Archive for the 'Discrete' Category

Discrete Logo



www.discreteheadwear.com

The Discrete logo is inspired by The Tower of Hanoi, a mathematical puzzle that has its roots in an ancient Vietnamese legend. A prophecy ordered three monks to move 64 golden disks onto a time-ravaged tower, one at a time, according to specific rules, resulting in an algorithm. When the last move of the puzzle is completed, the world will be enlightened.

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Discrete TV #9



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Discrete DOYONATOR


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Story on ESPN, DISCRETE TV

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Please check out the story ESPN.com ran on our web series, DISCRETE TV, for www.discreteheadwear.com


Interview on Powdermag.com

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I was interviewed by Powder magazine about the new TV series we launched, DISCRETE TV “off the top of our head” for Discrete headwear. Giver er a read. I’m proud of the series.

www.discreteheadwear.com

DISCRETE TV - Press Release

PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release
Contact:
Julian Carr
OWNER Discrete Headwear
801.573.2570
julian@discreteheadwear.com

Discrete headwear announces “Discrete TV

Salt Lake City-based headwear manufacturer announces a series of short web clips, DISCRETE TV, “Off the top of our head” for the 2010/2011 season.

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH – December 6, 2010 - Discrete Headwear, a rider owned and conceived headwear brand in the snowsport industry, is proud to announce the launch of a web series, starting with 8 episodes, and the release of 1 new one each week throughout the 2010/11 season. Each episode offers colorful, clever, less than 2-minute clips of Discrete’s athletes, artists, employees, and friends.

Discrete has committed to this project, in owner Julian Carr’s words, “with the idea that webisode content does not need to be a huge time investment, most of our episodes are under 1 minute and very entertaining.” Discrete is proud to showcase, in it’s initial 8 episodes; Discrete athlete’s Ian McIntosh, Jen Hudak, Discrete CFO Clayon Quarles, artist Casey Kawaguchi, and owner Julian Carr.

Discrete will display their web series on their flagship website, www.discreteheadwear.com, Vimeo, blog, company Facebook, Twitter, etc.

Discrete is in their 3rd year of business operations, and has undergone tremendous growth in the last year, this TV series is aimed to offer something to everyone excited about the brand, “we grew 100% from 09/10 to 10/11” says Julian, “I create Discrete’s products so that we have something for everyone, we are a fan of people having fun in the mountains and in life, I feel like this TV series reflects that.”

Discrete is a unique snowsport brand appealing to snow enthusiasts and hard core riders alike, “I created and built awareness for Discrete by sponsoring amazing athletes and thinking of unique ways to promote them,” said Julian Carr, Discrete owner.

To celebrate their momentum and officially kick-off the 2010/2011 winter season, Discrete proudly releases, DISCRETE TV, “Off the top of our head.”
Beginning business opeations in 2008, Discrete is a collaboration of athletes, designers, musicians, artists, and photographers. The company’s international office is located in Salt Lake City, Utah with distribution in the United States, Norway, Canada, Switzerland, Chile, Germany, Austria, and South Korea.

“We invite you to experience Discrete style.”
www.discreteheadwear.com

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Starting with DISCRETE TV #1: Jen Hudak solves the Rubix cube:

Seven additional episodes to be released today, 1 each week all winter!

Business Analogy

It all starts with an:

Once you have the idea you have to:

You’re confronted with:

You jump in there and suddenly you’ve got this:

But you still have lots of these:

You learn everyday, use all your intellect, all your creative ability, your blood sweat and tears… basically, never quit, learn to enjoy it, become good at it, and you start getting this:

My analogy once you’re a couple years into it, you have so many moving pieces it’s amazing, you’ve got to keep communication going with many many people, it’s quite the orchestration. it’s like you are a server at a restaurant with a 100 table section:

You have your two 30 tops you definitely need to stay on top of, maybe they are your manufacturers. You’ve got 7 six tops that are always needing more wine poured, maybe they are your sales reps and int’l distributors. You’ve got a bunch of 4 tops, 3 tops, some 2 tops in the corner, all your marketing contacts, seamstress, graphic designer, CFO, website tech, social media group, athletes, events, fedex, accountant, and down the list that are always needing they’re plates cleared. And you have that 1 person way off in the corner sucking down his sodas way too fast. But if you don’t stay on EVERYONE, keep everyone’s water glass full all the time - your section will go down.

Eventually the idea is to reach a level of mastery, efficiency, success:

So that you can do a little of this:

Or in my case, lots of this:

Photo: Adam Barker

And this:

Photo: adam clark

Cheers.

www.discreteheadwear.com

Discrete BANGER Beanie

With cold weather settling in, people getting their first turns of the year, it’s time to start thinking about getting outfitted with the appropriate winter gear. Allow me to suggest the Discrete BANGER from Backcountry.com, it comes in 4 color ways, one of them surely being something you’re down with. Don’t hesitate, grab it today!




To view the rest of Discrete products on Backcountry.com, click here:

BACKCOUNTRY.COM

Discrete/High-Fives


20$ donation to HighFivesFoundation.org gets you a one of a kind VASTON Discrete/High-Fives collab beanie!

Self motivation, skill set, entrepreneurship.

Every day I get up and my mind snaps into thinking objectively about the day. It goes something like this….. hmmm, I am a human, and naturally I want to be outside, I want to be active. But wait. I need to strategize about how to accomplish this since I am running a business. My mind switches, I know I will get to my circuit training later this afternoon, right now, I have a long to do list, my body accepts this and now my craving for furthering my business is just as hungry.

#1 SELF-MOTIVATION

Literally my motivation = my productivity. If I don’t feel like this guy above everyday, the communication orchestration that I conduct every day to make my business breathe will suffer.

#2 SELF-CONFIDENCE

It’s up to you how confident you want to be. There is always someone out there more able than you, more connected, yada yada… but you have to narrow your focus on your goals and your vision. Look at exactly how you are going to chase your ambitions, don’t dwell on the obstacles, be aware of them, but put your energy into how your goals are achievable and start moving, amongst the leeches, the predators, the competitors, the bright, the capable. “If you want to be a champion, you’ve got to feel like one, you’ve got to act like one, you’ve got to look like one.” RED AUERBACH

Be confident. In your personality, in your beliefs, in your intuitions, in your talents, in your conscious. Take that and be confident by yourself, amongst strangers, with friends, at work, in public, with family, in your relationship, and in business.

#3 ETHICS AND MORALS

If you have zero conduct of these matters, or if you simply feel that everything and anything is fair game in business, that is fine, but ultimately, the world, doesn’t agree. You, your brand, your business will slowly attain a reputation that is no bueno. You must be aware of what you personally want your business to stand for. I see morals as desirable conduct that has been mapped out for you, and I see ethics as your own acting out on what morals expect from you and what you apply and deliver on.

#4 TIME-MANAGEMENT

I constantly find myself with what at first seems like an almost impossible list of initiatives. When I look at everything at a whole, it feels overwhelming, like a heavy weight… I break it down, I’ll look at it in terms of one month, then one week, once I’ve dissected my tasks/goals/initiatives into small components, I can start looking at these by the day, any goal is attainable one task at a time.

#5 SALES

I am not a salesman. It is not in my nature. I once held a job as a cold calling telemarketer. I hated it. I was trying to talk people into buying things they didn’t need and didn’t want. That is my definition of a salesman. With my business I create things I know people will love and want. I position my company in the appropriate industry that I feel like I am an expert in. Once I have that established, I speak to the buyers, and I know they have to spend X dollars each year to fill their store shelves, they control a certain dollar amount of cash flow, I create a tributary (if you will), to channel their cash. I speak with them, not at them, I include them, no elitism, I relate to them, understand them from their perspective, it is usually acknowledged and appreciated, and ultimately resulting in a sale. I sale my product through the relationship of me and them. My brand and their store. My fair/competitive prices and their understanding of their $$ flow. I sale through my understanding of them and their needs and wants.

The other half of sales is marketing. To sale I must understand the industry as a whole, see things from a comprehensive viewpoint. Once I’ve accomplished this and my products are on store shelves, I now must understand the consumer, one purchase at a time. I create products that I know people will want, I create a brand I know people will find attractive. I guess it’s just like the understanding the retail store buyer’s perspective. I understand the individual perspective as well. My designs, brand, and products, I aim, appeal to people that are full of personality, they aren’t buying Discrete to “dress” in it. They are wearing it as an extension of themselves, no biggie, but exactly what they are looking for and can identify with. On top of this I need an understanding of the ever-changing world of social marketing, I take chances, try things, I try to be aware of the current engine, but I think outside the engine, and I am not afraid to be creative/innovative.

#6 FINANCE

My philosophy is, you are going to get fat if you eat potato chips all the time. As a business, making dumb decisions, uneducated purchases, excessive marketing, etc are all equivalent to eating potato chips. If I don’t know what I’m doing with my finances as a business, then I can’t make smart educated decisions to further the business. The business will become unhealthy, and fat. I say no to potato chips.

#7 INSTINCT

When you are running a business, you are faced with many decisions. Small, large and many in between. I often ask my friends, family, and girlfriend their opinion when making decisions. Usually it is to compare it to my instinctual feeling on the matter… I am open to everyone’s opinion, but when making decisions so often, I don’t know the answer in a lot of cases, but I don’t get overly analytical, I make a decision and stand by it. Live it, believe in it, act on it. The decision will acquire a life of it’s own, and soon other people are believing it and living it. Gather information, but don’t dwell, make decisions based on your instinct, and ask for help to weigh and consider.

Philosophies in action, observe, interact with my business:

FACEBOOK:

TWITTER:

WEBSITE:

Discrete on the creep!


I can’t tell you how cool it is to see photos like this. When I founded Discrete headwear, I always had a vision of how I’d like to see it represented on store shelves. This photo is from Milosport in Utah on 3300 south, 3119 east. This is a big first step of what I further envision for the brand. A couple more:

This is Milo in Orem.

WWW.DISCRETEHEADWEAR.COM