Burton Snowboards Is King of the Hill

The young, hip Vermont company rides trends to "shred" the competition

By Katy Marquardt

Posted: September 19, 2008

CEO Laurent Potdevin at Burton's flagship store in Burlington, Vt.

CEO Laurent Potdevin at Burton's flagship store in Burlington, Vt.

In the 1980s and early '90s, snowboarding was a sport of renegades. Skiers protested as young, etiquette-lacking adrenaline junkies with neon hair and baggy pants went bombing down the slopes with lawless abandon, sliding across picnic tables. Soon, ski resorts began banning snowboarders, further cementing the riders' image as outcasts.

Today, snowboarding is a mainstream pastime. "It's at the point where you've got your little sister, your mom, and your grandma out there," says Joel Muzzey, senior editor of Transworld Snowboarding magazine. (Snowboarders have even come to peacefully coexist with skiers.) This demographic transformation of the sport, which has grown from 2.5 million participants in 1997 to more than 5 million today, poses challenges for snowboard manufacturers, who must stay true to the sport's roots yet cater to the masses and a new generation of riders. (After all, the original misfits are now raising kids.)

The king of this $487 million industry, Burton Snowboards, has the right idea. The privately held company makes boards, clothes, and snowboarding accessories, claiming 40 percent to 70 percent market share (depending on the category). An adaptive strategy ensures the near-constant debut of new board models and fashions, allowing Burton to keep pace with ever-changing trends and to grab a piece of the increasingly lucrative kids' and women's markets. And in a potentially savvy move, Burton recently made an epic jump from pure snowboarding company to year-round dealer of surfing, skateboarding, and snowboarding gear.

Laid-back digs. Burton's Burlington, Vt., headquarters represent a radically different corporate culture. A walk through the Subaru-filled parking lot provides a glimpse of employees skateboarding in a bowl behind the building. And once you enter Burton's lobby, you'll find overstuffed couches surrounding a fireplace. The feel is ski lodge.

Right away, it's apparent that Burton is young; the average employee age hovers near 30, and work spaces contain everything from mini bars to vintage boards to spare flip-flops. Perks include a ski-resort season pass, the chance to test and borrow equipment, and the privilege of bringing dogs to work. And should more than 2 feet of snow fall on Burlington in 24 hours, work is canceled in favor of the slopes. "It's a good balance: a laid-back and very casual atmosphere where people work hard and set high standards for themselves," says Burton's chief executive, Laurent Potdevin, 41. "So we get to blur the lines between lifestyle and work environment."

That philosophy harks back to the beginning. After walking away from a job at a Manhattan investment firm in the late '70s, Jake Burton went to work in a Londonderry, Vt., barn, modifying a 1960s toy called the Snurfer, which was essentially a plywood skateboard with no wheels and a leash. He built roughly 100 prototypes before deciding on a construction (an early model hangs in his office). Burton founded the company in 1977, first selling models out of his station wagon. "Some days, I'd return home with just as many boards as I'd left with," says Burton, 54, who came close to bailing when he found himself $100,000 in the hole. Fast-forward to today: Burton now boasts one of the biggest brands in the industry; maintains offices in California, Australia, Austria, and Japan (the company does more than half its business overseas); and sponsors a stable of pro riders, including Olympic half-pipe champion Shaun White.

Hard core. Burton's main business is hard goods: boards, boots, and bindings. Engineers and designers make the gear at a manufacturing center 10 miles down the road. This setup allows fluidity in production; engineers can turn around a new board in as little as two weeks (although complex designs can take as long as four years). Meanwhile, techies test products in a sort of in-house science lab. To measure their durability, boards are frozen, smacked with hammers, and crushed by machines. Boots are pushed and pulled repeatedly to test their flexibility. Burton then turns to its team of pros and amateurs, who take the boards to the slopes and subject them to different riding styles and terrains.

Board designs range from minimalist to psychedelic to "the point where I'm embarrassed to show my mother," says Todd King, 36, business unit director for boards. The names are also inventive: Try Lux, Feelgood, Blunt, and Vapor on for size. Customers can also design their own boards by submitting artwork or a photo (Gene "The Demon" Simmons of the glam-rock band Kiss had one made featuring his own mug).

Better Ride

Everyone want's to pull down the big guy..... Burton is High performance like a high performance car you ride it faster, stronger, better and of cause its gonna break.

Who is pushing the sport to new levels....who pushes all the other companies to produce something better, more flex, more specific, more style than burton.

If there is no big guy then there is nothing to live up too.

Lib tech created new tech with the skate banana... do you think they would of pushed themselves to come up with something unique without the dominance of Burton.

The progression of snowboarding really has nothing to do with Burton as such it has to do with someone/something pushing us to be better. A better rider, a better board and a new better company....

I am not burtonised I love that there is variety within the snowboard industry. Rome,, Lib Tech, Ride and many more. Now we just have to know more to find what we need. Oh yeah I love to ride ride to live

Grant @ Oct 14, 2009 08:36:40 AM

proof in the pudding.

i personally know three people who rode the burton blunt for two weeks and it broke. not because of inexperience but because the board cannot take park riding the way other boards can. the same people owned boards from Rome and Ride snowboards and have been on them for almost two seasons. and refferring to inexperience it is not a rare occurance that you would break a board on a rail or on any park feature for that matter,experienced or not. certain boards can take a beating. breaking a board on a rail is not rare at all. and anyone who says that burton is the best in looks quality and getting what you paid for has clearly not riden anything else. burton may make more gear than anyone else but it is absolutely false that they make the best gear out there. sorry to burst your bubble.

greg gregerson of MS @ May 04, 2009 23:39:56 PM

Outstanding Quality

"Burton manufactures tons of hardgoods but listen to this. The article talks about how they test all of their product and make it the best. burton manufactures all hard good to last ONLY 14 DAYS ON THE MOUNTAIN!!!! SO FOR ANYONE WHO TAKES SNOWBOARDING AT ALL SERIOUSLY DO NOT BUY BURTON IT WILL BREAK. THEN WHEN IT BREAKS, THE "48 HOUR RETURN POLICY" ON WARRANTIES IS A HOAX, MORE LIKE 3-4 WEEKS THEY SUCK. WATCH OUT FOR THE CORPORATE MONSTER BUY A Lib Tech!!!!"

You're either an inexperienced snowboarder or a Lib Tech salesperson. If your Burton snowboard broke at all, especially a new one, it is because either you bought a used, damaged snowboard, or you were doing something wrong. Any snowboard of quality does not just "break" on the mountain. Abusing an already beat-up board - for example, riding a rail incorrectly, could (rarely) cause a board to break. Burton is known by all snowboarders and all store carriers of its brand as the best gear out there. Ask anyone with Burton equipment; I'm certain they'll tell you it beats all other brands in quality, looks, and getting what you paid for.

Liana Aro of CO @ Apr 21, 2009 13:49:10 PM

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