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Matinique Clothing
General
Information
Empathy — Walking
in Other People's Shoes
Empathy begins with
listening paying close attention to the world around us understanding,
appreciating and meeting the needs of those we serve, including
consumers, retail customers, shareholders and each other as employees.
Levi Strauss and Jacob
Davis listened. Jacob was the tailor who in the 1870s first fashioned
heavy cotton cloth, thread and metal rivets into sturdy "waist
overalls" for miners seeking durable work pants. Levi in turn
met Jacob's needs for patenting and mass production of the product,
enthusiastically embracing the idea and bringing it to life. The
rest is history: The two created what would become the most popular
clothing in the world — blue jeans.
Our history is filled
with relevant examples of paying attention to the world around us.
We listened. We innovated. We responded.
As early as 1926
in the United States, the company advertised in Spanish, Portuguese
and Chinese, reaching out to specific groups of often-neglected
consumers.
In the 1930s, consumers complained that the metal rivets on the
back pockets of our jeans tended to scratch furniture, saddles and
car seats. So we redesigned the way the pockets were sewn, placing
the rivets underneath the fabric.
In 1982, a group of company employees asked senior management for
help in increasing awareness of a new and deadly disease affecting
their lives. We quickly became a business leader in promoting AIDS
awareness and education.
We believe in empathetic
marketing, which means that we walk in our consumers' shoes. In
the company's early years, that meant making durable clothes for
workers in the American West. Now, it means responding to the casual
clothing needs of a broad range of consumers around the world. Understanding
and appreciating needs — consumer insight — is central
to our commercial success.
Being empathetic also
means that we are inclusive. Levi Strauss' sturdy work pants are
sold worldwide in more than 80 countries. Their popularity is based
on their egalitarian appeal and originality. They transcend cultural
boundaries. Levi's® jeans — the pants without pretense
— are not just for any one part of society. Everyone wears
them.
Inclusiveness underlies
our consumer marketing beliefs and way of doing business. We bring
our Levi's® and Dockers® brands to consumers of all ages
and lifestyles around the world. We reflect the diverse world we
serve through the range and relevancy of our products and the way
we market them. Likewise, our company workforce mirrors the marketplace
in its diversity, helping us to understand and address differing
consumer needs. We value ethnic, cultural and lifestyle diversity.
And we depend and draw upon the varying backgrounds, knowledge,
points of view and talents of each other.
Empathy also means
engagement and compassion. Giving back to the people we serve and
the communities we operate in is a big part of who we are. Levi
Strauss was both a merchant and a philanthropist - a civic-minded
leader who believed deeply in community service. His way lives on.
The company's long-standing traditions of philanthropy, community
involvement and employee volunteerism continue today and contribute
to our commercial success.
As colleagues, we also
are committed to helping one another succeed. We are sensitive to
each other's goals and interests, and we strive to ensure our mutual
success through exceptional leadership, career development and supportive
workplace practices.
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