Jackson Kayak

Jackson Kayak is a producer of kayaks and was founded by its namesake, Eric "EJ" Jackson. After working with Wave Sport Kayaks as a team member and as a designer, Eric Jackson and business partner, Tony Lunt formed Jackson Kayak in Rock Island, Tennessee in October 2003.[1]

Jackson Kayaks at the Teva Mountain Games in Vail, Colorado

Company history

Jackson Kayaks are often used by Freestylers

Already in their first year, the company sold 2,500 boats, resulting in $1.5 million annual sales. Year-on-year sales increased by 80% until 2007, and the company sold 7,515 boats in 2008. In the United States, the company sold 40% of whitewater kayaks in 2008/2009, and the expected sales in 2009 was 7,000 boats. It also has the largest market share in England and Japan, and increases its share in France.[2]

The kayaks have become very popular as high-performing playboats of Freestyle athletes. Many of the world's leading Freestyle paddlers use Jackson kayaks, and Jackson Kayak's sponsorship of some of the best Freestyle kayakers in the world adds to this development (see below).

Controversy: Jackson Kayak's and Steve Fisher's Dreamline A Fresh Spin on Kayak Instruction

Jackson Kayaks were early supporters of their then Team Jackson Kayak member Steve Fisher for his Dreamline Kickstart fundraiser for a Fresh Spin on Kayak Instruction.[3][4][5] Additionally, many Team Jackson members including Eric Jackson were instructors in the filming of the project. The project has never been completed and Kickstarter funders did not get any DVDs. Some people have questioned if the project was a fraud.[3] Jackson kayak's commented that they didn't know why the project was not completed, but that Steve was active filming and working on other projects around the world.[5] Steve Fisher is no longer a Team Jackson member.[5] For more information see Steve Fisher's wiki page.

The sponsored team includes some of the world's most successful Freestyle K-1 kayakers. Among them are the Jackson family (Eric, Emily, and Dane Jackson), Nick Troutman, Claire O'Hara, Ruth Gordon, Jason Craig, Clay Wright, Stephen Wright, Jez, Rafa Ortiz, Mike Dawson, Nouria Newman, Ben Stookesberry, Joel Kowalski, and Steve Fisher. At the 2007 World Championships, Jackson Kayak's team took the K-1 World Title in Pro Men, Pro Women, Junior Women, and third in Junior Men. At the 2009 World Championships, the team took the first three places in the K-1 Pro Men and the first two in the K-1 Pro Women competitions as well as the runner-up for the K-1 Junior Men's title; the team did not sponsor junior women at the time.

In addition, some of the competitors who were not sponsored by Jackson Kayak rode kayaks of their brand, including in 2009 the two first places in the C-1 competition, the first place in the K-1 Junior Men's competition, and second to fifth place in the K-1 Junior Women's competition. In 2011 the Jackson team managed to collect 5 gold medals, 4 silver and 3 bronze medals. Dane Jackson became the first person to participate in all four of the freestyle disciplines and walked away with three gold medals and a bronze medal.

In the 2013 World Championships held at the Nantahala, Jackson athletes took out K1 Men's, K1 Women's, Junior K1 Men's, Squirt Men's and Squirt Women's while gaining podiums in C1 and OC1.

Company strategy and debated effect on the market

Jackson Kayak works primarily with smaller dealers instead of large retailers. They have particularly promoted Kayaking as a family sport, especially by producing boats for children as small as weighing 13.5 kg (30 pounds). Canoeist Joe Jacobi, an Olympic Gold medalist in 1992 and teammate of Eric Jackson at the Olympic Games, believes that Jackson has "made whitewater kayaking a family sport in a way that no one else in the industry has been able to do."[2]

After a peak in 2006, the kayak market in the United States has declined.[2] In view of their success and their inexpensive boats, Jackson Kayak has been accused in the kayaking world of flooding the market with kayaks and, also by creating a large second-hand market, of being in part responsible for the market to decline in recent years. Opponents of this view blame the evolution of kayaks for the market development: As long as kayaks evolved fast, and differences between boats of different generations were large, the market boomed, and Jackson Kayak was there to serve the demand. Now that the evolution has greatly slowed down, they argue that the interest in new boats has naturally decreased. Eric Jackson himself claims that his company has actually activated the market.[2]

References

  1. De La Cruz, Bonna (01/18/04), "Ex-Olympian turns Midstate hamlet into white-water mecca", The Tennessean, archived from the original ( Scholar search) on 2013-02-03 Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
    Harris, Roger (2004-04-27), "Olympian Looks to Make Splash with His Kayak Designs in Rock Island, Tenn.", The Knoxville News-Sentinel
  2. Bonna Johnson (25 October, 2009). Jackson Kayak tops industry sales in six short years. Independent thinker has taken his expertise, and his business model, straight to his customers. The Tennessean (retrieved 8 November 2009)
  3. "Steve Fisher (kayaker and filmmaker)", Wikipedia, 2019-07-26, retrieved 2019-07-26
  4. "Dreamline | A Fresh Spin on Kayak Instruction". Kickstarter. Retrieved 2019-07-26.
  5. "Steve Fisher Attempting to Break New Ground- Again- a Kayaking Kickstarter that YOU can be Part Of!". Jackson Kayak. 2015-11-09. Retrieved 2019-07-26.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.