External Factor Analysis of The Vermont Teddy Bear Company

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External Factor Analysis of The Vermont Teddy Bear Company

Opportunities

Settlement of NY real estate litigation

The Vermont Teddy Bear Company's settlement for their closed down New York retail store is a positive step for the company. In March of 2005, the Company continued its settlement discussions with the Company and on April 27, 2005, the Company entered into final settlement of its litigation relating to a former lease for retail space in New York City. Under the terms of the settlement, the Company paid its former landlord $1.15 million when the settlement agreement was executed, including the release of a $150,000 security deposit previously held by the landlord, and the Company will pay the landlord an additional $1.2 million on or before March 15, 2006, without interest ("Vermont Teddy", 2005). While this negatively affected net income for the third quarter in 2005, it also signals an end to litigation expenses and loss of executive focus due to this issue. It

was a good move to get this over with but it lasted for almost 5.5 years and drained the company of both human and financial resources.

Going Private

Taking the Vermont Teddy Bear Company private was a bold but in the short-term positive move for the company by CEO Elisabeth Robert. Going private will allow the company to focus on execution instead of short-term strategies to pacify Wall Street. Instead of wasting valuable executive time and effort on quarterly financial calls the Vermont Teddy Bear Company is free to follow its long-term plan and execute without the Wall Street push for short term gains. The company wanted to invest in its own infrastructure expansion and improvement but as a public company this would have incurred the wrath of Wall Street. "We were hoping to get [Vermont Teddy Bear] out of the tyranny of quarterly earnings," says founder Chris Covington (Sheahan, 2005). Additionally, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was set to put tremendous pressure on the company. From both a manpower and financial resource perspective, this Congress enacted law was going to be more than the company could bear (no pun intended). "The prospect of having to enact section 404 [regulations] was onerous on a company like ourselves," says CEO Elisabeth Robert (Sheahan,2006). The sale closed in September of 2005

Threats

800-Flowers

800-Flowers is a huge threat to the long-term health of the company. They have 120 retail outlets compare with 0 for VTB.

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