chris975d
Ramblin' Wreck
- Messages
- 903
Buy gold/sand gear when we get it. That's the best advice I can offer, and that's what I actually do. Again, all of this is pretty logical to anyone dealing with the apparel industry. Gold isn't ever going to be made/offered in large quantities as an apparel color choice. Especially when it can't match our helmets. We chose "sand"/tan/khaki instead as our textile/cloth equivalent. So we have two pretty bland colors for our apparel choices if we stay with our primary colors (tan or white). Because how many fans would wear something like this (I would, but I don't mind being a little loud with my wardrobe)??
That (or sand/tan) is not something any apparel company is going to make much of (again, talk to the industry), when they can make navy, or even white, which is our other color, and one we actually do have a lot of offerings in, but the issue with white is that it's just plain. And most people don't even think of it as a primary color for a sports team, instead it's typically an accent/secondary/tertiary color.
Let's look at any other sports team that uses gold (true gold, not a yellow/cheddar version) as a primary color...find a lot of gold apparel for them. Heck, let's look at probably the largest fanbase (i.e, customer base) of a gold team there is...Notre Dame. Primary colors are gold and blue. And they don't even get anywhere close to a 50/50 split of gold to blue apparel. It's like 90% blue.
If they can't get/sell a lot of gold, when it's one of their primary colors, we aren't going to either. So when we do get gold, we as a fanbase need to not be cheap and buy it. That's how we get more. But I'd never, ever expect it to be even close to 10-20% of what we are offered. We get a lot of white, our other primary color, but no one gets excited about buying a white shirt. It looks generic. And no one is going to buy white pants, or white jackets, etc. But, conveniently enough for apparel companies, we have navy blue as an accessory color. And let's go back to the reasoning the Dallas Cowboys moved from royal to navy...
Quote:
When shopping for Cowboys gear, all you see is navy, white and silver. No royal blue. There’s a reason for that, and it directly impacted Dallas’ decision to shift from royal to navy.
“Navy has been more popular in retail, and for us when we do so much of our sideline products, whether it’s polos or hats or T-shirts, a lot of that royal color – which is what the Cowboys used to be – has kind of transitioned to navy just because it does so much better at retail,” McCord said.
That (or sand/tan) is not something any apparel company is going to make much of (again, talk to the industry), when they can make navy, or even white, which is our other color, and one we actually do have a lot of offerings in, but the issue with white is that it's just plain. And most people don't even think of it as a primary color for a sports team, instead it's typically an accent/secondary/tertiary color.
Let's look at any other sports team that uses gold (true gold, not a yellow/cheddar version) as a primary color...find a lot of gold apparel for them. Heck, let's look at probably the largest fanbase (i.e, customer base) of a gold team there is...Notre Dame. Primary colors are gold and blue. And they don't even get anywhere close to a 50/50 split of gold to blue apparel. It's like 90% blue.
If they can't get/sell a lot of gold, when it's one of their primary colors, we aren't going to either. So when we do get gold, we as a fanbase need to not be cheap and buy it. That's how we get more. But I'd never, ever expect it to be even close to 10-20% of what we are offered. We get a lot of white, our other primary color, but no one gets excited about buying a white shirt. It looks generic. And no one is going to buy white pants, or white jackets, etc. But, conveniently enough for apparel companies, we have navy blue as an accessory color. And let's go back to the reasoning the Dallas Cowboys moved from royal to navy...
Quote:
When shopping for Cowboys gear, all you see is navy, white and silver. No royal blue. There’s a reason for that, and it directly impacted Dallas’ decision to shift from royal to navy.
“Navy has been more popular in retail, and for us when we do so much of our sideline products, whether it’s polos or hats or T-shirts, a lot of that royal color – which is what the Cowboys used to be – has kind of transitioned to navy just because it does so much better at retail,” McCord said.