A Hand in Remarriage
These entrepreneurs help make it easier for couples to walk down the aisle as many times as they like.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2003/september/63776.html
What: A bridal planning and
consulting service for second-time brides
Who: Bill and Cheryl Brown of
Twice Is Nice Encore Bridal Creations LLC
Where: Charlotte, North
Carolina
When: Started in 2001
When Bill and Cheryl Brown decided to get married, they looked
forward to planning a big, fancy wedding--even though it was the
second time down the aisle for both.
But almost immediately, the pair discovered that the wedding
industry doesn't tend to look kindly on second marriages.
"When we were planning our wedding, we couldn't find
wedding professionals to give us what we wanted," explains
Cheryl. For example, the Browns wanted an expensive type of
invitation, but they were almost reprimanded by the salesperson for
wanting to spend so much money. "She was very insulting,"
recalls Cheryl.
Inspired to provide other couples with the kind of
wedding-planning service they couldn't find anywhere else,
Cheryl, 39, and Bill, 46, decided to start their own company,
Twice Is
Nice Encore Bridal Creations LLC. The company deals with all
the issues associated with a second, third or fourth
marriage-everything from the wedding dress and reception food to
advice and referrals on blending families, constructing prenuptial
agreements and more.
The Browns started their business part time at first, both
keeping their airline industry jobs. But in early 2003, business
became so busy that Bill began running the business full time. Now
that they plan three weddings a month and put on wedding shows
twice a year, it's no wonder company sales for 2003 are
projected to reach $70,000 to $75,000.
For Cheryl and Bill, knowing their market intimately helped
build their success. They knew, for example, that people entering
second marriages generally have more money to spend and consider
their second weddings as a way to celebrate an increase in their
quality of life. Having been through it herself, says Cheryl,
"[I] know what second-time brides want."
What: A gourmet food truck
that delivers to office buildings
Who: James and Geoff Murdock of
Wolf Bros. Mobile Gourmet
Where: Kansas City,
Missouri
When: Started in 2001
Everybody's seen those food trucks that visit office
plazas--they sell fast and convenient fare like hot dogs and chips,
but few of the options are terribly healthy. Brothers James and
Geoff Murdock knew they could improve on that concept, so they
launched their Wolf Bros. Mobile Gourmet food truck, which provides
nutritious and gourmet menu selections.
"We knew there were a ton of people confined to office
spaces," says James, 35, a former chef. "We figured it
was a safe bet that they were anxious to try something new."
Making high-quality food without the overhead of a brick-and-mortar
restaurant was a safe bet indeed, as 2002 sales reached $50,000.
Sales for 2003 are projected to be in the six figures.
With items like fresh asparagus soup and pasta Bolognese on the
menu, the Mobile Gourmet is a far cry from your typical food truck.
Still, to get customers to actually stop and try the food, the
Murdocks had to hand out free samples at first. One taste, says
Geoff, 33, "[and] people loved our service. They'd say
'Thank goodness there's somebody like you in this
city.'"
What: A children's
enrichment center
Who: Gayle Baigelman, Jennifer
Barrett Bernstein and Cheryl Bayer Brady of Creative Space
Where: Los Angeles
When: Started in 2001
Motherhood completely shifts your priorities--just ask Gayle
Baigelman, 42; Jennifer Barrett Bernstein, 41; and Cheryl Bayer
Brady, 38, co-founders of Creative Space.
These three moms left jobs in the entertainment and Internet
worlds to start their children's enrichment facility. Here,
kids take fun and creative classes like Fairy School, where they
create a fairy persona and make fairy costumes, or Create Your Own
Superhero, where the kids invent superhero alter egos, complete
with costumes and special powers.
Wanting the freedom to schedule around their children's
needs, the entrepreneurs envisioned a place where parents would not
only drop off their children but also stick around for the fun of
it--or perhaps to take the adult yoga class--while their child was
in the Build Your Own Skateboard class.
The partners didn't rely on the usual primary colors and
dinosaurs in their facility's decorating scheme.
"[We've got a] funky style. [It] looks like a New York
City loft space," says Bayer Brady. "Parents come in and
say 'I've never been in a place where I want to hang out,
my 3-year-old wants to hang out, my 12-year-old wants to hang out
and my 15-year-old wants to hang out.'"
From their bevy of creative classes to the Kids Night Out movie
nights, held every second Friday of the month (a great chance for
parents to have a date night), these co-founders now expect 2003
sales to hit half a million dollars. Talk about making fairy tales
come true.
What: Garden-inspired beauty
and skin-care line
Who: Ellen and Jack Davies of
Davies Gate
Where: Irwindale,
California
When: Started in 1993
How much: $4,000
Being a jewelry designer like her mother didn't make Ellen
Davies happy, but taking her mother's advice to pursue a
business with the botanical soaps she made did. "I happen to
be a passionate gardener, and I love beauty and skin-care products.
It was a way to get those two together," says Davies.
She and her husband, Jack, took $4,000 in savings to buy paper
wraps and labels for packaging, then worked with a small supplier
in France to create a custom formula from which they ordered a
couple of pallets of bar soap. Because they started their company,
Davies Gate
LLC, in their apartment, "we literally sat on soap boxes
for furniture," Ellen, 39, recalls.
Jack, a lawyer who's since joined the business full time,
handles the legal aspects as well as other business duties. Ellen
plunged into the creative aspects, including handling calls.
"I'd get a call for our customer service department, put
them on hold and change my voice," laughs Ellen, who now has
12 employees.
Booking accounts with The Studio at Fred Segal and other fine
boutiques, first-year sales were $60,000; the Davies' alluring
aromas now have them projecting 2003 sales of $11 million to $12
million. And although the Davies have expanded from one item to
160, their spending habits haven't ballooned. "There are
two types of people: those who look at the top line, and those who
look at the bottom line," explains Jack, 39. "We've
always been bottom-line [types]."
- April Y. Pennington
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