USA TODAY International Edition

For Life Is Good, COVID can’t kill all optimism

- Derek Catron

Life is good.

It’s more than a slogan. For more than 25 years, it’s been an ethos for the company that makes $ 100 million a year printing those three words on T- shirts, ball caps, coffee mugs and other merchandis­e.

But then 2020 arrived, and with it the coronaviru­s pandemic. When Bert and John Jacobs, the brothers who founded the company in 1994, met in March with the top leadership staff of Life Is Good, they spoke of things that seemed a rejection of the optimism they normally peddled. Layoffs. Bankruptcy. Even an end to the business.

It wasn’t as if Jake – the smiley- faced stick figure who adorns many of the company’s T- shirts – hadn’t had a reason to frown before. After 9/ 11, people told the Jacobs brothers life wasn’t good any longer. They responded with a shirt bearing a stylized American flag above their brand. Customers bought them up, and though the company donated sales from that shirt to charity, the gesture broadened their customer base.

“Our business didn’t just survive that era, it thrived,” Bert Jacobs said in a recent phone interview.

The 2013 bombing at the Boston Marathon struck closer to home – the brothers grew up in Needham, Massachuse­tts, and the privately held company is based in Boston. They responded with a T- shirt bearing the city’s name on the front with a heart replacing the second O and the legend, “There’s nothing stronger than love” on the back.

“That became the best- selling T- shirt we ever made at the time,” Jacobs said. The profits again went to charity, and their customers multiplied.

But the coronaviru­s was something else. The company couldn’t just print a clever T- shirt and ride it out – not if the very act of gathering many of their 200 employees in their New Hampshire distributi­on center jeopardize­d lives. Shutting down the center – even if it meant losing the business – seemed like it might be the right thing to do.

So the brothers met with their leadership team, which asked for 48 hours to seek feedback from the staff and consider alternativ­es.

Hanging in the balance: the future of a company whose origin story sounds like a folk tale.

“We didn’t even invent ‘ life is good.’ We just happened to get lucky and be the first ones to trademark it.” Bert Jacobs, Life Is Good co- founder

After finishing college, the brothers put their artistic inclinatio­ns to work trying to sell T- shirts in the early ’ 90s. They traveled the East Coast in a van dubbed “Enterprise” hawking T- shirts on college campuses and anywhere else they found a crowd.

After five years and with $ 78 to their names, they returned home to Boston and threw a keg party. They pinned drawings of their latest ideas to the wall for friends to critique. One showed the grinning stickfigure face they would soon make iconic. Someone circled it and wrote, “This guy’s got life figured out.”

Life Is Good was born. Their first time out with the new design, they sold 48 shirts in 45 minutes.

Jacobs, square- jawed, ginger- haired and, in his mid- 50s, fit enough for all the activities celebrated on his shirts, looks like he’s the guy who’s got life figured out. But he’s humbled talking about the business’ success.

“We didn’t invent these ideas,” he said. “We didn’t even invent ‘ life is good.’ We just happened to get lucky and be the first ones to trademark it.”

So when the employees said they wanted to figure out how to safely keep the business operating, the team mobilized to retrofit the distributi­on center.

“We brought in nurses. We set up stations 10 feet apart ( and staggered shifts),” Jacobs said. “It’s been three months, and we don’t have any cases. We’ve been fortunate so far.”

New designs include drawings of animals with the message “Wash your paws“or “Stay calm, stay cool, stay home.” A design for graduates bore the inscriptio­n, “Class of 2020: ‘ Virtually’ the greatest class of all time.”

“That one went crazy,” Jacobs said.

“Our customers, like ourselves, recognize that there are obstacles. … We like to say, ‘ Life isn’t easy, and life isn’t perfect. But life is good.’”

Still.

 ??  ?? Brothers Bert and John Jacobs founded Life Is Good to spread the power of optimism. COURTESY PHOTO
Brothers Bert and John Jacobs founded Life Is Good to spread the power of optimism. COURTESY PHOTO

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