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Reebok contract keeps Atlas busy making Super Bowl merchandise

Friday, February 12th, 2010

South Florida Business Journal – by Susan R. Miller

Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing in Fort Lauderdale scored big with its contract from Reebok to print Super Bowl T-shirts, VP Adam Cohen says.

Until this week, Fort Lauderdale-based Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing was a little-known company quietly producing promotional shirts, hats, caps and bags for corporate clients – and struggling through a down economy.

Then, in December, Atlas was awarded a statewide contract by Reebok, a subsidiary of German sportswear giant Adidas, to produce the official T-shirt for the Super Bowl.

By 10 p.m. on Feb. 7, as a bucket of Gatorade was being dumped on New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton, Atlas’ five screening machines began cranking out championship T-shirts.

“We were given the task of keeping up a production rate of 2,200 pieces per hour,” VP of Sales Adam Cohen said. “We were able to run at maximum efficiency all throughout the night, with all five automatic presses.”

http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/stories/2010/02/15/story8.html

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Florida Distributor Finishes Super Stretch

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

ASI Central

With still days of world championship partying ahead in New Orleans, two weeks of intensive Super Bowl-related work are finally winding down for one Florida distributor. As an official project partner with Reebok, Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing (asi/700400) recently produced tens of thousands of Super Bowl-logoed apparel items at its Ft. Lauderdale manufacturing site. “We had our five presses running since the AFC Championship game [two weeks ago],” says Adam Cohen, vice president of sales at Atlas. “After the Super Bowl, we ran them until 10:00 [Monday morning]. This has given us a major shot in the arm.”

The screen printed apparel, which ranges from short sleeve T-shirts to hoodies, was distributed and then sold at sporting goods stores, hotels and other venues throughout Florida. Atlas printed several designs, including items featuring Peyton Manning and Super Bowl MVP Drew Brees. “We had been on their [Reebok's] radar and we got an opportunity to put a bid package together,” says Cohen. “We went through an extensive site survey, but it came down to our ability to do the job quickly and efficiently. I’d say we hit it out of the park.”

Rather than hire additional temporary workers, Atlas offered its staff of around 60 employees a large amount of overtime hours. “We probably had 60 to 70 hour weeks,” says Cohen. “It gave us the chance to give our people big chunks of money in their paychecks to start them off well for the year.”

Following this successful run, Atlas is now developing specialty apparel concepts for Reebok for other sports, including NCAA and professional basketball. Already, Atlas works as a prestige partner with Staples Promotional Products (asi/120601), servicing large clients like Coca-Cola, UPS and Google. “We basically work as an in-house ad agency, bringing ideas from the retail side,” says Cohen. “We’re not just a contract printer. We have these specialty projects as well.”

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Atlas Interviewed on T-BizTV

Monday, February 8th, 2010

T-Biz TV is a T-Shirt Industry internet TV show hosted by Scott Fresener of T-BizNetwork.com. In this special Super Bowl Pre-Game show Scott talks about the “Who Dat” T-Shirt controversy with the NFL and interviews Adam Cohen of Atlas Embroidery & Screen Print who is printing pre- and post- game shirts for the Super Bowl.

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Local Company Pulls Saints Tee All-Nighter

Monday, February 8th, 2010

It’s Saints merch mania at one local company, which is printing up to 2,000 shirts an hour

By CAROLYN RYAN

NBC MIAMI

As Saints fans took to South Florida streets to party after the big win on Sunday night, one local company was hard at work.

As soon as the game ended, the employees at Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing went to work printing up thousands of Saints Championship t-shirts. More than 50 employees pulled an all-nighter to complete the task, printing tens of thousands of t-shirts to be shipped to retailers all across the state.

Atlas is the only authorized company in South Florida to print the official NFL shirts, the graphics for which were provided by Reebok. The shirts were even worn by the Saints players after the game in the locker room.

Vice President Adam Cohen said the contract to print the championship shirts means big money for them.

“For the last couple of weeks our employees have been working hard, putting in lots of overtime hours to get these shirts ready to go. Last night we didn’t stop production other than a few small breaks here and there. We’ve been running on cuban coffee and Red Bull, but it will all pay off in the end,” said Cohen.

The company was printing up to 2,000 shirts per hour. They’ll hit retailers shelves later today.

http://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local-beat/Saints-Shirts–Big-Business-83809452.html

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Atlas kicks into high gear with Super Bowl T-shirts

Monday, February 8th, 2010

South Florida Business Journal – by Susan R. Miller

Adam Cohen pulled an all-nighter following the New Orleans Saints’ Super Bowl victory.

The company he works for, Fort Lauderdale-based Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing, went into overdrive Sunday night, printing the official Super Bowl T-shirt.

“We were given the task of keeping up a production rate of 2,200 pieces per hour. That started at 10 last night,” said Cohen, vice president of sales. “We were able to run at maximum efficiency all throughout the night with all five automatic presses.”

Cohen said he spent much of Sunday night working and conducting media interviews.

Getting the Super Bowl contract wasn’t easy. There was an intensive interview with Reebok, the official master licensee of the NFL, Cohen said.

Reebok won’t let him divulge just how many shirts Atlas is producing, but he said it had received a few 53-foot trailer loads, with more on the way.

Atlas also produced the AFC Championship T-shirts, and was making them right up until the Super Bowl.

“We have been on pretty much a 24-hour schedule for the last two weeks,” Cohen said. “We printed dueling merchandise for the last two weeks – that’s your head-to-head matchup T’s.”

There was a bit of scrambling at the last minute, admits Cohen, a diehard New England Patriots fan.

“We hedged our bets toward Colts, we had the facility set up to run Colts merchandise on three of the five presses, so we could be ready to react,” he said.

But, as the clock ticked down, Atlas realized it needed to change its game plan.

“As soon as the Gatorade was dumped on the coach, Saints merchandise began to run,” he said.

Atlas was started in 2002 by Mitchell Lombard, who lost his job in corporate America just after Sept. 11. He began with one machine and two employees in a 900-square-foot bay.

Today, there are five machines and 60 employees. Cohen said most have been working in shifts around-the-clock for the last two weeks.

Although it’s a big contract, Cohen said the Super Bowl deal is “just gravy on top of our traditional business.”

Atlas produces specialty apparel packages for several Fortune 500 companies, including Coca-Cola, Subaru, Google, Anheuser-Busch and UPS.

The shirts are being sold to all tiers of retail south of Jacksonville.

Copyright 2010 bizjournals.com

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Printing Presses Rush Out Saints T-Shirts

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

FORT LAUDERDALE (CBS4)

Reporting
Tiffani Helberg

With two minutes left in the Super Bowl, a Fort Lauderdale small business launched into overdrive. Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing began printing the official Super Bowl T-shirt with the Saints as the winner. Nearly all the employees were expected to work through the night to keep the presses going.

“We’ve got five automatic presses and each of those presses will be doing about 400 pieces per hour,” estimated owner Adam Cohen. “So I don’t know. I figure 2,000 pieces per hour.”

The machines are expected to run for at least 14 hours straight, cranking out T-shirts that will be distributed throughout the Southeast region.

“I’m feeling as though its gonna be a very long night,” Cohen said. “You know we’ve got a lot of things going on here. We’ve got a ton of production to do.”

While the big game is over for the Saints and the Colts, the big game is just beginning for this small business. But they said they are eager to do it as it also means a big financial windfall.

“In this economy, it’s definitely been great,” he said.

The first set of official Super Bowl shirts were printed ahead of time so that the Saint would be able to wear them as soon as the game was over. Now, the rest of the batches will go to eager fans.

http://cbs4.com/local/printing.saints.tshirt.2.1478448.html

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Welcome to the NFL: Winning a Super Bowl Contract

Friday, February 5th, 2010

“Don’t expect to get rich,” the NFL warns potential contractors–at least not from the contract itself.

Mitchell Lombard, owner of Fort Lauderdale’s Atlas Embroidery and Screen Printing, isn’t forking over $2.7 million for 30 seconds of airtime at Sunday’s Super Bowl XLIV – for him, just doing business with the NFL is ad enough.

“It’s a feather in our cap,” says Lombard, whose 60-person company will churn out thousands of t-shirts bearing the champions’ name once the whistle blows. “It’s a very small piece of our business – it’s more of an accomplishment than anything else.” (There’s maybe a bit of understatement there: Lombard also says the contract allows employees “to get overtime and make back some of what they didn’t get in 2009.”)

For the big game, the NFL will hire dozens of small companies for jobs ranging from crafting mini metal lockers (tickets for premium seat holders are delivered in them) to arranging floral centrepieces for pre-game dinners. The businesses jump through major hoops for contracts that usually require a last-minute sprint – and low margins. The big prize, though, is not the money from the work itself – “though it’s sweet because the economy is so rocky,” says Lombard – but the experience, contacts and credibility that result in big payoffs later. Lesson: Don’t judge a contract’s worth only in dollars.

“Once you’re able to put on your client listing that you did business with the NFL for the Super Bowl, it gives you a lot of credibility,” says Solomon Davis, vice president of Tampa’s Sol Davis Printing, which had contracts with the NFL totalling $31,000 for Super Bowl XXXV in 2001.

“Did we make a substantial amount of money? No. Did we get some exposure? Yes,” he told Tampa Tribune. “Money-wise, it certainly wasn’t what people thought we got.” (Page 6 of the NFL’s handbook for its Emerging Business Program, which targets women and minority-owned business, reads: “Do not expect to ‘get rich’ through this program.” The words “Do not” are underlined and printed in boldface type.)

Still, the publicity played a huge part in the company’s ability to exp and, adding equipment and employees (Sol Davis Printing has grown from Davis and his son to 13 people, for example.)

Francine Powers’ Miami catering company We’re Having a Party has participated in three Super Bowls, and Super Bowl 2010 – for which she’s making boxed meals for parking lot attendants and soup for an NFL tailgate party – will be her fourth.

“Each time I bid, I act like it’s the first time,” Powers told CNN Money. “I don’t take any of it for granted. This type of work is not going to make you a ton of money, but it puts your business on a better footing.”

Case in point: Another big job – a contract for the Academy Awards Governor’s Ball in Los Angeles – came from the corporate caterer she subcontracted for during the 1995 Super Bowl. And the exposure and experience (she says it taught her to handle high customer volume) Powers gained from working the Super Bowl allowed her to move her business from her home into commercial space. She also could afford new equipment.

Looking for a slice of next year’s Super Bowl in Arlington, Texas? Don’t wait – the game of contracts actually already has kicked off.

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Profiting From Super Bowl Merchandise

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Adam Cohen, Vice President of Sales for Atlas Embroidery, on winning the contract to make Super Bowl shirts.

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Tourism Officials Hoping For Saints, Colts Invasion

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Super Bowl misses ‘dream matchup,’ but businesses preparing for rush

By Doreen Hemlock
STAFF WRITER
Sun Sentinel Your Money Section

The Super Bowl matchup between the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts may not be ideal for South Florida tourism, but travel-industry leaders are rallying behind the two football teams to woo their fans — and fast.

The Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention and Visitors Bureau is increasing radio and cable TV ads in the Indiana and Louisiana markets to lure visitors for the Feb. 7 game and related festivities.

“They’re the dream teams now: Indianapolis and New Orleans,” said bureau president Nicki Grossman.

Before Sunday’s finals, many tourism leaders had hoped the New York Jets would win their playoff game, bringing crowds familiar with South Florida to cheer a team that has not reached the Super Bowl in decades. The Minnesota Vikings also seemed a promising choice, since Minnesota is cold and has a large population base to help fill Florida hotels.

But though a smaller city with warmer weather, New Orleans is sure to send thousands to watch the Saints’ Super Bowl debut. And Indianapolis fans may recall the fun they had at the 2007 Super Bowl played in South Florida and come again in droves, Grossman said.

Tourism leaders expect roughly 74,000 people will attend the Super Bowl. They’re focused on luring at least 40,000 more football fans to the area to watch the event on TV and enjoy the excitement.

Said Grossman: “We’ll show them how to party.” The final matchup has been closely watched by South Florida
companies counting on Super Bowl business after a poor year for tourism in 2009: hotels, restaurants, transport companies and even T-shirt printers.

Mitchell Lombard, president of T-shirt printer Atlas Embroidery & Screen Printing in Fort Lauderdale, called a Saints-Colts faceoff “kind of vanilla” compared to the bonanza of a potential Jets-Vikings game.

“We’d do 10 times the amount of shirts if it were New York-Minnesota.

The difference is huge,” said Lombard, whose staff worked through Sunday night printing an initial load of two 53-foot shipping containers of shirts with the names of the two Bowl contenders.

“And that’s not my stat. It comes from Reebok and Adidas, the official companies for the NFL. They know.”

Still, many hotel executives cheered the Saints making the cut. “Their first time in the Super Bowl will bring more people here,” said Michelle Shulman, a spokeswoman for the 1,058-room Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa in
Hollywood, which is sold out for the game as the host hotel for Super Bowl sponsors.

“For New Orleans, after having gone through [Hurricane] Katrina and what they went through, I think it’s revitalizing the city,” added Amaury Piedra, complex general manager for the 433-room Westin Beach Resort Fort Lauderdale and 486-room Sheraton Fort Lauderdale Beach Hotel. “I think we’re going to see a huge number of Saints fans coming.”

Some hoteliers also found consolation in the Jets losing. They noted many New Yorkers may have stayed with friends and relatives and not in resorts anyway.

And some savored a defeat of the Miami Dolphins’ arch rival.

“Speaking as a Dolphins fan first, I’m glad they [the Jets] didn’t make it,” joked hotelier Piedra.

Homeowners looking to rent properties to Super Bowl visitors hoped the matchup would boost interest in rentals. But Broward County resident Jerry Gratenstein said by Monday noon he had “not received a call yet” for several condos and homes he’s trying to rent in Fort Lauderdale.

Still, any Super Bowl in South Florida has local businesses applauding.

At Fort Lauderdale based Coastal Car and Limousine, Evan Michaels said the Super Bowl is the only South Florida
event that prompts his company to add rentals and out-of-town cars to its 55-vehicle fleet. “There are other great events in South Florida for our industry: the boat show, Art Basel and the South Beach Wine and Food Festival,”
Michaels said. “But the Super Bowl is much better.”

Staff Writer Sarah Talalay contributed to this report.
Doreen Hemlock can be reached at dhemlock@SunSentinel.com or 305-810-5009.

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S. Fla. Co. Works Overtime On “Super” Shirts

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The crew of Atlas Embroidery in Ft. Lauderdale is working overtime to produce this year's Super Bowl shirts for Florida. FORT LAUDERDALE (CBS4) ― The presses at Atlas Embroidery in Fort Lauderdale are working overtime now that this year’s Super Bowl teams have been announced.

Atlas owner Adam Cohen said his company was awarded the contract to print the official Super Bowl XLIV for Florida and with Sunday’s games it came right down to the wire.if they were to have them store shelves by the morning.

“It’s really on the fly. It’s just go, go, go. They call it ‘if, then.’ If they win, then you print!” said Atlas’s owner Adam Cohen.

Atlas Embroidery was one of five companies that bid on the Super Bowl shirt contract. They were chosen, in part, because they already have a long, successful history with companies like Coca-Cola, Google, Budweiser, and Adidas. They will print the shirts for most cities in Florida, from Jacksonville down.

One of the first stores to put them on display was the Sports Fanatic at the Dolphin Mall.

“A manager from another location went and picked up the shirts straight from the warehouse this morning. I then went by that location and picked up our cut,” said Phil Edens.

And it’s a good thing too.

“Our phone has been ringing off the hook this morning with people asking if we have the shirts in yet,” said Edens. “And they were actually surprised when we told them we had them already.”

As seen on CBS4 – Click Here

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