On the Right Track
Wondering what the first year of startup is like? Get an insider's view as we follow one entrepreneur's journey.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2004/april/69994.html
While popular culture has a voyeuristic enthusiasm for reality
TV, there is something intriguing about possessing unfettered
access to someone's experience. For the next year, I'll be
tracking one man's quest to build a thriving business in its
very first year. Beginning with this month's introduction to
Scott Duffy, 33, and his path to starting Self Storage Capital Group,
each installment will offer an insider's look into Duffy's
life as an entrepreneur, complete with the ups and downs that path
invariably includes.
Traveling Man
It was a car accident in the fall of 1990-Duffy's junior
year-that forced him to drop out of the University of San Diego.
Recovering from two brain hemorrhages and only able to listen to
music and tapes, this speech communications major was so excited by
the Anthony Robbins program that he sought an internship with the
bestselling author and speaker. After impressing the company in
interviews, Duffy landed a job with Robbins Research, traveling and
promoting Robbins' books and workshops.
Duffy waited six months to fully recover, then embarked on his
new adventure in July 1991-leaving college for good. Having always
considered himself an entrepreneur, Duffy recalls, "I had the
opportunity to meet some incredible people [who] had started
successful businesses or overcome incredible adversity. It played a
major part in shaping me and what I am today."
After a year with Robbins Research, Duffy left and was
subsequently injured in a bicycle accident that left him
recuperating for the following year. Then an opportunity to help
start a consumer Internet access business in the San Francisco Bay
area arose. Although the enterprise ultimately failed, the
experience allowed him to become familiar with people and companies
emerging in the dotcom world. Duffy stuck through tough
times-sleeping in his car for a period of time-to make it in the
tech sector. Eventually, he spent a few years helping to launch CBS
SportsLine.com, financial news and information site Quote.com, and
community and tools site Xoom.com-focusing primarily on sales for
each.
After taking time off, Duffy returned to Los Angeles to help
relaunch Fox Sports' Internet division. After being promised an
entrepreneurial working environment, he pledged two years-despite
fears the situation would not be as entrepreneurial as he wanted.
Soon after his start in 2001, those fears materialized. Out with
his brother-in-law one night, Duffy asked, "What is 180
degrees different from what I do?" His brother-in-law pointed
out the window to a self-storage business. Before long, Duffy had
commissioned a preliminary market study, the results of which gave
him the push he needed to pursue the idea of a real estate
investment company specializing in acquiring, developing and
managing public self-storage companies.
Preparing the Way
Though Duffy started Self Storage Capital Group in May 2003, he
had long prepared himself for the shift. "I spent a year
deciding that this was something I wanted to do," reveals
Duffy. "[I] was really diligent and methodical [about] how to
approach it." Writing a comprehensive business plan, building
a team and lining up equity were essential before leaving Fox
Sports.
Though self-storage is a $17 billion to $20 billion market, with
more than 45,000 storage facilities in the United States, the
biggest player-Public Storage-controls less than 5 percent of the
market, with the next runner-up controlling less than half that.
"It's a highly fragmented, relatively unsophisticated
market," observes Duffy. "I see this great opportunity to
come into the industry with a sophisticated, methodical way of
approaching the business-consolidating mom-and-pop operators to
create a larger [operation]."
Now working on closing his first deal, Duffy has ambitious goals
for 2004: acquiring one facility and one group, or portfolio, of
properties; securing a development deal to build units from the
ground up; and finding one major backer and one major bank to
finance Self Storage Capital Group. With an office in Santa Monica,
California, Duffy has already armed himself with a team of experts
in the self-storage field and advisors who have built companies
that Duffy would like to model his after. Independent contractors-a
real estate broker, a bookkeeper, an attorney, an accountant and a
part-time administrative assistant-help him run his business, in
addition to a team of professionals who work on a
project-by-project basis. Stay tuned for next month's
installment, where we'll find out how Duffy was able to finance
his startup.
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