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Bonobos (apparel)

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Website
  
bonobos.com

CEO
  
Andy Dunn (Jul 2007–)

Number of locations
  
11

Founders
  
Andy Dunn, Brian Spaly

Founded
  
2007

Headquarters
  
New York City

Type of business
  
Private

Bonobos (apparel) httpslh3googleusercontentcomz3qg9t7QIhAAAA

Industry
  
Retail, apparel, e-commerce

Profiles

Bonobos is an e-commerce-driven apparel company headquartered in New York City that designs and sells men's clothing. Bonobos offers a full line of men's suits, trousers, denim, shirts, shorts, swimwear, outerwear and accessories. The company was founded by Stanford Business School housemates Andy Dunn and Brian Spaly, and launched exclusively online in 2007. In 2012, Bonobos' business model extended offline with the launch of their e-commerce “Guideshop" locations, and through a partnership with Nordstrom.

Contents

Bonobos was named “One of America’s Hottest Brands” by Advertising Age, “Best Men’s Pants” by New York Magazine, one of Inc. Magazine’s “20 Awesome Facebook Pages”, and was awarded Crain’s New York Business “Best Places to Work in New York City”.

History

The firm was founded by Brian Spaly who began designing men’s pants while at Stanford Business School. They featured a curved waistband, a medium rise and a tailored thigh that fit better and eliminated “khaki diaper butt.” As demand grew, he and housemate Andy Dunn decided to pursue the project as a business opportunity.

Initially, the brand was launched exclusively online. Dunn cashed in his 401(k) to build Bonobos.com and raised a round of angel investment. Initial investors included Wealthfront CEO and former venture capitalist, Andy Rachleff, and JetBlue Chairman and founding Bonobos board member Joel Peterson, both of whom had lectured Dunn at Stanford Business School. Dunn then moved to New York City with 400 pairs of pants that he picked, packed and shipped from his Union Square apartment. Within six months, the firm grew to five employees and a $1 million net revenue run rate. In its first three years, the company received over $7 million in funding from angel investors. In 2009, Spaly moved on to another venture, running the Chicago-based fashion commerce company Trunk Club.

In 2010, the company received its first institutionally-driven financing round, raising $18.5 million from Accel Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners. As part of the round, Accel Partners’ Sameer Gandhi and Lightspeed Venture Partners’ Jeremy Liew joined Bonobos’ board.

As Bonobos expanded its assortment to include suits, dress shirts, outerwear and tailored pieces, more customers requested the opportunity to “try before they buy”. In fall 2011, the company tested an e-commerce store at their New York City headquarters, calling the location a Guideshop. The purpose of the Guideshop location was to provide a physical space for men to try on Bonobos prior to e-commerce transactions being placed. Within a year, the concept became an integral part of the firm's service and business model.

In 2012, Bonobos closed a $16.4 million strategic minority investment round led by Nordstrom, with participation from existing investors. In tandem, Bonobos partnered with Nordstrom to sell the brand’s clothing in their full-line stores and their website. Bonobos furthered its offline reach in May 2012, opening its first standalone Guideshop location in Boston. By January 2013, Bonobos had opened additional Guideshop locations in Chicago, Georgetown and San Francisco.

Bonobos announced a $30 million round in 2013, with Glynn Capital and Mousse Partners joining existing investors Accel Partners, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Forerunner Ventures and Nordstrom. At this time, Forerunner’s Managing Partner Kirsten Green joined the Bonobos board and total funding to date reached nearly $73 million. Simultaneously, the company launched the golf brand Maide, which is the second brand launched by the Bonobos team. By August 2013, Bonobos had opened Guideshop locations on Crosby Street in New York City, Bethesda, MD, and Austin, TX, bringing total location count to eight. By August 2013 employee headcount reached 175.

Bonobos Ninjas

Bonobos ninjas are customer service representatives tasked with providing quality customer service for the company’s e-commerce site. Dunn conceptualized the name to attract college-educated qualified candidates to the job and to emphasize Bonobos’ desire to provide great customer service. Bonobos ninjas interact with customers through phone, email and social media.

Guideshops

The Bonobos Guideshop locations are an e-commerce store for men to shop the brand in person. Guideshop locations display the brand’s full offering of merchandise, with sizing samples available across categories for men to try on. Customers work individually with a Bonobos “Guide” who serves as a shopping and styling assistant. After each appointment, Guideshop visitors receive an email with their fit and style preferences. Customers can also purchase on-site at the Guideshop locations through the website. Bonobos Guideshop locations are located in Manhattan's Flatiron and SoHo districts, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, San Francisco, Bethesda, Washington, D.C., Austin, Dallas and Houston and have been covered nationally and locally in The New York Times, USA Today, CNBC, WABC-TV, Crain’s New York Business, The Boston Globe, Chicago Sun Times, San Francisco Chronicle, among others.

Plans for a third New York City Guideshop location were announced in February 2014. The new location will be in the new Brookfield Place (former World Financial Center) development in lower Manhattan.

In October 2015, a new Guideshop location opened in the newly developed River Oaks District in Houston.

Products

Bonobos designs, markets and sells multiple categories of men’s apparel for casual, business and formal wear occasions. Bonobos launched with pants and carries a wide selection of styles and fabrications such as denim, washed chino, wool, and corduroy. Today Bonobos’ categories include pants along with casual and dress shirts, suits and blazers, tees, knits, polos, outerwear, shorts, swim, ties, pocket squares and belts. Its suits are made in China and its denim is sewn in Mexico. Bonobos carries neckties that are hand-sewn in the US.

Technology

In early 2012, Bonobos opened a West Coast office to build a Silicon Valley-based technology team. After a year and half, Dunn realized that communication and efficiency would improve by eliminating bi-coastal offices. In 2013, Bonobos moved the technology arm to the New York City headquarters.

References

Bonobos (apparel) Wikipedia