Firing on all cylinders
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Smith & Wesson may be best recognized as the brand of choice for Dirty Harry, the movie cop who warned punks his .44 Magnum was “the most powerful handgun in the world.”
But that was in 1971, and much has changed in the past 36 years. Police officers want lighter-weight pistols than the bulky steel revolver “Dirty” Harry Callahan barely concealed under a sport coat. Soldiers need foolproof weapons that won’t get jammed by the desert sands.
There are guns now more powerful than the .44, and Smith & Wesson has realized it can’t get by on its name — or Dirty Harry’s — alone.
That’s why Mike Golden, Smith & Wesson’s CEO for the past two years, has targeted new technologies and sales to the military and police departments to ensure the company’s future.
Except for the pistol-shaped cufflinks he sometimes wears, there isn’t much about him that says “gun guy.” A past corporate boss at Black & Decker, Kohler and The Stanley Works, Golden knew more about power tools and toilets than the .40-caliber pistols he jokes about hardly being able to hit a target with.
“When I joined the company, I had never shot a firearm before in my life,” the 52-year-old said. “I tell people the board wasn’t looking to find a marksman.”
When he took over the 155-year-old Springfield-based company, its earnings were flat. The country was at war, and the military’s handgun contracts were all going to Italian-based Beretta. Handgun sales to police departments — a market that Smith & Wesson once had 98 percent control over — were mostly going to Glock, an Austrian company.
“The company had been under-managed and under-marketed for the last 10 to 15 years, at least,” Golden said. “Our research shows that it doesn’t matter whether you’re male or female, old or young, Democrat or Republican, like guns or don’t like guns, the perception of the brand is extremely positive. That’s what intrigued me, that this brand that everybody knows and everybody loves wasn’t being utilized.”
Golden hired a Washington, D.C. lobbying firm to go after government contracts. In the past two years, the company has made four deals worth a total of $20 million to make the 9 mm pistols the Army is giving to security forces in Afghanistan.
Smith & Wesson’s earnings have seen double-digit growth since Golden took over. The company’s work force stands at about 900 non-union employees, 200 of which were hired in the past two years.
The company reported $98.4 million in sales for its second quarter that ended in October, an increase of 46 percent from the same period in the year before. Its net sale expectations for the 2008 fiscal year are about $320 million.
About 75 percent of the company’s sales are in the sporting goods market, which has remained steady despite gun control efforts.
But government sales are still a major aim for Golden.
This year, the military handgun contract that Beretta has had a lock on for nearly 20 years is expected to come up for bid. Analysts say that deal could fetch about $310 million, and predict that Smith & Wesson’s chances to land it are good, but far from guaranteed.
“The government is going to buy the guns that fit their needs and not just a brand name,” said Eric Wold, managing director at San Francisco-based Merriman Curhan Ford. “They love Smith & Wesson, but they’re not going to buy their guns just because they’re an American company.”
Golden realizes that, and has quickly fused the company’s popularity with a need to advance its technology by trying to reclaim ground that Smith & Wesson lost to Glock.
When Glock introduced a lightweight polymer pistol for police departments in the 1980s, Smith & Wesson’s managers “thought cops would never buy a plastic gun,” Golden said. They could only watch as police departments shifted to pistols made by Glock and other companies.
Golden pushed the company to come up with a product that could compete, and last year Smith & Wesson launched its M&P (Military and Police) line of polymer pistols. Smith & Wesson has so far climbed back to about 10 percent of sales to police departments, but is still dwarfed by Glock’s 65 percent control of the market.
“A police officer on the street isn’t going to say he prefers a Colt or a Beretta or a Glock over a Smith & Wesson,” said Ray McGrath, the political director of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers. He retired from the Worcester, Mass. police department in 2002 carrying a Smith & Wesson .357 Magnum just as his fellow officers were switching to 9 mm Glocks.
“The reality is that the general police public is more concerned about the safety and accuracy of weapon,” he said. “They’re not particular to the actual manufacturer of a weapon.”