The Northern Advocate

Big shake-up for Icebreaker retail

Up to 50 jobs to go in restructur­e as US parent eyes growth

- Aimee Shaw

VF Corporatio­n-owned merino wool clothing company Icebreaker is undergoing a major restructur­e, with up to 50 local staff set to lose their jobs. The Ponsonby-based retailer, which operates 16 shops in New Zealand, six in Australia and 15 in North America, was sold to the owner of The North Face, Vans and Timberland brands in November 2017 for $288 million.

The Kiwi-founded company is undergoing consultati­on with staff and expects 40-50 jobs to be disestabli­shed as some parts of its operations are moved to Switzerlan­d, where VF Internatio­nal is headquarte­red.

VF Corporatio­n vice-president Jan Van Mossevelde told the Herald the restructur­e was necessary for the brand to further expand globally.

He was vague on detail, and would not specify which divisions of the business would be moved offshore, but said jobs that were focused on the global business were among those that would be disestabli­shed.

The Herald understand­s marketing roles are among those that will be run out of Switzerlan­d and the company has begun asking some senior staff to consider relocating to Switzerlan­d.

The US retail giant has plans to double the size of Icebreaker by 2025 as it moves to expand its apparel offering from outdoor clothing to casual and work wear. To do this it would need to “undertake a reorganisa­tion of both the business and team structure in New Zealand”, Van Mossevelde said.

As of October, the Icebreaker entity will cease trading and the business will be split into three new entities — two set to be based out of the Ponsonby head office and one in Switzerlan­d.

Van Mossevelde could not delve into details, but he said the restructur­e would simplify operations and allow roles to be “situated closer to the markets they support”.

He said the redundancy notice to staff had been “met with empathy”.

“We are now at a point where we see a unique opportunit­y of rapid growth and we have come to realise that the current structure will not position us in the best place to enable that growth,” Van Mossevelde said.

Icebreaker employs 112 staff in New Zealand and has stores in Auckland, ¯Queenstown, Wellington Airport, Otaki, Napier, and partner stores in Queenstown Airport and Wellington.

Van Mossevelde said Icebreaker’s connection to New Zealand had been “central to the brand’s success to date” and VF “remained committed” to the country and its local suppliers as the business entered its next stage of growth.

Icebreaker was founded by Jeremy Moon in 1995. He is understood to have made almost $100m from the sale of the company.

VF Corp is an almost US$14 billion ($19.4b) footwear and clothing company based in Denver, Colorado. In addition to The North Face, Vans and Timberland, VF also owns Dickies, Jansport, Kipling, Wrangler and Supreme brands.

 ??  ?? VF Corporatio­n has plans to double the size of Icebreaker by 2025.
VF Corporatio­n has plans to double the size of Icebreaker by 2025.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand