge than installing and developing hardware and software.

Some travel goods manufacturers have achieved a nearly open system, albeit with only a handful of their top customers. Krueger is an evangelist for trust and radical transparency. “We need to get really naked and say O.K., everyone needs to make some margins. With our very best clients – everything is open. They know what our costs are for the goods. We forecast together. We don’t have a true Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) system but we get close to it: we have several big clients where we receive weekly inventory reports. And everyone shares the risk.”

Other suppliers have evolved in the opposite direction, pushing risk onto their partners, and taking most of the profit. An example is a brand that hedges its bets by opening its own factory luggage boutiques, assuming the forecasting and inventory risk for those factory stores. Industry response seems to depend on how transparent the brand is about its intentions, and whether travel goods retailers are competing on a level playing field with the factory stores. At the extreme end, one industry manufacturer reportedly requires retailers to lock in orders 14 months in advance. Because this manufacturer no longer warehouses inventory for travel goods retailers, fill-in orders take eight weeks, putting all the risk associated with that product on the retailer. In response, some retailers have apparently dropped the brand they helped build, resulting in the gradual transition of the brand to a factory-store sales model. Krueger thinks this is the wrong approach. “We have the perfect word for this in Sweden, ängslan. It’s a combination of fear, anxiety, pain. When we structure our business to push the ängslan onto our retailer, then we haven’t defeated it. It still exists.”

Retailer Forecasting: The Rise of the Geek

The good news is that the data needed by manufacturers to improve forecasting efficiency is already being gathered, crunched, graphed, and sorted by an army of travel goods retailers. Schackne has seen the transformation first-hand. “Since I’ve started, the industry has drastically changed. Whole networks of mom and pop stores are gone, and in the last 10 years even some big, influential retailers have gone out of business. When I first started with Travelpro 17 years ago, we had a rebate program and that’s when I realized stores still handwrote receipts. But they all had great customer service skills.”

The retailers that have thrived in the last two decades have great customer service skills, just like the stores who closed. But they have also developed extraordinary inventory tracking and sales reporting tools, which allow them to carefully manage the risk, without going under.

Case Study: Guy Paquette, Director of Corporate Operations, Bagot, Leather Goods, Luggage Plus Kingston, ON

Perhaps the quintessential retailer/geek, Guy Paquette is the tech-savvy director of corporate operations at Bagot Leather Goods, Luggage Plus in Kingston, ON, who says the inventory management system at Bagot has been automated for approximately “forever.” Paquette describes their point of sale (POS) system as being very simple to use: “it reports top unit volume, and top dollar volume. It helps us manage what’s hot and what’s not. Our POS system answers those questions for us on a daily, weekly and monthly basis.”

Inventory management and SKU control are critical to remaining profitable in an uncertain retail market. Paquette shares that “last year, we had the worst year in our 20-year history.” Keeping the doors open in a challenging business climate is only possible by keeping tight control of ordering and inventory.

“Tradeshows are the time to see new products launch, take advantage of incentive order programs and book preseason orders. When we write preseason orders at a show, we’re helping make the inventory plan for our vendor. And in most cases preseason orders just put you in the cue to receive new merchandise. I had two reps in the store yesterday, and wrote fill-in orders for both. That’s typical, we do more immediate inventory orders than pre-book orders” explains Paquette. But online technology can hurt as well as help. “It’s an unacknowledged fact that we are the showroom for some brands. Customers look in our store to see the product in person, and then buy online. It’s the direct result of a brand’s decision to sell online to consumers, and it doesn’t feel like a partnership.”

Case Study: AAA Allied Group, Cincinnati, OH

Sue Lanter, AAA auto travel product coordinator, Cincinnati, OH, describes her businesses’ highly organized buying system. “AAA Allied Group consists of 45 offices that each have a travel store. They are all unique in size, configuration, etc. We even have some that are located in car repair facilities. Our offices are located in parts of seven states – Connecticut, West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and Kansas – so we have very diverse regions. We do not have a central warehouse, so each office is responsible for placing their own orders. We have a list of approved items that they may order from and we customize the order forms from our vendors so that the offices only can order the items that we have approved for sale. We group our stores into A, B, and C categories based on sales and store size. We also have broken our items into ordering classifications so that the stores know the core items that they need to be stocking, as well as some others that give them options based on their location, demographics, etc. We have three classifications – Required, Recommended, and Optional – and the items vary depending on whether the store is an A, B, or C. Required items are our best sellers or they are items that are key to our business lines. They would be considered core products. Recommended items are good sellers, but not the top sellers; they can be Required in an A store, but based on size maybe not in a B or C. We tell the offices that once they have the Required items for their office in stock, to look at the Recommended items if they have space to add them. Optional items are newer, unproven items and should only be stocked if the offices are stocked on other things and have room. Often Optional items are seasonal colors or items, or specialty items.

“This has not been an easy system to manage. It is hard to measure turns because some offices will pick up new items right away and others may not pick them up for a couple of months, if at all. We have annually reviewed the entire list to determine items that would continue to be sold as well as items that will no longer be ordered and will be phased out. We look at margin, quantity sold, how long we have been carrying the item, and how many offices have sold the item in making our determination. It isn’t the most efficient process in terms of timeliness, but it has worked for us.”

Case Study: Lisa Heth Rappley, Manager, Groskopf’s Luggage & Gifts, Grand Rapids, MI

Lisa Heth Rappley is a third-generation manager at family-owned Groskopf’s Luggage & Gifts, in Grand Rapids, MI. “We have an overall budget, right now I’m working off a specific budget for the holiday catalogue, and we reserve a certain percentage for miscellaneous and special orders. We track every single one of our SKUs by company and we do regular reporting on each SKU, in order to make sure we’re not ordering too heavily. If we didn’t regularly track our SKUs we’d risk over ordering, and then we wouldn’t be able to provide variety. We run and review our reports before we go to shows, and set a budget for our core items, leaving a chunk of cash as wiggle-room for new stuff. It’s fun to take gambles with new merchandise! It’s always trial and error for new items, but then we set a budget.

The reality is that we have to project our orders out and turn them in by a certain date or they just won’t ship. Besides the International Travel Goods Show, the NLDA Summer show at Navy Pier is a big buying show for us. It happens at the end of June, and we just sent or orders in [in mid-July]. Getting orders in early assures we get product, versus someone who puts in a holiday order in November.

Case Study: Marilyn Janisch, Owner, Going in Style, Palo Alto, CA

Despite being the owner of Going in Style, a Palo Alto, CA, store with a highly regarded clothing department, Marilyn Janisch still finds clothing preseason orders “kind of painful. It’s hard to accurately predict what customers will want next season, or what the demand will be.”

Janisch shares that “one thing I do to increase our sales and to enhance our customer service is special-order items we do not stock, or just items we happen to be out of. If a customer is looking for a specific style, color, or size of an item we do not have, I offer to order it and either have it shipped to the customer, or preferably to have them come in to pick up in the store. There are several vendors who are very good to work with and turn these special orders around quickly — they are Baggallini, ExOfficio and Royal Robbins. Some vendors are not that easy to work with — if I want to special order just one item for a customer, I have to place a minimum order. Otherwise, I get charged an ‘under-minimum’ fee, and pay excessive shipping fees – which I have done just to satisfy the customer. It would be nice if more vendors (especially luggage vendors) would sympathize with small retailers and the challenging retail climate we are in and offer reasonable shipping fees for special orders and quick turnarounds.”

Beyond SKU Control: Competing in the Age of Physical Experience, and Online sales

How does a brick-and-mortar retailer compete against online sales? Retailers can also provide a fun, informative shopping experience and a personal relationship that is positive but not intrusive. Technology-driven change can also work for a brick-and-mortar retailer. Vancouver is swept up in Pokémon fever, and Bagot Leather Goods, Luggage Plus is taking full advantage. “We have battery backup packs for cell phones, which have become a rare and precious commodity among battery-draining PokémonGo players. We created a Pokémon poster for our window advertising battery backups, and activated a Pokémon lure in the store.” Local television station CKWS featured a recent on-air interview with Paquette about the craze, on location in Bagot Leather Goods. While talking to Travel Goods Showcase, Paquette looked out the window and reported: “tourists are taking selfies of themselves in front of our PokémonGo poster!”

Multiple manufacturers also made the case for embracing repairs and warranties. Krueger states “retailers need to touch repairs, because of how it builds good will. A friend of mine told me ‘anything good you do, no matter how nice it is, you’re doing it for yourself.’” In retail, this is never more the case than when a store is handling consumer warranties and repairs. Again looking outside of travel goods, the car industry is famous (and notorious) for experimenting with every possible path to a sale. There is a reason car dealerships have service departments. That way they can guarantee that their customer is standing on their lot at the very moment when they find out it’s finally time to get a new car. Schackne provides this important caveat: “from the retailer’s perspective, partnering with a seasoned manufacturer who honors warranty and repair service is critical. Otherwise, those issues become the retailers’ headaches and jeopardize customer loyalty.”

A brick-and-mortar retailer can also combat internet sales by providing a unique product that’s not available online. Some manufacturers who allow retailers to order a custom color or spec, in sufficient quantity (typically with some type of one-season exclusivity agreement). Krueger cautions that “if you order a custom product, you do need to respect the fact consumers now need to see and research a product online before buying in person, and they may even get anxious if they aren’t able to do that.” Any retailer-specific product should be represented on the retailer’s website, and if possible also on the brand website, with a link back to the retailer.

The paradox of today’s retail age is that even as consumers have gone digital for business, entertainment and relationships, they still hunger for physical, authentic, unplugged experiences. Besides the strong analytic skills and the customer service chops of travel goods industry retailers, the travel goods industry has a significant advantage over most other retail sectors. Consumers, especially young consumers, are focused on collecting experiences rather than things. Thompson defines the winning paradox of the travel goods industry: “while travel is an experience, travel requires new investment. Retailers who can help their customers have an experience rather than focusing on ‘how do I sell you stuff’ are the retailers who will thrive.”

This story originally appeared in the Fall 2016 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

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Project-Based Learning: Initiative to Reality

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From Harvard-developed MBA coursework to a new book deal, Harm-Jan Steenhuis, Ph.D., works to make the HPU College of Business a center of project-based learning

By Sara Ecclesine

Hawaii Pacific University MBA Program Chair Harm-Jan Steenhuis, Ph.D., thinks a lot about competitiveness. “What makes a region competitive? How do you evaluate clusters of economic activity, and find opportunities for growth?” Steenhuis studied these questions during his diverse professional career, whether looking at aviation technology transfer in Romania, or creating an export plan for an Indian transformer manufacturer. While at universities in the U.S. and the Netherlands, Steenhuis became convinced that his job as an instructor is to teach students to analyze competitiveness and find opportunities by learning critical thinking skills. And the path to fostering critical thinking is project-based learning.

Steenhuis joined HPU in the summer of 2015, drawn in part to the university’s highly international faculty and student body, which provides an ideal atmosphere for international business research. Even more compelling for Steenhuis was HPU’s culture of project-based learning, a central component of the College of Business (COB) strategic plan. In 2012, Jeffrey and Laura Alberts-Boromisa funded a Project Learning Initiative and Academic Improvement Fund at HPU’s COB. Jeffrey Boromisa, also serving as Executive in Residence, sought to increase the competitiveness of the COB through the establishment of an applied learning process, where student-teams serve as consulting groups to local businesses. The Project Learning Initiative has spawned events as unique as Hawai’i’s first International Women’s Hackathon.

After his arrival at HPU, Steenhuis immediately began developing project-based learning opportunities that increase the rigor of the COB. The first will be a new graduate course in International Competitiveness and Strategy, based on materials developed by the Harvard Business School. HPU is one of only a handful of universities in the U.S. authorized to teach this graduate course. The course is 50% case-based course work supported by materials and best-practice teaching techniques developed by Harvard. The other 50% will be project-based, with students analyzing local industry clusters and learning to think critically about the determinants of competitiveness, with the goal of improving the prosperity of the people of Hawai’i. “A cluster of economic activity doesn’t tell us the complete story,” explained Steenhuis. “Is it producing patents? Are the patents relevant economic drivers? How does it compare to a different region? Does it increase quality of life?”

Steenhuis is so enthusiastic about project-based learning that he’s writing the book on it, with co-authors Larry Rowland and Brian Kulik. Inspired by The Case Study Handbook, written by William Ellet and published by the Harvard Business Press, Steenhuis and his collaborators are writing a student guide to topics such as how to approach a project and how to interact in groups, aimed at students used to textbook and lecture-style teaching. “Education is not just theories and memorizing terms. You need that business literacy, but it’s not our end goal,” asserts Steenhuis. “With project-based learning, you’re going to get students who can think critically and be profession ready, global leaders; who can make a difference in community before they’ve even left school. And to me, that’s what’s exciting.”

This story originally appeared in the HPU 2016 President’s Report.

New Trends in Family Travel

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Society Changes, Human Needs Stay the Same

As members of a rapidly changing, increasingly global society, we feel the pressure to work more and to stay constantly plugged into our devices, our email, and social media. Our tastes are increasingly sophisticated and cosmopolitan, but our basic needs as humans for meaning and connection remain unaltered. Out of the push of society and the pull of intimacy, new trends are emerging that allow individuals and families to create personal moments, bond with their loved ones and create lasting memories, even in the midst of an intense business trip, and despite the pressure of a competitive, jaded, Instagram-fueled leisure culture. One such trend is the rise of “bleisure” travel, travel that melds business and leisure. The other is multigenerational aspirational adventure travel, the family vacation guaranteed to get the attention of even the most jaded tween, and create memories that will last a lifetime.

Connected Workers, Disconnected Families

According to research by Project Time Off, workers in the United States are using a historically low number of vacation days, fewer than at any time in the last 40 years. (Project Time Off is a non-profit organization with the mission to increase the use of vacation time, supported by a broad coalition across the travel and retail spectrum including the National Retail Federation.) On average, if you live in the United States you’ll take only 16 vacation days in 2015, almost a week less vacation compared to an average of 20 days in 2000. Project Time Off is concerned with documenting and defining the effects of this drop in vacation time, not just for individual workers, but for the health of their children and families. In The Work Martyr’s Children: How Kids Are Harmed by America’s Lost Week, Project Time Off asserts that today’s generation of children are missing out on vacation traditions and quality time with their parents. Dr. Lotte Bailyn, study contributor and professor emerita at the MIT Sloan School of Management, notes that the study found that most kids (61%) want to spend quality time with parents during vacation. While just 19% of kids say they are in a very good mood during their everyday life, this number jumps to 60% when parents take time off work to hang out with them. “Their moods are different and it takes a while to get them out of their shells,” Bailyn explained. “In a strange way, particularly with younger children, the best relationships come when there’s enough quantity time to drive quality interactions.” Although family time is important to children, nearly a quarter of working parents reported that it had been more than a year since their last family vacation. The work pressures that keep parents at the office are the same ones that keep other American workers from using their vacation time, fears that they will “come back to a mountain of work” (29%) because “no one else can do the job” (20%) topping the list.

The Rise of Bleisure Travel

At the same time that families and individuals are suffering the effects of taking fewer vacation days, business travel has been on the increase and is expected to continue to rise through the end of 2015 and 2016. The Global Business Travel Association (GBTA), an international business travel and meetings organization, projects that both individual and group business trips in the U.S. will increase by approximately 2% a year in 2015 and 2016, while international business trips are expected to increase by 5% in 2015 and 7% in 2016. According to Michael W. McCormick, GBTA executive director, “thanks to a healthier domestic economy and a stronger U.S. dollar, companies are putting more travelers on the road not only because they can afford to, but because they continue to see a strong return on their business travel investment.”

Squeezed by more pressure at the office and more time on the road, how are workers fighting back? With bleisure travel, defined as a trip that includes both a business and leisure component. According to two recent studies, business travelers are increasingly staying over the weekend, bringing their family, and leaving the hotel room to work in parks and coffee shops. This year BridgeStreet Global Hospitality released THE BLEISURE REPORT 2014, based on a survey of 640 international guests. And Hotwire.com® also published their third American Travel Behavior Survey, both of which documented a strong bleisure travel trend.

The Numbers behind the Trend

According to BridgeStreet Global, bleisure travel is on the rise. The majority, 60% of travelers, report that they are more likely to take bleisure trips today than they were five years ago. The same number (60%) have already taken bleisure trips, adding an average of two vacation days per business trip. Among bleisure travelers, more than half (54%) bring along their family or significant other. Younger travelers (age 25-34) are the strongest adopters, with 93% expecting to take a bleisure trip in the next five years.

Hotwire.com® reported similar results. Roughly half of American business travelers have added leisure time to a business trip, with 56% of younger travelers 18 to 34 and 37% of 35 to 44-year-olds reporting bleisure trips. Henrik Kjellberg, president of Hotwire®, is an advocate of bleisure travel. “You might have to travel for business, but it doesn’t mean you have to let much-deserved leisure trips fall by the wayside. Popular domestic business hubs like Atlanta see a ton of foot traffic during convention season. However, once the corporate groups leave – typically on Thursdays – hoteliers drop their prices for the weekend to try and fill rooms with leisure travelers. As such, you can spend a couple of extra days away to explore or relax in one of these great cities while taking advantage of affordable hotel deals.” Industry veteran Bobby Williams, founder of BOCONI bags and leather, can relate. “I definitely live in bleisure travel-mode with my family…non-stop all the time!”

Equipping the Bleisure Traveler

Retailers can respond to the bleisure trend by tailoring their sales and marketing message to this new reality, rather than drawing a strict line between work and leisure travel, and by stocking products that encourage flexibility and exploration, such as structured backpacks or convertible briefcase/backpack combos. According to BridgeStreet Global, even if they don’t extend their trip 82% of business travelers take time out to explore the city they’re visiting. The right bag can encourage micro-adventures: jumping on a shuttle to see a city during a layover, or taking a hike through a sculpture garden. When talking about bags for business travel, bringing up the idea of bleisure travel to your customer can change the tone of the conversation from the contemplation of impending drudgery to the possibility of wonder and fun.

One game changer, according to both travel icon Rick Steves and the travel blog One Bag, is to steer able-bodied travelers away from rolling bags, which can easily lose a third of interior volume and add a third in weight due to the addition of wheels, retractable handles, and attendant hardware. Doug Dyment from One Bag asserts, “few places worth visiting are conducive to rolling a bag behind you; even modern city sidewalks have curbs, cracks, congestion, and clutter (often of the unpleasant organic variety).” And Rick Steves points out, “I really appreciate the mobility and practicality of having both hands free while en route – I can eat a sandwich or buy a bus ticket and hop on board without breaking my stride.”

But bleisure travel isn’t just about squeezing a micro-adventure in between meetings, it’s about adding on a weekend to explore the city, or bringing the kids along on your work trip. Even seasoned road warriors will need to learn new packing tricks, as their small work carry-on bag will need to fit more and do more. This is where retailers can be game changers, by providing packing seminars and educating their clients about the use of cubes and other organizational features. Steves is a strong proponent of packing cubes, “packing cubes are a worthwhile supplement to any bag purchase. They help compress your clothes, keep them organized, and allow you to easily access your bag’s contents without risking spilling all of them out on the airport or train-station floor.”

The TLS Professional Weekender, developed by eBags in response to the input of business travelers, is chock full of features perfect for bleisure travel. In the office, the TLS Weekender can be carried briefcase-style, with or without a shoulder strap. Because no one wants their socks (or kids’ toys!) to go tumbling onto the meeting room floor when they’re digging for their laptop or charger, clothes are in a completely separate compartment than the laptop and organizer areas. The clothing compartment is shaped to be used with the eBags packing cubes for additional compression, organization, and carrying capacity. While sightseeing between meetings, the bag can be worn as a backpack with sternum straps and a padded, ventilated Airmesh back panel. In the airport, the laptop section is TSA-checkpoint friendly. Although everyone loves basic black, the new heathered graphite colorway is also a great choice. It will pop on your sales floor while still reading as a neutral.

New this winter, BOCONI is introducing the Tyler Tumbled Campus Pack, a polished, stylish backpack that’s ideal for bleisure travel. It looks good enough for the boardroom, in Milano grained leather finished with antiqued nickel hardware. But it’s also comfortable and capacious enough to extend your trip over the weekend and explore a new city.

For customers who appreciate a sporty aesthetic, the TPro® Bold™ 2.0 carry-on backpack from Travelpro is a great choice.

Because the demographic with the largest percentage of adopters is the under-34 set, a roomy, durable and on-trend bag like the HEX Sonic backpack should be part of your store’s bleisure merchandising plan. The Sonic features laptop and organizer pockets for office-access, and two completely separate gear/clothing pockets. It comes in a variety of neutral-but-not-boring fabrications. The most adventure-friendly bag in the HEX collection is the HEX Roark Revival Mule Backpack with a 30-liter carrying capacity and enough comfort features for a weekend in the mountains. The sophisticated PV-coated cotton fabrication keeps you from looking like a backpacking college student, and the separate laptop compartment allows for easy access to your computer without exposing the office to your hiking boots.

Multigenerational Aspirational Adventure

The last decade has seen the rise of “grandtravel,” where time-poor parents are left at home with their busy careers, and grandparents and kids vacation together. In the Instagram age, this trend is combining with adventure travel (bucket-list trips like summiting Everest or an African safari) into the aspirational adventure family vacation. Multi-generational families, not necessarily including parents, but often funded by and including grandma, are looking for more exotic experiences than the beach or the nearest national park. The Travel Channel calls these social-mediagenic family trips one of the top five travel trends this year. “Families are foregoing the family vacations of the past, where quality time was spent parked at the beach, and instead are looking for transformative experiences that the whole family can share.” But going to the Galápagos Islands in a family group with members that are between eight and 80 means shopping for a tour with a lot of support and comfort, dovetailing neatly with the trend of “glamping.” This is good news for retailers, since exotic, aspirational family vacations require support, advice, and specialized travel equipment from savvy retailers. Expect sales of products like soft-sided luggage that can be loaded onto a camel, smart children’s products, bug- and-sun resistant clothing in every size, and lots of opportunities for packing seminars.

The Numbers behind the Trend

How big is multi-generational travel? Rainer Jenss, president and founder of the Family Travel Association, asserts that their research shows that 33 to 40% of the $270 billion leisure travel business is multigenerational. According to a recent national survey conducted by Preferred Hotel Group and marketing company MMGY Global, there are four key aspects to the multi-generational adventure trend. Grandparents (35%) are paying for the trip, more so than the parents (25%), but 40% of both grandparents and parents say the grandchildren are active in vacation planning. Lindsey Ueberroth, president and CEO of Preferred, explains, “(millennials) are doing a lot of online research. What happens is the grandparents come in and want to pay, and millennials come in with the research…to create a unique experience.” Global travel is particularly popular, because multigenerational vacationers “want a deeper cultural experience,” Ueberroth explains. Family Vacation Critic, TripAdvisor’s family travel site, is also touting “experiential travel” as a key family travel trend, noting that Disney is jumping on the bandwagon, with offerings such as a cooking class in Ecuador through Adventure Disney.

Destination Transformation

Because time for family togetherness is scarce and precious, families are setting high standards for their trips. CNN recently published a story titled “10 Places that can Change your Child’s Life.” (No pressure, vacation planners!) Where is adventure travel taking these families-on-the-go? Alaskan cruises combine luxury, separate programs for all ages, and shared experiences in nature. Luxe lodges in South America entice families to visit bucket list destinations like Patagonia, while providing well-organized horseback riding, photo safari, fishing, kayaking, and hiking excursions. Huffington Post author (and CEO of Chill Expeditions) Crawford Hill touts “Ecuador and the Galapagos, Costa Rica and Andalusian Spain, which offer great opportunities for relaxation and countless possibilities for experiential learning as a family. This kind of educational travel adventure is far more enduring than simply traveling to an all-inclusive resort together – and obviously it offers a more authentic and engaging opportunity.” Jenss notes that children love animals, making Alaska, Central and South America and Africa great destinations, and that children as young as 10 years old can get certified to scuba dive.

Equipment and Preparation

For the multi-generational family adventure, equipment and preparation are key. Adventure travel means backpacks and soft-sided duffles in durable fabrics and understated colorways, making Travelpro’s National Geographic™ duffles perfect for the adults, while animal-themed child-sized carry-ons like the ones in the National Geographic™ Collection by Travelpro help get kids excited for the trip. Tuck a tube of critters from Safari Ltd. into the kids’ carry-on to play with on the plane, and help them get in the spirit of adventure. TrendyKid also makes animal character carry-ons, as well as bags with more sophisticated graphics for tweens.

Lightweight packing is even more important for adventure travel than bleisure trips. Peter Cobb, co-founder of eBags.com, takes note: “inspired by YouTube and travel blogs, there is an explosion in the number of people deciding to take trips off the beaten path. They want to experience nature, history, culture, and food in exotic locations once thought to be out of reach. They are finding that lightweight travel backpacks with packing cube organizers can make all the difference in managing their belongings throughout the trip.” The eBags TLS Mother Lode Weekender and Weekender Junior (for smaller-framed travelers) fits the bill with ease, offering many of the same organizational features found in the eBags TLS Professional Weekender, but in additional size and color choices. The BOCONI Bryant LTE Ruck Sack, in Heather brown canvas with antiqued mahogany pull-up leather, and finished with a durable waterproof coating, makes an elegant set for adventure travel when combined with the Bryant Safari Bag in antiqued mahogany pull-up leather, also with a waterproof finish.

But it’s not just about bags. Look for travel goods manufacturers who carry products that can help keep traveling families safe, healthy and comfortable. Your customers will appreciate Goodwipes, the extra-large-size cooling towelettes, great for camping, safaris, and hiking in warm climates. Emergency ponchos and mini LED flashlights are a no-brainer. And check out Go Travel’s Mosquito Cot Net, a lightweight mosquito net ideal for cots, cribs, and strollers, which protects against bites and stings. Go Travel also makes a kid’s door stop, which prevents doors from locking accidentally and protects little fingers from heavy hotel doors. And don’t forget Airtushi, Oakthrift’s inflatable travel highchair.

Defining the Problem, Finding the Solution

In this connected world, human ingenuity is allowing us to find ways to relax, to unplug, and to bond with nature and with each other. The new travel trends of bleisure travel and the multigenerational aspirational family vacation are born out of the challenges of modern life, and require more planning and travel knowledge than the road trips and weekends at grandma’s house enjoyed by previous generations. But with advice and equipment from a great travel retailer, families can enjoy the same potential for bonding and fun during their leisure travel time, even if their circumstances and surroundings look very different from 40 years ago.

This story originally appeared in the Winter 2015 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

Get Ready, Get Chipped, and Go!

Travel Goods Retailers Prepare for the New Credit Deadline
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Visa and MasterCard have set October 1, 2015 as the deadline for retailers across the U.S. to switch from the classic swipe-stripe credit card reader to an EMV system that reads chip-cards. The carrot is that the entire country will change over to the more fraud resistant chip system, bringing the U.S. into technological alignment with the credit cards used by the rest of the world. The stick is that retailers who don’t make the switch will be responsible for fraudulent charges. The migration to chip-card readers is part of a larger period of disruption in the world of consumer credit. With new technologies such as Apple Pay, Square, and GoPayment entering the market, retailers have more choices than ever before, but are also deeply dissatisfied with high fees and distrustful of banks and credit card companies.

We talk to some savvy retailers to bring you the information you need to make sure you’re ready for October 1, and informed about the new world of consumer credit technologies.

Why EMV?

EMV stands for Europay, MasterCard and Visa, the founding members of EMVCo, the group which establishes and regulates credit card chip technology. Unlike the magnetic stripe cards that are the norm in the U.S., EMV cards contain a chip (microprocessor) that validates the credit card during every interaction with the payment device, and uses encryption to secure the data. During a sales transaction, EMV is more secure than magnetic striped cards because of its technology, as well as how it’s physically handled. Sophisticated authentication protocols make it difficult to use skimmed card information, and the act of inserting the card into the device by the customer, rather than swiping the card by the retailer, means the card never leaves the customer’s possession.

Most of the world migrated to EMV around 2005, primarily to combat credit card fraud. As the rest of the world became more secure, with a typical drop in fraud of over 50% per country, credit card thieves have increasingly targeted the U.S. and its millions of vulnerable magnetic-stripe cards. While the need to switch is urgent, the task is herculean. With the October 1 deadline looming, there is a still a massive amount of work to be done to complete the transition to chip. The National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates that at the beginning of this year only about 8% of U.S. consumers had chip-enabled credit cards. Banks are expected to work to substantially increase those numbers, with industry projections putting the percentage of chip cards at between 50% and 60% by the end of this year.

New EMV Policy: What’s it Mean to Me?

Switching to EMV can be a simple process, or become more difficult and time consuming based on the size and complexity of the retailer’s POS system. “We did make an early transition to the chip technology in our store,” explained David Stoller, owner of Suitcases & More in Scottsdale, AZ, “but we have not done anything with those SquareApples  or that GoQuick. We are pretty simple folk here.” Guy Paquette, director of corporate operations for Bagot Leather Goods, Luggage Plus in Kingston, Ontario, also found that for a business of his size, the change was easy. “Retailers should have no fear, because this should be a seamless conversion.” As Paquette recalls, “I use Chase, like many folks in the U.S.. I called them, they sent a technician that afternoon, and he plugged in my new machine.”

Larger retailers with customized POS systems may have the additional burden of certifying that their credit card processing systems meet EMVCo standards. However, for the vast majority of retailers, your payment processor has already taken care of EMV certification.

EMV on the Sales Floor

The switch to EMV will require some training, both of staff and of your customers. In order to run a card with a new EMV machine, first visually identify whether the card is a chip card. If it’s a stripe card, the EMV machines available to U.S. retailers also allow traditional swipe-authorization. If it’s a chip card, the customer will insert it into a slot in the bottom, front of the card reader, which points towards the customer, and leave it in the machine. The customer will follow the terminal prompts, and then complete the transaction either with a signature, or by entering a Personal Identification Number (PIN code), less common in the U.S..

According to QuickBooks.com, during the Canadian EMV migration a frequent problem was that many customers absent-mindedly left their credit cards in the machine at the end of the transaction (as many of us have done in older-style ATM machines). This is likely to be a problem during the transition to chip cards, since the busy holiday season comes right after deployment of the new EMV machines. U.S. retailers will need to take steps to remind harried and distracted holiday shoppers to withdraw their cards at the end of the transaction, either through signage or even humorous employee t-shirts.

Managing Fraud Risk

While credit card companies have made it clear that EMV machines are not a requirement, they have also stated that the October 1 deadline represents a liability shift from the credit card company to the retailer in cases of fraud. No one wants to be the source of a security breach affecting their customers, both from a public relations and a liability standpoint, so beyond the EMV requirement it’s important that the first goal of your payment and point of sale (POS) system is to protect your customers’ data.

Since switching to EMV in 2008, Canada saw a 40% reduction in fraud, according to QuickBooks.com. It’s unclear if the reduction in fraud in Canada is the result of adoption of EMV technology, or the concurrent change in Canadian laws protecting consumer privacy and security. “I’m a technology guy, so we got the new payment systems as they came out, just to give them a try,” explained Paquette. “Doing business in Canada, our primary concern is compliance with our government’s strict privacy laws. We first got a chip enabled credit card reader 10 or 12 years ago, and then invested in tap and pay technology [also called near field communication (NFC)] about six years ago. A year after that, in response to the Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), an amendment to the Privacy Act, we got rid of our tap and pay machine.” Fraud concerns and complying with PIPEDA also drove Paquette to restructure his POS system. “We separated our credit/debit system completely from our POS system to prevent any data breaches that would result in our customers’ credit card information being stolen.” Sam Hirsh, owner of Tripquipment in Falmouth, ME, believes Paquette’s security measures are important for U.S. retailers. “How do you protect yourself? By doing the most common sense things possible. We will never save credit card information,” stated Hirsh. The experience of Canadian retailers is of interest to U.S. retailers, who are frequently encouraged to adopt more and more integrated systems, which save credit card info, sales history and other consumer data, while also having the ability to push personalized promos out to customer’s smart phones. The promotional value of these integrated systems must be weighed against their possible vulnerability to hackers and credit card fraud.

As was the case during global adoption of EMV, fraud will most likely migrate to the least secure sales channel. Retailers without EMV card-reading technology may find themselves targets in the future. However, there is no reason to panic if you don’t currently have an EMV card reader. You have to take an actual EMV card (still not common) after October 1 that turns out to be fraudulent in order to create a liability situation. But do contact your card processor to create a plan to get yourself an EMV compliant machine as soon as possible.

Where is the Bottleneck?

Although news outlets have characterized the slow U.S. adoption of chip-card readers as symptomatic of unsophisticated U.S. retailers, the real problem lies elsewhere. Technology vendors and credit card processors are racing to get their services certified as being compliant, at the same time that larger retailers, health care companies, banks, airlines, and other credit card-dependent businesses are also trying to get certified. Chuck Weisbart from It’s…In The Bag! in Palm Desert, CA, echoed a common frustration: “Our processing company is waiting until the first of October. Our banks are the ‘financial gestapo.’ We would have had the chip readers years ago, but it was our banks that didn’t want to have to spend the moolah.” Hirsh is also experiencing vendor-related delay. “Our POS company sent us a note saying the chip-card readers were coming but not available yet. Meanwhile we’re getting offers every day from other processing providers offering chip machines and asking us to switch. But we like our POS system so we’re going to wait for them.”

Credit Card Controversy

In the rest of the world, EMV card readers require a PIN, rather than the signature cards that most U.S. banks will issue. The Mallory Duncan, senior vice president and general counsel of the NRF believes this is unfair. “Banks are adding a chip that makes the card hard to counterfeit but refusing to add the PIN that would ensure user legitimacy. Retailers are being required to cover the $25 to $30 billion cost of the new equipment. Why are they making us buy equipment that can do both, but refusing to do what they do in Europe and set up a system that does both?” Duncan asks.

Weisbart also has a beef with the length of time that it’s taken banks to issue chip cards in the U.S..

“You can tell the real traveler from the novice, as the real traveler has experienced refusal of their unchipped cards overseas. What is baffling is that a lot of our customers have called the big boys in banking, such as Bank of America, Chase, and Wells Fargo, and asked for a chipped card as they are going out of the country, and have been told that they cannot get them, and the consumer accepts that answer. Wait till the chipped card comes in the mail automatically in the next couple of months to hit the October deadline, and then see how much all these consumers trust their big boy banks.”

Swipe Fee Furor

Credit card processing fees are a continual source of merchant frustration. The biggest question travel goods retailers have about new credit is whether new technology and new options will disrupt the market enough that processing fees go down. The answer, at least so far, seems to be no. NRF estimates that current transaction costs run between 2% and 4%, although it can be difficult to track batch fees, statement fees, maintenance fees, data security compliance fees, monthly minimums and customer service fees on top of the non-negotiable interchange fees. Credit card fees are now the third or fourth largest expense for retailers, after rent and payroll. New technologies, such as PayPal Here and Square charge between 1.7% and 2.75%; on the lower end of the 2% to 4% fee range but likely not low enough to shake up the industry.

Outside the U.S. it’s possible to find tighter government regulation of interchange fees, leading to more money in retailers’ pockets. As an example, in 2003 the Reserve Bank of Australia cut credit card interchange fees in half. Organizations such as NRF and businesses like Walmart have been going after the credit card companies in the courts, although so far their efforts have not been fruitful. On Jan 20th of this year, the Supreme Court rejected a NRF challenge to debit card swipe fee rules. Duncan, speaking for a disappointed NRF, stated that the Supreme Court ruling “means retailers will keep paying billions of dollars more than they should, and that fee-hungry banks will continue to rake in unearned profits that ultimately come out of consumers’ pockets.” Duncan called for continued work lobbying for lower swipe fees: “Countries all over the world are significantly reducing interchange fees because they know these fees are a sweetheart deal for big banks and an unfair burden for merchants and consumers.” Whether we ultimately choose smart wallets, tap and pay, swipe or chip, that is legislation we can all support.

Pick Your Features and Make Your Move

Many businesses will opt to swap their non-EMV terminal for an EMV-compatible one, to keep it simple and keep their costs down. One wise upgrade would be to make sure your new EMV terminal is both signature and PIN capable. Although most U.S. consumers will initially receive chip and signature cards now, chip and PIN cards are coming in the future. And if you have significant number of international customers, you’ll need that PIN capability. It could make the difference between closing a large sale, or not.

This may also be the time to upgrade your current system to one with inventory or customer loyalty tracking, although that adds a level of potential security risk. You could opt for a machine that also takes mobile or contactless payment, such as Apple Pay, by using NFC. Contactless EMV payments allow customers to tap their card against the terminal (as with a mobile wallet) which can significantly speed up transactions. If you have very busy periods, this could make a big difference to the length of the line at the cash register and the overall transaction experience for your customer. Ricki Subel, Marketing Manager for central U.S. chain Landmark Luggage, states that “we have integrated Apple Pay at one of the stores. We are interested in modernizing our operating systems in general, as well as being ahead of the curve to suit the needs of our customers and comply with consumer trends. There have been some technical issues on the behalf of both the system hardware and the user fluidity, but we are working through those in an effort to be able to bring Apple Pay to all stores who are very willing and excited to try it.”

Bottom line? We’re in the VHS and Betamax era of new credit and we don’t know who is going to come out on top. The name of Chase’s new terminal, Future Proof, sums up the uncertainty of current payment practices. It accepts swipe-type debit and credit cards, works for both PIN and signature inserted chip cards, and accepts both mobile wallet payments and contactless chip-card transactions. When making decisions about new credit, think about your customer demographic, make your best prediction of what payment technology will gain popularity in your region, and try to keep your contracts and systems flexible to respond to change.

This story originally appeared in the fall 2015 issue of Travel Goods Showcase

Global Opportunities in Environmental Education

2015 HPU Teacher of the Year Regina Ostergaard-Klem, Ph.D., brings the community into the classroom, and the classroom into the community

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Hawai‘i Pacific University Associate Professor of Environmental Science Regina Ostergaard-Klem, Ph.D., began her academic career in industrial engineering, a non-traditional path for an environmental scientist. “Studying engineering instilled a pragmatic approach to problem-solving,” Ostergaard-Klem shared, “and provided me with an analytic framework to evaluate problems with a lot of variables and multiple objectives.” After receiving her Ph.D. in Systems Analysis and Economics for Public Decision Making from The Johns Hopkins University, she worked at the United States Agency for International Development before coming to HPU in 2008. “I think that my diverse professional experiences, from database development to international policy analysis, give me a rich collection of real-world anecdotes that help me illustrate sustainable development in the classroom,” said Ostergaard-Klem.

Ostergaard-Klem is thrilled to add to her collection of hands-on experiences during a CIEE International Faculty Development seminar in China this summer. “Rarely does a class period go by without some reference to China, whether related to carbon offsetting, rare earth elements or eco-cities in China,” said Ostergaard-Klem. China’s decisions have tremendous implications for domestic and international sustainability. “Real-life examples gained from traveling through China, directly incorporated into my curriculum, will have an even greater impact on my students.”

Ostergaard-Klem is also preparing her students for the World Conservation Congress (WCC), to be held in Honolulu in 2016. “This is the Olympics of conservation, a gathering of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the oldest and largest international environmental organization. The WCC happens every four years, and it’s never been hosted in the U.S. before,” said Ostergaard-Klem. “We’re expecting between eight and 10 thousand participants.” The IUCN has traditionally been centered on species conservation. However, the organization has become increasingly concerned with balancing ecosystems and community impacts, making this a great moment to present Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) research, Ostergaard-Klem’s primary focus, to conservation professionals. (GPI, a supplement to GDP, adjusts for negative and positive effects of economic activity.) HPU and the University of Hawai‘i are collaborating to provide Conservation Campus programs, affiliate events providing training and teaching experiences for WCC participants and students from around the world. “My primary goal is to make sure the conference provides tremendous opportunities for enrichment and professional networking for HPU students,” said Ostergaard-Klem. “This is also an opportunity for local leaders from the business and environmental community in Hawaii to engage and share best-practices with their counterparts from all over the world.” Given that the conference will be held on an island, “I hope WCC is an opportunity to further support island partnerships such as that with the President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands and HPU alumnus Christopher Loeak (BA ’79).”

This story originally appeared in the summer 2015 issue of HPU Today.

Creating a Sustainable Future

Regina Ostergaard-Klem, Ph.D., provides global leadership in environmental science through community-based research

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Hawai‘i is known for rich research opportunities in volcanology, marine biology and astronomy. The 2015 Hawai‘i Pacific University Teacher of the Year Regina Ostergaard-Klem, Ph.D., is on a mission to add environmental science and sustainability to that honor roll. Because of Hawai‘i’s unique combination of diverse ecosystems, an economy dependent upon those resources, and cultural connections to nature, HPU students can do globally relevant sustainability research without ever leaving the islands. “Business and the environment have a symbiotic relationship that is critical to quality of life in Hawai‘i,” noted Ostergaard-Klem, an Associate Professor of Environmental Science. “There is no more interesting place on earth to study sustainability.”

Ostergaard-Klem’s primary research focus is the customization of the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) to the unique needs of Hawai‘i. GPI was developed two decades ago as a supplement to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). GPI and GDP start at the same point, but GPI is then adjusted for negative and positive effects of economic activity, such as saltwater intrusion in a well, or the value of grandparents watching their grandchildren. GPI expresses these economic pluses and minuses as a dollar value, in order to aid policy planners in modeling trade-offs. Business leaders will recognize GPI as the macro expression of a movement also taking place at the micro level that includes Corporate Sustainability Plans, B-Corporations and the Global Reporting Initiative. “The low hanging fruit for companies is the reduction of waste, which is good for the environment by eliminating externalities and good for business by saving money,” said Ostergaard-Klem. “GPI is a way to track how well our whole economy is doing at reducing externalities.”

Ostergaard-Klem, her University of Hawai‘i collaborator Kirsten L.L. Oleson, Ph.D., and their army of graduate and undergraduate students produce a GPI for Hawai‘i, showcased in the State of Hawaii Environmental Council annual reports. Ostergaard-Klem explained the process: “GPI reporting is driven by data collated across different agencies and organizations that do not necessarily talk to one another. The GPI framework can be a model for other initiatives like Aloha + Challenge and its Sustainability Dashboard project. Our students gain real-world experience collaborating with community organizations to develop locally important deliverables, a key part of Ostergaard-Klem’s teaching philosophy. “It’s not that I’m parenting the students, but I think about my courses within the context of the student’s career development, rather than simply as an opportunity to teach the subject matter on the syllabus,” said Ostergaard-Klem. “I try to give them real-world skills.”

Research in Hawai‘i has the potential to lead the development of globally relevant protocols for localizing GPI. The original GPI formula includes items that are unimportant in Hawai‘i, such as human-made air pollution, while undervaluing others, such as sea-level rise from climate change. Ostergaard-Klem has shared her work on the localization of GPI with local organizations like the Hawai‘i Chapter of the American Planning Association and the Hawaii Economic Association and will present to the United States Society for Ecological Economics In October. These sessions help policy makers, planners, and economists realize the limits of GDP, while providing them with GPI as a more comprehensive alternative. Ostergaard-Klem has found that “planners and policy makers are often trying to piece together information on policy impacts, so our GPI reporting is very useful for them.”

This article originally appeared in the summer 2015 issue of HPU Today.