Starbury scoring?

Posted by Rob Walker on February 6, 2007
Posted Under: Uncategorized

Both Business Week and Brand Channel have done pieces recently on the success of the Starbury One sneaker — which sells for the startlingly low price of about $15. I will admit that when I heard about this sneaker, I was pretty skeptical. But Business Week says “3 million pairs have sold since its August debut.” (Although somewhat oddly, the source on that is Stephon Marbury.) Business Week continues:

The Starbury and its ilk have the potential to undermine Nike’s basketball sneaker business. According to researcher NPD Group Inc., the low-cost shoe market — sneakers under $50 — has grown nearly 9% over the past two years and now makes up more than half of the $16.5 billion of branded athletic footwear sold each year in the U.S. Nike sells its own cheap sneakers, but doesn’t have much traction against such low-cost entrants as the $35 Amp runner, a creation from Payless ShoeSource. “If I were a branded athletic company right now, I’d be reconsidering my whole approach,” says Jeffrey Bliss, president of Javelin Group, a sports marketing firm.

I don’t know about any of this threatening Nike’s business model. I think they’re doing pretty well these days.

BrandChannel adds this:

Though the brand was promoted in influential basketball lifestyle publications, a major ad budget wouldn’t keep those shoes priced below $15 for very long. So over the summer Marbury embarked on a series of launch appearances dubbed the Starbury Movement Tour to introduce the brand at Steve and Barry’s stores throughout the US. (Marbury was paid no money up front, unlike his previous endorsement deal with sneaker brand AND1, but receives royalties on sales.)

Also, Marbury apparently wears the shoes during games: “And even as his on-court performance occasionally (all right, more often than occasionally) incites 20,000 fans at Madison Square Garden to boo (or worse), Marbury burnishes his good-guy image with a brand that is accessible to nearly anyone.”

I definitely agree with that last point, and I basically thought that was all this brand was going to achieve — making Marbury look good. But I guess it’s actually resonating with some group of consumers. Is it parents buying these shoes for their kids? Is it adults who just want some no-nonsense sneakers and don’t care about whether they’re “cool” or not? Or are kids really into them? I would think that there’d be some risk of schoolyard stigma associated with wearing a brand basically known for being super cheap. But maybe I’m wrong about that.

Further diversion may be found at MKTG Tumblr, and the Consumed Facebook page.

Reader Comments

My son likes the shoes for two main reasons: 1. they look cool (they really do); 2. Stephon Marbury is his favorite player. I like the shoes because 1. they are cheap; 2. he really likes them; 3. attractive design, especially in the white/blue/orange format.

#1 
Written By Matt C. on February 7th, 2007 @ 2:58 pm

I have a pair! They’re actually fairly excellent – the lines are clean, the colors are subdued-yet-obnoxious (black-orange-blue), the logo is unknown and subtle enough to not be obnoxious…and 15 bones is pretty much my ideal price for a pair of shoes.

Is there a bit of ironic-hipster positioning going on here (esp. given that I don’t actually, y’know, play basketball)? Of course – they’re a terrific cultural object. But they’re a terrific cultural object that actually looks pretty cool, is cheap, and is rather explicitly making a socio-cultural-economic statement that I can really get on board with: Kids shouldn’t be (too outrageously) padding the bank accounts of their millionaires-many-times-over sports stars.

#2 
Written By jkd on February 7th, 2007 @ 7:29 pm

Thanks for both of these comments, which speak to something I”m totally unqualified to judge — the look/style question. And it sounds, from both of these comments, like the do well on that front.

Do you feel like people recognize the look — does anybody ever say: Oh, you got those Marbury sneakers?

I’m also curious where you got them.

If you’re tired of talkinga bout it in public (to the extent this site can be considered public), use walker@robwalker.net

No obligation of course!

Thanks again.

#3 
Written By murketing on February 8th, 2007 @ 8:43 am

Not a problem to talk about it — I bought my kids’ shoes straight from our local Steve and Barry’s mall store (that’s the maker of the shoe). As i was walking out with the box, another family was coming in to return their son’s shoes for a larger pair; the kid was SO EXCITED for his new shoes. They also make a low-top shoe in this line for only $9.99.

My (pale-skinned) son goes to a (very rainbow-hued) public school here in Well-Known College Town, Wisconsin, and has been getting mad props on his shoes from all his classmates. The Starbury One is a well-known brand in elementary schools already, after just a few months.

#4 
Written By Matt C. on February 8th, 2007 @ 3:01 pm

I am trying to buy a few pairs. I think the shoe appeals to me because I play alot of jump sports and feel that shoes needs to be replaced every 6 months… or my 37 year old ankles will suffer…

#5 
Written By abc on February 8th, 2007 @ 3:43 pm

There were early stories about this shoe being really bad for actual basketball players’ ankles, and were responsible for Marbury’s injuries earlier this year. These stories seem to have gone away though.

#6 
Written By Matt C. on February 9th, 2007 @ 11:20 am