BCBusiness

April 2016 30 Under 30

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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bcbusiness.ca APRIL 2016 BCBusiness 35 describes it, "to bring those grassroots stories to life," through decentralization of Lululemon's social media channels. "We're in a position now where it's no longer 'one founder, one voice.'" b ack in the summer of 2013, when Lululemon came calling, Potdevin almost didn't take the job. "I was in the middle of getting separated from Cathy"—the mother of his two children: Luc, 15, and Estelle, 13. "I was happy at Toms. The kids had relocated from Vermont—I was like, 'I can't look at it.'" He hung up the phone. But then he started to think about it and realized his whole career had been building toward this point. A trained engineer, Potdevin had followed his master of engineering in Switzerland with an MBA at Paris's exclusive École Supérieure des Sciences Économiques et Commerciales (ESSEC), where he spe- cialized in a new program focused on managing luxury brands. Fashion house Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy sponsored the program—and right out of school, in 1991, o¨ered him a job. "I spent a lot of time in the factories. I sewed a lot of bags and cut a lot of leather hides. The atten- tion to detail—how you're cutting the leather around the defects—was impec- cable." Eventually he would be sent to Los Angeles to restructure an LVMH fac- tory there before taking over the compa- ny's North American operations, based in New York. In 1995, he was introduced to Jake Burton, whose eponymous snowboard company had become a cult favourite and was taking o¨ around the time of the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, where snowboarding debuted as a medal sport. Potdevin had grown up skiing, but had also—as a young entrepreneur—built 10 snowboards of his own ("We sold eight of them… they were not that great. You couldn't get on the chairlift"); he liked the idea of moving into a more entrepre- neurial environment and back into the milieu of outdoor sports he'd grown up with in Switzerland. Potdevin spent 15 years with Burton, the last ve as presi- dent and CEO. "We had a blast building a brand, a sport and an industry. We went from being this countercultural teenage boy smoking dope on a chairlift to building an Olympic sport." ( BCBusiness.ca/GoDigital STAY SMART GO DIGITAL Same stories, same look, no shipping required. Stay smart, informed and always ahead of your competition with the digital edition of BCBusiness. Get it in your inbox today. Subscribe for just $19.95*/year *Plus tax 05D1G16 Stay Smart.indd 1 16-02-25 10:27 AM

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