Morehouse College Students ‘Step’ Up Their Game with Footwear Business

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
Morehouse College Students ‘Step’ Up Their Game with Footwear Business



04BizThabbi-Stephen-Malcolm-Conner1_LIVE.jpg

Conner and Stephens design and retail unisex canvas and leather shoes

As a student at the prominent Henry W. Grady High School in Atlanta, Thabiti Stephens had some friends who came to class in fancy cars while for others, school lunch was the day’s only real meal. That wealth inequality bothered Stephens at a young age and stuck with him once he entered Morehouse College, where he is currently majoring in business marketing.

“I knew that I wanted to start a company that focused on giving back,” Stephens recalls.

Today, the college junior is the CEO of Steps by Stephens L.L.C. (stepsbystephens.com), an affordable shoe company that produces unisex leather and canvas shoes.

“We design, manufacture, and retail our shoes—the whole nine yards. We oversee every step,” Stephens says.

Stephens first came up with the idea in 2010, a week after high school ended. He spent much of that summer mapping out the business, designing the shoes, and researching manufacturing options. Stephens incorporated the business in late 2011 and began selling shoes six months later. He came up with $25,000 in startup funding, which was gleaned from his own savings and that of his new business partner and college roommate, Malcolm Conner, 20. They used the startup capital to produce, market, and distribute their footwear, carrying an initial inventory of 2,500 shoes.

The company sold an average of 55 pairs a month, or 330 total, the second half of 2012, generating about $20,000 in revenues.

“In the first two months of 2013, we were averaging 108.5 sales a month, (selling from the initial 2,500 inventory) resulting in a little more than $13,000 in revenues,” Stephens says. To date, the company has donated $4,000 to local homeless shelters.

Stephens, 20, is quick to point out his entrepreneurial mission was fraught with challenges. Finding a footwear manufacturer that was willing to work with an untested startup was the first obstacle.

“There aren’t many manufacturers in the U.S. and those that are here were priced substantially higher than those overseas,” says Stephens, who interviewed about 200 companies before deciding on his current producer. To find that manufacturer, Stephens turned to Alibaba.com, an outsourcing site that connects businesspeople with manufacturers across various industries.

Pricing was another challenge for Stephens, who had to strike a balance between affordability, profitability, and philanthropy. He studied price points and the footwear industry as a whole—in which brands such as Nike, Adidas, and Under Armour generate $48 billion in annual revenues—to come up with his shoes’ $60 price tag, including shipping and handling.

Most of Steps by Stephens’ sales have been transacted online and involved customers such as Julian McMillan, a fellow Morehouse College student, who took an interest in the shoes when he saw Stephens sketching out prototypes for them back in 2011.

Collaborating with local HBCUs and other colleges and universities, Steps by Stephens will participate in a number of events and activities, potentially reaching an audience of 10,000 students, to help further expose the brand.

“We are working with a few record labels in Atlanta that have agreed to incorporate Steps by Stephens into their artists’ wardrobes,” says Stephens. Also, “we have received support from local news and radio stations.”

Living on very little sleep, Conner and Stephens admit that they will have to add to their stable of human resources to achieve the firm’s sales and philanthropic goals. There are times, for example, when they conduct business calls with the firm’s overseas manufacturer at 3 a.m., and then have to wake up for class three and a half hours later.

Last year, Steps by Stephens broke even. Both Stephens and Conner predict sales to surpass $100,000 for 2013. As Steps by Stephens works through growing pains, the firm will continue to roll out new options such as a children’s line and a wider selection of colors.

“We’re also working to get our products into local boutiques and other retail outlets,” says Stephens, “all in the name of expanding brand awareness and growing sales that will equate to more food donations and charitable contributions.”
 
I tip my hat to these brothers, but I'm not down with their mission statement:

Create a business model that would help those members of our community that are in need. For every pair of shoes sold, a portion of that money will help provide meals to the children that need them the most. We will continue these efforts in the hope of eventually ending childhood hunger in America!


Their goal should be to make as much money as possible, that way they can pay their employees and they can go out of buy all the food they want (from another black owned business) Anyways I'm happy for them.
 
I tip my hat to these brothers, but I'm not down with their mission statement:

Create a business model that would help those members of our community that are in need. For every pair of shoes sold, a portion of that money will help provide meals to the children that need them the most. We will continue these efforts in the hope of eventually ending childhood hunger in America!


Their goal should be to make as much money as possible, that way they can pay their employees and they can go out of buy all the food they want (from another black owned business) Anyways I'm happy for them.

lol gotta love bgol...

theres a shoe company called toms. u mighta heard of them before. they give away a pair of shoes to a poor kid in a developing country for every pair sold.

its working out just fine for them...

In 2010, just four years after its founding, TOMS surpassed the one million mark in shoe donations (Bitici). By October of 2011, that number had doubled (TOMS Giving Report 2012). Accordingly, TOMS’ revenues also jumped, growing from an estimated $9.6 million in 2008 to $20.1 million in 2011 (PrivCo). The charity aspect of TOMS’ products provides the company with an advantage over other “regular” brands. Providing shoes to children who lack them adds an extra incentive for consumers to purchase TOMS’ shoes and leaves them with a “feel-good” quality. Because of the “One for One” concept, consumers are also able to understand exactly what buying a pair of TOMS means. Fueled by the simplicity and tangible nature of its cause, the popularity of TOMS’ shoes and its mission has proliferated.

so i show all that to say...more power to those young brothas...
 
Last edited:
i wish them the best.




but didnt a basketball player tried to make a shoe company with low price shoes? (what hapened with that?)
 
i wish them the best.




but didnt a basketball player tried to make a shoe company with low price shoes? (what hapened with that?)

The tried to compete with NIKE. Nike is worse than Microsoft when it come to business practices and monopoly.

Good luck to the brothers.
 
i wish them the best.




but didnt a basketball player tried to make a shoe company with low price shoes? (what hapened with that?)

marbury tried to make a performance athletic shoe that he could sell for 10% of the price of the competition.

good in theory but prolly hard to do. thats like making a car that will sell for under $10,000 that can compete with the BMW M5 performance.

these shoes are casual canvas joints, so the profit margins are prolly wayyyy wider.
 
lol gotta love bgol...

theres a shoe company called toms. u mighta heard of them before. they give away a pair of shoes to a poor kid in a developing country for every pair sold.

its working out just fine for them...



so i show all that to say...more power to those young brothas...

How are developing countries suppose to develop their own shoe industry when their citizens are getting shoes for free, and how many jobs are not created by giving away shoes for free.
 
How are developing countries suppose to develop their own shoe industry when their citizens are getting shoes for free, and how many jobs are not created by giving away shoes for free.

dont change the subject fam.

u said ur not down with their mission statement cuz according to u, "Their goal should be to make as much money as possible".

i just showed u an example of a much bigger shoe company who also has had a mission of giving back from day 1 and they still grew into a thriving multimillion dollar enterprise.

and this kids company is not giving away shoes in other countries. they are giving food and charitable donations to organizations that are feeding the hungry, here.

sometimes that greedy mentality is just small thinking. u can do good and make money at the same damn time if u so choose to.
 
This is cool. For once a Morehouse thread without it being about some batty boy shit.

don't worry mrmet wont let u down, he's probably blowing up google right now searching gay+morehouse+preacher+fired




glad these brothers like many others in the AU Center are doing good.
 
Just placed an order for these in size 10! Placing on my Facebook wall, Instagram and Twitter and email blasting to all my associates!

IMG_0808.jpg
 
Back
Top