PrettySquareGal
I'll Lock Up
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https://www.pressherald.com/2017/02...ement-buyout-to-trim-workforce-by-10-percent/There's more to the story that the national media doesn't seem to be telling. All is not well in the land of the shammy-shirt and the duck boot: the Bean office in Freeport earlier this week announced that it plans to cut its workforce in Maine by 500 people thru buyouts for workers over the age of 50, and will also eliminate its pension program. The company is not in good shape, largely because recent generations of the Bean family are not very bright.
"The first generation earns the wealth, the second maintains it, and the third spends it"
....
Boy did it ever read like spin. I was surprised Bean still had a pension plan as most of those were jettisoned in the private sector in the '90s (the brokerage firm I worked for at the time got rid of its in '96). Then again, I'd rather see a company cut costs to survive, then go belly up later as that means 100% layoffs - but there was not enough in that article to say what is really happening at the company.
Yup ⇧. Bean, surprisingly, has survived longer than usual as a family run business. And, like Ford eventually did, they have brought in an outside CEO so maybe there's hope.
No hope and he's not that new. He is a former Walmart China CEO and must be behind what we're now seeing:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephen-smith-306b2515/
I personally do not own much from them. A shirt or two I believe. My wife has a few things, including a winter coat which she likes very much. I lost a lot of my interest in paying premium money for their products quite a few years ago when thumbing through the catalog showed mostly imported merchandise. The image they portrayed and the reality were far different. My perception was that they wanted you to think of old Maine and not think of an Asian woman furiously churning out product for peanuts.
Thing was, Bean didn't really become a "fashion" company until the preppy craze of the '80s, and when you read what Mr. Useta B. Walmart has to say there, it seems like they're considering that as the model they want to follow into the future. A fashion craze has the lifespan of the average pollywog, and those who live by them will inevitably perish by them.
Within ten to fifteen years, I predict Bean will be bought out and turned into just another brand in a "portfolio of brands." It will retain the Freeport store as a Maine presence for branding purposes, but what manufacturing they still do here will be outsourced to Bangladesh and/or China. I expect even the call centers will be overseas soon.
This trend has been underway for a while now. The "Bean Logo T-Shirts" I ground out for ten hours a day on a production line in 1987 have been made in China for decades. Even when they were making them in the US their practices were shady -- contractors were expected to meet production quotas by any means necessary, if that meant removing safety guards from equipment and letting workers get body parts mangled during speedups, well, those people don't buy our stuff anyway.