
11 minute read
Barn Burner
On the heels of a record year that blazed past the $1billion sales mark, Boot Barn’s growth is just heating up. By Greg Dutter
PSST. Want in on a little secret? Boot Barn is a big business—and it’s poised to get a whole lot bigger. The chain is expected to triple in size over the next 10 years. We’re talking a projected 900 stores in nearly 50 states. But a lot of people—particularly the investment intelligentsia, which largely resides along America’s urban coastlines— don’t have a clue about Boot Barn. Even when informed of the chain’s solid growth, now going on 11 straight years, they remain skeptical. Chalk it up to a coastal bias blind spot, one that prevents them not just from recognizing what a behemoth Boot Barn is fast becoming but also leads them to pooh-pooh the enormous economic significance and social influence of so-called “flyover” country.
Not even the fact that Boot Barn just reported having the best year in its 44-year history—one that saw the now 300-store chain total $1.5 billion in sales (fiscal 2022) and every store turn a profit—is enough to make investors take notice. What’s more, comp store sales grew 54 percent and earnings tripled. The Irvine, CA-based company is looking to open roughly 40 to 50 stores a year over the next 10 years, which sets the stage for billions more in annual sales. That expansion includes further market penetration in states where Boot Barn already does well and virgin territory in towns and cities across the country that also live and breathe its merchandise mix. The chain’s destination store format has been updated and is running like a well-oiled machine.
Yet, in the days that followed last month’s impressive earnings call, Boot Barn’s stock price actually fell. The general consensus was that a horrendous quarterly report from Target and a slew of other poor retail earnings reports dragged Boot Barn down with them. The retailer was guilty by association. Yet the fact remains that the chain’s numbers were record-smashing. What’s more, comp store sales are up 12 percent this year. Neither the pandemic nor rising inflation have taken the wind out of Boot Barn’s sails/sales.
So, forgive Jim Conroy, president and CEO of Boot Barn, for having a bit of a chip on his shoulder. The organization deserves a lot more respect than it gets for what it has achieved and expects to achieve, especially in an age when popular opinion says it can’t be done. Equally irksome to Conroy is the corollary assumption that consumers don’t want to shop in stores—and that they don’t regularly wear western fashion. Wrong on both counts.
Conroy knows this because he sees it firsthand. He recently visited a Boot Barn location in Weatherford, TX, about 60 miles west of Dallas and found the store (which opened in May of 2021) buzzing with customers shopping the extensive array of functional merchandise as well as “a whole bunch of what can now be viewed as pretty mainstream” apparel. “It’s doing three times its original budget,” Conroy reports. “Now, I can’t put my finger on all the aspects that are working in that store, and whether they’re attributable to internal or outside macro factors, but my sarcastic side says, ‘Yes, it’s a trend, and evidently one that’s been going on for 11 years, because we’ve had 11 years of positive comps.’ But nobody will listen.” Nevertheless, Boot Barn will keep doing what it does best— and keep growing, Conroy assures. The chain is on pace to hit between $2 billion and $3 billion this fiscal year. Perhaps eventually it will win over the doubters and deniers. In the meantime, Boot Barn just doubled its total addressable market to $40 billion. Conroy, for one, sees enormous potential. “We’re miles away from maxing out the growth of our business,” he says, describing Boot Barn as a momentum play. That includes core customers replenishing their wardrobes for work and fashion as well as a growing adjacent customer base that wears the product casually. “We’re just scratching the surface of that (latter) market potential,” Conroy says. “That’s a giant market
Boot Barn’s makeover appeals to core and casual customers alike.

OFF THE CUFF
WHAT ARE YOU READING? The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown.
WHAT WAS THE LAST MOVIE YOU SAW? The original and the remake of West Side Story. My boys (ages 13 and 15) recently switched to the Orange County School of the Arts, where my older son is now learning to sing opera and my younger son just appeared in a production of Gypsy. I don’t know if they’ll become performers, but if they’re ever handed a microphone to do a presentation, they won’t hesitate, and they’ll do it well.
WHO IS YOUR MOST COVETED DINNER GUEST? My parents. They passed away several years ago and I’d love to just have them see what’s happened in my family’s life.
WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE HOMETOWN MEMORY? I’m from Dix Hills, Long Island, and my favorite memories are of my senior year in high school and just a collection of amazing friends—many of whom I’m still in touch with, even though we’ve all gone different ways.
WHAT IS THE BEST BUSINESS ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED? It’s not specifically business-related, but my dad always said: “Keep it simple, stupid.” The KISS method toward everything was his mantra. And that approach is alive at Boot Barn. We have a very simple and straightforward strategy, and we focus on nothing but executing it.
WHERE IS YOUR MOMENT OF ZEN? Every Sunday morning, my two boys and I drive to the same local park to play pick-up basketball for three hours. We’re always on the same team. And win, lose or draw, I’m a 52-year-old dad playing basketball with his two teenage kids who still talk to him. Lifelong memories are made every Sunday. Recently, we won all four games. We held the court. That became quite the story when we got home to Mom.
WHAT MIGHT PEOPLE BE SURPRISED TO KNOW ABOUT YOU? I was a pre-med major in college. In fact, the only reason I wound up in retail was when, trying to earn money for medical school, I applied for a consulting job at Deloitte & Touche. I put my resume into what I thought was the management consulting folder for healthcare companies. Turns out it was the folder for retail companies. The first question asked: “Why do you want to be in retail?” I quickly spun a story, and the rest is history. and expected to be a big part of our growth going forward.”
Capturing the adjacent customer has already been quantified. Over the past two years, Boot Barn’s customer count is up 35 percent and sales are up almost 70 percent. “Basically, half of our growth is new customers,” Conroy says. “I couldn’t be happier with that ratio, as we’ve been able to get our legacy customer to shop more frequently while, at the same time, convinced new customers to shop with us without having upset the apple cart.”
Still, some investors remain skeptical that the fashion customer base actually exists and even more doubtful that Boot Barn can capture it. Others fret over the risks associated with a greater focus on fashion, but Conroy believes they’re wrong. He cites the chain’s successful expansion into new markets as proof. “We’ve been opening stores in states that people didn’t think were ‘western,’ like Pennsylvania, Ohio and Virginia,” he says, noting that Boot Barn now has outlets in 38 states. “And we’ll be opening a store in Cherry Hill, NJ, and outside of Albany, NY, this year.”
Indeed, Boot Barn’s concept seems to have nationwide appeal. What’s more, the chain’s best-performing doors are located not in rural areas but in cities, like Houston, Dallas, Nashville, Phoenix and Charlotte, NC. “It’s not like every store is in a small, farm town,” Conroy says. “And if we’re successful in North Carolina, why can’t we go north to Pennsylvania? There are a ton of consumers who wear our products living between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.”
New York is another example. While Conroy says Boot Barn may never open an outlet on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, there’s a huge potential customer base stretching from New York City to Syracuse to Buffalo. “That’s a gigantic triangle of customers who wear our products,” he says, adding that the merchandise mix has expanded to appeal to a broader audience. “It’s not just cowboy boots, Wrangler jeans and hats. There’s product virtually for everybody in our stores. You don’t have to own a horse to shop there.”
Conroy says Boot Barn’s ability to appeal to a broader customer base is quantifiable. “Typically, we want our new stores opening in states near New York to do $2 million as an average first year store, and they’re doing like $4 million,” he reports. Perhaps even more reassuring is the fact that Boot Barn’s growth is not being driven entirely by fashion sales. In fact, if the chain excludes women’s fashion sales, the business overall is still performing exceptionally well. Sales, compared to two years ago, are up 71 percent. “Even if we take zero credit for all the women’s product that has some fashion tailwind to it, we’re still up 63 percent,” Conroy says.
BALANCING ACT Boot Barn stores strike a delicate balance between function and fashion, blue and white collar, core and casual customer, and men and women. The key is to appeal to a diverse audience without alienating anyone—to look upscale enough for a customer spending $500 on alligator skin boots while not turning off a guy buying work boots for $179.
Conroy says his team has been laser focused on getting that balance just right. It includes segmented categories within the stores that are separate yet inclusive. So, for example, there’s the alligator skin boot that could be worn with a suit at a charity gala and, two shelves below that, the work boot for the guy who swings a hammer for a living and wears them six days a week. “We want to expand our ocean of customers, but we can’t lose sight of our core customer,” Conroy says. The use of targeted marketing helps ensure that “A guy working on an oil rig won’t receive a promo about the latest fringe purse by Miranda Lambert.” Conroy adds, “Based on the success of our recent store openings, I believe we’ve found that balance.”
Byron Wortham, president, Core Brands Sales for Rocky Brands (Durango, Georgia, Rocky and Muck) says Boot Barn’s ability to appeal to both function and fashion customers under one roof is a key to its success. In addition to a consistent floor plan and aesthetics, he cites the merchandise team’s understanding of the fashion shift brought on by the pandemic. “With the proliferation of work-from-home, people wear what they want all day long, and boots are part of their lifestyle. CEOs are also wearing boots and jeans in the boardroom,” he says. “Boot Barn understands this and has created a more upscale and lifestyle-oriented environment in its stores. They are not a traditional western store. This has allowed them to capture not only core western consumers, but also new consumers who may have previously made their purchases at an upscale department store.”
Prasad Reddy, CEO of Twisted X, says Boot Barn is doing a lot of things right. That includes product presentation (appealing), customer service (tremendous), stores (clean) and merchandise mix (really good). “It’s a combination of all those aspects that has led to Boot Barn’s exceptional growth,” he says. Another factor, Reddy says, is Boot
Barn’s expansion into new markets. “They’re expanding where western footwear hasn’t traditionally been, but consumers are hungry for this product based on the wave of western fashion trends we see,” he says, adding that this is helping Twisted X broaden its reach. “Boot Barn is the only western retailer that’s nationwide, and that exposes our brands (includes Black Star and Wrangler) in states where we’re not as prominent, which gives us the opportunity to reach and retain new consumers.”
LET’S GET PHYSICAL Another factor contributing to Boot Barn’s success is its firm, albeit old school, belief that its customers prefer to shop in its stores. While many in the investment community believe the world has moved on to a DTC/digital landscape, Conroy begs to differ. “The numbers within our company, and the industry overall, show that most of retail is still conducted in traditional stores,” he says, adding, “I just don’t understand how so many people have convinced themselves of something that is so blatantly untrue.” This is one instance, however, where Conroy doesn’t mind the prevailing misconception; it works to Boot Barn’s advantage. “I love the fact that everybody thinks the world is going online, because we’re going to continue to open stores,” he says. “We’re attracting customers from more mainstream channels partly because those retailers drank the Kool-Aid that everyone is shopping online.” That belief, he says, has led to a vicious cycle of neglect. “As those stores underperform, they pull out inventory and reduce staffs, and then they underperform more, and then they pull out more inventory and more labor…if you do that enough times, you’ll destroy your concept,” Conroy says. Boot Barn, by contrast, remains focused on its profitable brick-and-mortar channel. “Most of our customers interact with us in our stores, we make more money in that channel, we have a more loyal customer there, we’re more competitive, we have higher exclusive brand penetration,” Conroy says. “And while we want to grow our digital business—and it’s growing quite nicely—we spend half of our time with our digital team figuring out ways to get more customers into our stores.”
Over the past several years, Boot Barn’s split between in-store and online sales has remained steady at 85 percent to 15 percent. It’s a ratio Conroy
Boots bonanza: an extensive selection of core, work and western-inspired fashion await shoppers.
>38

See how good life can feel with a Life is Good® slipper package from Green Market, their exclusive slipper licensing partner.
