Young Millionaires: Class of 2004
Think it's nearly impossible to become a multimillionaire before you're 40? Meet 23 young entrepreneurs who did just that--and learn the inside secrets to their success.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2004/november/73112.html
Duwop
Company description:
Manufacturer of specialty makeup and body creams
Founders: Christina
Bartolucci, 39, and Laura DeLuisa, 37
Location: Glendale,
California
Projected 2004 sales: $5
million
Behind the Scenes:
Cristina Bartolucci and Laura DeLuisa met and found their
inspiration in the trenches, doing makeup and hair on movie sets.
"An actress would come in [with puffy eyes] in the morning and
have to look perfect at 7 a.m.," says Bartolucci. "We
would pack [her] eyes with gauze soaked with ice water, which was
uncomfortable and messy." To solve the problem, the pair
invented their first product, I gels, in 1999. Today, signature
products like Lip Venom lip gloss and Revolotion body makeup are
popular with fans including Jennifer Aniston and Kelly Ripa.
Loose Lips:
"When [we] first started the company, I was doing graphics in
a copy store, and this kid came up to me and said, 'DuWop? What
a great name. Is it registered?' I said, 'I don't think
so,' and he said, 'Let me register it for you,'"
says Bartolucci. "In front of me, in the store, he went online
and registered, and stole our name. It took us three years and a
lawsuit to get it back. So now, no matter how excited I am, I take
a deep breath and think 'Is silence the best response
here?'"
Rein It In: After
distribution of DuWop products exploded thanks to a zealous sales
rep, Bartolucci and DeLuisa realized they didn't want to be a
mass-market brand. They scaled back distribution and now offer
their products in specialty boutiques, such as Henri Bendel and
Fred Segal, as well as upscale retailers Nordstrom and Sephora. The
pair hopes the new strategy, combined with a full line of products
now in development, will take DuWop to more than $10 million in
sales in the next three years. -Nichole L. Torres
Expeditiontrips.com
Company description:
Internet-based adventure travel company specializing in expedition
travel
Founders: Ashton Palmer,
32, and Kristy Royce, 35
Location: Seattle
Projected 2004 sales: $6
million
No Fear: Driving
snowmobiles in Antarctica, working at jungle camps in the Amazon,
camping in the Australian Outback-as former expedition leaders on
cruise ships, Ashton Palmer and Kristy Royce had done it all. But
in 1999, this husband-and-wife team set out on a new adventure:
starting their own travel agency. With no previous business
experience, the couple, who first met at a youth hostel in
Australia, faced the challenge head on. "Our whole lives up
until that point had been filled with risk," says Royce.
"So for us, this wasn't too risky."
Perfect Niche: Palmer
and Royce stand out from other travel companies by specializing in
trips on small cruise ships to remote locations where the highlight
is the destination, not the amenities onboard.
Teamwork: A $200,000
investment from a family member more than covered the couple's
$100,000 startup costs. However, because the money was doled out in
increments, they were forced to work nights at restaurants and
forgo salaries for the first year and a half. The rough roads have
only strengthened the pair. Says Palmer, "Together, we were
able to create something that neither one of us could have done
individually."
All Work and Some Play:
Once or twice a year, Palmer, Royce and their staff of six get out
and experience the trips themselves. "It's important to
remember how amazing these trips are," says Royce. "You
forget after a year or so, so you've got to go out in the
field." -Sara Wilson
ePrize
Company description:
Interactive promotion agency
Founder: Josh Linkner,
34
Location: Farmington
Hills, Michigan
Projected 2004 sales:
$15.5 million plus
Get Up and Go: From
an initially self-funded startup in 1999, ePrize has blossomed into
the world's top interactive promotion agency. The company helps
bridge the gap between the offline and online worlds by turning
anonymous consumers into permission-based customers, with the lure
of fun, interactive web promotions.
Dotcom Crash Course:
Whenever you come across a company so strongly connected to the
internet, you have to ask how they survived the dark days of the
dotcom crash. Josh Linkner saw it coming in mid-2000 and began to
shift away from serving the venture-backed (and soon to be extinct)
dotcoms that made up most of ePrize's client list. "We had
to adapt our complete strategy and company to service the large
brands that would be around to pay the bills," explains
Linkner.
The Campaign Trail:
With more than 900 completed advertising campaigns and a client
list that reads like a who's who of large U.S. corporations,
ePrize is miles beyond its nearest competitor. The company signed
on 17 new major brand accounts, including Circuit City and FedEx,
in the first quarter of 2004 alone.
All That Jazz: One
word you'll hear a lot from Linkner is creativity. His
background as a jazz guitarist, pianist and singer has helped him
bring an artistic attitude to his business. "Jazz is [about] a
very improvisational, creative-type of environment," he says.
"I look at what we're doing as a company much the same
way. Instead of notes, you're working with people and
technology."
The Future's So
Bright: A spirit of innovation and evolution is driving
ePrize toward its next goal: $30 million in sales by 2007. But
it's not all about the bottom line at this company. Top-notch
customer service and quality employees are two principal areas that
spark ePrize's engine. Says Linkner, "Some day, a company
will come along and put us out of business, so it might as well be
us." -Amanda C. Kooser
365 Inc.
Company description: Online
sales of licensed soccer and rugby apparel, and a soccer and rugby
news outlet and database
Founder: Bernard Frei,
39
Location: Birmingham,
Alabama
Projected 2004 sales: $6
million
The Globe-Trotter:
Hailing from Sydney, Australia, Bernard Frei wanted a new start in
the States and surprised many in the sporting world by choosing
Birmingham for his online rugby and soccer emporium.
"[There's] this absolute astonishment that this range of
product is available not only in the U.S., but [also] out of
Alabama," Frei says.
By the Book: With no
background in website design or e-commerce, Frei needed more than
just his passion for rugby and soccer to build his internet
presence. He spent 1998, his business's first year, with an
internet guidebook on his lap, learning as he went. "My
business basically kicked off in a spare bedroom with a ton of
advice from friends and an HTML code book."
Just Do It: At age 18,
Frei received an unforgettable piece of advice from a prominent
Australian businessman. "It was basically to get on and do it
now, and not to hang around," says Frei. "I think so many
business plans end up sitting around and never get used, and
that's a shame."
The Almighty Dollar:
"The worst mistake [I made] was never having the time to get
around to getting serious financing," says Frei. "Because
of that, we've missed major opportunities."
Mr. Big Stuff: Over the
years, Frei has built business relationships with sportswear giants
such as Adidas and Reebok. And it was the partnership with Adidas
that secured 365 Inc. its biggest coup to date: having soccer
superstar David Beckham sport the company's gear in TV ads.
Says Frei, "His name and brand recognition in the U.S. is just
driving our sales beyond our wildest dreams."
-N.L.T.
CI Host
Company description:
Web-hosting and data center infrastructure provider
Founder: Christopher
Faulkner, 27
Location: Bedford,
Texas
Projected 2004 sales:
$45 million plus
What's the Score?
C I Host commands some impressive figures: 210,000 customers, as
many as 5,000 new customers every month, 8,000 resellers around the
world, a 37,000-square-foot data center and 9,000 servers. Another
interesting number: 15. That's the age at which Christopher
Faulkner started his first business selling baseball cards and
sports memorabilia out of a small storefront in Bedford, Texas. Now
he helps businesses like that one get online.
From Fanzine to
Business: There have been a few stops along the way.
"I've started 201 corporations, and 197 of them failed
miserably, which is a life lesson that I learned. To be successful,
you have to fail along the way," says Faulkner. He built his
first website as a fanzine for the band Pearl Jam in 1995, and by
the end of the year, he was running a fledgling version of C I Host
out of his apartment.
Growth Spurt: C I
Host soon outgrew Faulkner's apartment and today has offices
and data centers in Bedford, Texas, as well as Chicago and Los
Angeles-and soon, London. And Faulkner has done it all without the
help of VC financing or loans. "We're debt-free," he
says. Bootstrapping and growing at a breakneck pace aren't the
easiest things to reconcile.
The Host With the
Most: Faulkner keeps the ship sailing smoothly by
maintaining 15-hour workdays. Busy as he is, he always has time for
his customers. How many CEOs do you know who conduct their own
weekly internet chat for all comers? Faulkner's experience and
business savvy belie his age. Fortunately for C I Host, he could be
at the helm for a long time to come. -A.C.K.
Antelope Valley Medical College
Company description:
Accredited medical college that provides EMT, medical assistant and
paramedic training, as well as training in other areas
Founders: Marco Johnson,
38, and Sandra Johnson, 39
Location: Lancaster,
California
Projected 2004 sales: $7.5
million
Good Medicine: As a
firefighter, Marco Johnson too often witnessed deaths that could
have been prevented-if someone at the scene had taken immediate
action. So in 1997, he began offering medical training classes in
his community. His wife, Sandra, arranged for the place and time,
and secured students, while Marco taught classes in CPR and first
aid. "[Sandra] got tired of me coming home and complaining,
'I wish someone would've started CPR or first aid before we
got on the scene,'" Marco recalls. "I thought maybe a
few more lives could've been saved."
Growing Up: Since those
early days, demand has grown: The college now employs 42 staff
members and certifies nearly 8,000 people per year in CPR and first
aid. At the behest of students, Antelope Valley started EMT,
licensed vocational nurse, medical assistant, medical billing and
paramedic certification programs. Their biggest mistake early on,
says Marco, was not thinking in big enough terms about the business
or seeing its full potential.
Playing Catch-Up: In the
beginning, the couple had to use their day-job salaries to keep the
fledgling school afloat-while rent payments sometimes fell behind.
"It was always a repetitive circle," remembers Sandra.
"We would be behind on our home expenses, and then some money
would come through the business and we were able to catch up again,
until we got to where we are today."
Active Duty: Still an
active firefighter, Marco plans to retire within the next year to
focus on building the school with Sandra, who recently quit her
paralegal job. "When I go to the fire station, the last thing
on my mind is this operation, because I know Sandra has the same
thoughts and same attitudes I do about the business," says
Marco. "Being best [friends] and business [partners has]
helped the balancing act." -N.L.T.
LoveSac Corp.
Company description:
Chain of stores (about half are franchised) specializing in modular
furniture
Founder: Shawn Nelson,
28
Location: Salt Lake
City
Projected 2004 sales:
$30 million plus
A Bag Is Born: At age
18, Shawn Nelson was watching TV on the couch when he decided
"a huge beanbag thing" might be more comfortable. He
bought 14 yards of vinyl, cut it into a baseball shape, and spent
three weeks filling it with anything soft he could find. The
finished LoveSac was 7 feet wide, and everyone who saw it tried it
out-and loved it.
Pocket Power: When
neighbors started placing orders, Nelson decided to start his
company almost as a joke. With free help from his friends, he made
the LoveSacs in his parents' basement and sold them at trade
shows, events and even the drive-in. Business was moderate at best,
until he got a call on his cell phone that changed his life: a
quarter-million-dollar order from Too Inc., which was looking for a
back-to-school offering for its Limited Too stores. "I
answered the phone and said, 'Twelve thousand LoveSacs? Sure,
no problem. That's what we do; we're the best in the world
at it,'" remembers Nelson.
Hard Road: Undaunted,
Nelson amassed $50,000 in credit card debt building a factory. He
worked 19-hour days and slept at the factory. "It nearly broke
me emotionally, physically, mentally," Nelson says. "My
hands were cracked and bleeding. We finished the order [for Too
Inc.] but ate up all our profits." Just when things seemed
darkest, a deceptively simple idea presented itself: Open a mall
store. Not just any store, but one designed from the beginning to
look like an upscale chain-even before it was a chain. It paid off:
With some 55 stores, about half of them franchised, LoveSac is
looking at sales topping $30 million this year.
Looking Forward:
"We're headed toward owning [the market for] oversized
living," says Nelson, who dispenses with all modesty where his
business is concerned. "We're going to have a catalog
that'll be three inches thick, selling everything that's
over-the-top, bling-bling,
LoveSac-get-out-of-our-freaking-way."
Unstoppable: No one
fully expected LoveSac's success-not even Nelson himself. He
says being committed to solving any problem is vital to his-and any
entrepreneur's-success. "Decide that there is always a
way," he says, "and you'll find that there is."
-Jonathan Riggs
CCM Marketing Inc.
Company description: Media
buying advertising agency specializing in the direct-response
market
Founders: Suzy da Silva,
33, and Nicole Licata, 35
Location: San Luis Obisbo,
California
Projected 2004 sales: $30
million
Directly Speaking: Suzy
da Silva and Nicole Licata met in 1998 while working at a
direct-response advertising agency, and the lack of ethics they
sometimes witnessed inspired the pair to branch out on their own in
2001. "We wanted to do something that would treat the clients
better," says Licata, "because direct response in general
is a not-so-upfront industry. A lot of people take your money and
don't tell you why they're taking it."
Timing Troubles: After
the partners started their business in July 2001, the 9/11
terrorist attacks nearly put a quick stop to their venture because
nobody was watching or buying from infomercials-it was all news all
the time. To get through it, the pair went to TV stations directly
to look for compromises and ad rate reduction deals that would help
everybody-their clients, the stations and themselves-to survive.
"Everyone had to be a team at that point," says da
Silva.
Know Thyself: Says
Licata, "We're both salespeople, so we have a lot of
people watching over what is not our strong point-accounting. If
you see a weakness in your business and you don't [understand]
it, don't pretend you do. Hire somebody."
One Big Family: During
the lean times after 9/11, da Silva and Licata vowed they
wouldn't lay off a single employee. Though they had to forgo
their own paychecks for a time, and each gained 25 pounds from the
stress of it all, they kept their promise. Says da Silva, "We
didn't want people out in that kind of environment. It's
like a family here." The result: incredibly loyal employees
and a knowledge that the duo can get through anything-including
successfully losing their stress-related pounds. -N.L.T.
Urban Evolution,
Civilian and Lotus; Tonic; and J-Squared LLC
Company description:
Clothing stores, a private nightclub and a real estate company,
respectively, focusing on upscale, modern style
Founder: James P.
Funderburk Jr., 39
Location: Charlotte,
North Carolina
Projected 2004 sales:
$3.3 million plus
Southern Revolution:
Since 1994, James P. Funderburk Jr. has injected Charlotte, North
Carolina-known as a conservative banker's town-with his vision
of modern chic, starting with clothing store Urban Evolution and
continuing most recently with J-Squared LLC, his newest foray into
real estate development with architecturally modern housing. The
common thread with these diverse businesses is offering "a
unique product, service or hospitality the Charlotte region is
missing but anticipating," says Funderburk. Doing so in
exciting and innovative ways has drawn a loyal customer base that
has allowed him to continue to expand his scope of style.
Worldly Charm:
Funderburk competes with major metropolitan ventures by bringing
the best concepts from his travels back to Charlotte. Private
lounge Tonic melds Zen and modern elements, with many décor
items designed and built by Funderburk, who has earned local and
national recognition for his enterprises. "I've never let
being undercapitalized stop me from doing something," he
philosophizes. "I always thought 'Worst-case scenario, I
can always use lines of credit.' And if something gets really
bad, I can always get a job again."
Special Treatment:
From including his retail managers on buying trips and paying for
gym memberships to instilling a sense of ownership, Funderburk
stresses appreciation for all his employees. "It's not
easy to retain employees in retail, but I have very little
turnover, and that's because I demonstrate to them [that] I
always want them to be a bigger part of things," says
Funderburk, who partnered with one employee to start Tonic and two
others for his second Civilian store.
New Beginnings:
Inspiration is key for Funderburk, who remodels his businesses
every 18 months. "I look for something new; that's where
the excitement comes from," he says. "It's easy to
lose the excitement-that's why I like moving into other
businesses as well." -April Y. Pennington
Cornerstone Promotion, The Fader magazine
Company description:
Lifestyle marketing company, culture magazine
Founders: Jon Cohen, 36,
and Rob Stone, 36
Location: New York
City
Projected 2004 sales:
Approaching $20 million
Fresh Alternative: Music
industry veterans Jon Cohen and Rob Stone launched Cornerstone
Promotion in 1996 to help music companies promote artists to niche
audiences-but they quickly realized the same nontraditional,
grass-roots approach could be applied elsewhere. Now Coca-Cola,
Disney, Microsoft and Sony-Ericsson are among the roster of
corporations seeking out Cornerstone's cultural and marketing
know-how.
Immersed: With 25 being
the average age of Cornerstone's staff, they can speak with
great authority on youth culture. "This company was built by
people who live, eat and breathe what they do here," Cohen
attests. "They love music, film, the lifestyle of what this
place is all about, and that's the important thing we look for
in a new hire."
Youth Brigade:The
Fader magazine was born in 1999 to promote Cornerstone's
website and soon took on a life of its own. "With Cornerstone
being so service-oriented," says Stone, "we wanted to
build something that represented our taste and our values, how we
saw culture at the time." The magazine's initial lack of
distribution and Cornerstone's preference for alternative
marketing methods set the foundation for their FARM (Field
Activation Research Marketing) Team. Paid team members ranging from
ages 18 to 25 (many were loyal readers) first spread the word about
The Fader by acting as "ambassadors" and meeting
with influential people-such as college radio station programmers,
talent bookers, and young photographers and writers-to introduce
the magazine. Today, The Fader is a subscription-based
magazine with eight issues per year, while the FARM team creates
word-of-mouth for Cornerstone projects and keeps Cornerstone in the
know on the latest buzz.
Broadened Horizons: The
magazine's new division, Fader Films, has released its first
project, and two more films may appear at Sundance 2005. With
offices in Chicago and New York, the co-founders hope to spread
their marketing genius to Europe and Japan. -A.Y.P.
eFashion Solutions LLC
Company description:
Operations management for fashion manufacturers' e-commerce
sites
Founders: Edward Foy,
33, and Jennifer Foy, 32
Location: Secaucus, New
Jersey
Projected 2004 sales:
$25 million to $30 million
ePioneers: In the
dotcom heyday, Edward Foy and fellow Calvin Klein Jeanswear sales
account executive Jennifer Silano thought more clothing
manufacturers should use the internet as an added revenue stream.
Launching eFashion Solutions in 2000, they took their business
model to fashion trade shows, where they touted their turnkey
package: eFashion Solutions would design the signature website,
manage the customer call center, handle fulfillment, and even
provide reverse logistics. The couple, who also married that year,
kept working toward their dream, even while credit card debt
mounted.
Full-Service Appeal:
"We focus on what we call the 'wow factor'-constantly
wowing our first client and our second client so the industry would
talk about us," says Jennifer. After landing the trendy
juniors line XOXO as their first client, word-of-mouth quickly drew
other pop culture brands seeking an online flagship store, such as
urban apparel giants Baby Phat, JLo and Rocawear. In September, the
Foys added international websites to the mix.
Focal Point: In the
beginning, Edward remembers trying to offer their services to just
about everyone. "We weren't focused enough on our
industry, where our knowledge was." When they did land
fashion-minded clients, they tried too hard to do everything for
them. Appreciative for the business, the Foys would do extra work
gratis. When certain clients started regarding this as a right,
policy changed. "Now we service to the letter of the
contract," says Jennifer.
Branded: The Foys
take great care to build the eFashion Solutions brand. "We
don't have the money Coca-Cola has to build this brand around
our name," says Edward, "so it's the experiences
people have with us." -A.Y.P.
All Star Wines & Spirits
Company description:
Upscale wine and spirits shop
Founder: Craig Allen,
35
Location: Latham, New
York
Projected 2004 sales:
Approaching $5 million
Worms to Wine: At age 6,
Craig Allen launched his first business-selling worms. His friend
dug them up, his mom sold them, and Allen oversaw the operation.
Years later, armed with a marketing degree, Allen turned down a
career at Procter & Gamble to stay at the liquor store where he
worked and learn more about wine. "Wine is something
that's recession proof," says Allen. "It's a
product that lends [itself] to a very social atmosphere."
Strong Spirits:
Compiling the best ideas from hundreds of stores, Allen designed
his from the ground up, showcasing tens of thousands of bottles.
But before he could even open his doors, he was caught in a series
of battles against the state of New York. Most significant was a
six-month struggle that finally won New York alcohol retailers the
right to be open for business on Sundays.
Doing Overtime: Despite
the legal battles, Allen has grown the business by double digits
almost every month for the past six years. His current project:
launching a wine bar and tapas restaurant next to his store. To top
it all off, he uses his business to give back to the community,
having founded or co-founded three annual charity wine-tasting
events that net $150,000 a year. What's his secret? Says Allen,
"My slogan from Day One has been: We're not smarter than
anyone else, but we're willing to work a little bit
harder." -S.W.
Reply.com
Company description:
Online referral source for automobiles, real estate, home
improvement and financing
Founders: Behnam
Behrouzi, 23, John Truchard, 32, and Payam Zamani, 33
Location: Walnut Creek,
California
Projected 2004 sales:
$20 million
Coming to America:
The story of how Reply.com was founded has more twists and turns
than a Hollywood movie. It begins with how Payam Zamani got from
his home country of Iran to the United States. At age 16, Zamani
was smuggled out of Iran to escape the extreme religious
persecution that members of the Bahai Faith were subjected to. He
came to America in 1988 with $75 and no knowledge of English.
Paint the Town: The
entrepreneurial bug first bit Zamani during a summer as general
manager of Student Works Program, a student-run painting franchise
at the University of California, Davis, where he met fellow student
(and future vice president of sales) John Truchard in 1992.
"Since Payam and I both enjoyed the experience, it was natural
for us to talk about future opportunities," says Truchard.
A Portal Is Born:
Remember AutoWeb.com? A co-founder, Zamani left AutoWeb six months
after taking it public in 1999. "I always felt that there was
a lot left undone," he says. "I wanted to get back in
there and rebuild that concept." And that's just what
Zamani and his team did.
Next Step: In 2001,
Next Phase Media was launched and later became Reply.com. Besides
automobiles, Reply.com is a gateway for real estate, home
improvement and financing. All the content is free to the consumer.
Since Zamani's nephew, Behnam Behrouzi, had been an
entrepreneur since high school, Zamani pulled him in. As CTO,
Behrouzi played a pivotal role in building up the technology to
power the new venture. "Our vision was to eventually do with
services what Amazon did with products," says Behrouzi.
Going Public: The
co-founders made the decision to not touch any VC financing,
instead opting to bootstrap the business. That has paid off.
Behrouzi, Truchard and Zamani have big plans for Reply.com. An IPO
could be in the works early next year. "Five years from now,
Reply.com [will] be a household name," says Truchard. At the
rate they're growing, you can expect it to be even sooner.
-A.C.K.
Progressive Telecom
Company description:
Wholesaler and distribution of cell phones and accessories
Founder: Art Alaniz,
33
Location: Edinburg,
Texas
Projected 2004 sales: $60
million plus
Mother Knows Best: Many
successful businesses have been started in a spare room. Art Alaniz
launched Progressive Telecom from a room in his mother's house
in 1997, even while he was living in another city and working a
full-time job. "She was fine with it," says Alaniz.
"She knows I've always had an entrepreneurial
spirit." The room was home to shelves full of used cell
phones, a desk, a phone and a fax machine.
Quit Your Day Job:
"When I opened the company, it was just a way to make a little
extra money," Alaniz explains. Business in reselling used
mobile phones, particularly in the underserved Mexican market, was
booming. And Alaniz was soon faced with taking the next leap of
quitting his well-paying day job and becoming a dedicated
entrepreneur. He took a 50 percent pay cut and moved in with his
mother to get the business going-quite a change for the young
bachelor. But it paid off. Progressive Telecom now thrives in
larger digs with 140 employees and five locations-two in the United
States and another three in Mexico. And, of course, Alaniz has his
own place these days.
You Say You Want an
Evolution? What began as a newspaper ad offering to buy
used cell phones has evolved into a business that specializes in
new phones and refurbished mobiles. Though the Latin American
market was key in getting Progressive Telecom off the ground, the
company now does about half of its business in the United States
and half in Latin America. But Alaniz isn't stopping there: He
has his eye on the Asian market. "We're not even at the
tip of the iceberg," says Alaniz. "This could be a
billion-dollar company." -A.C.K.
Tokyopop Inc.
Company description:
Multimedia publishing company specializing in English-language
"manga"-Japanese comic books
Founder: Stuart Levy,
37
Location: Los
Angeles
Projected 2004 sales:
$60 million plus
Well-Read: While
working in Japan, Stuart Levy-fluent in Japanese-initially rebuffed
friends there who urged him to read manga. Once he relented, he was
bowled over by the movielike experience. He thought, "There
are tons of people back at home who would dig this if they could
read it in English." He was right: Today, in addition to
Tokyopop's 40 manga titles, there's Cine-Manga,
Tokyopop's line of books based on movies, TV shows or sports;
anime TV shows; DVDs; and other books supporting products. Titles
on Star Trek and the NBA are in the works.
The Producer: Levy
doesn't relegate himself to just one aspect of the business-he
enjoys both the business and creative sides, writing stories and
composing music for some projects. Ultimately, he considers himself
a producer. "A producer gets the team together, handles the
finances, but is also totally involved in the creative
[process]."
Pay Up: "I
don't mean to sound too old school or anything, but in my
opinion, you've got to pay dues," says Levy. He scoffs at
the notion that starting a business is as simple as deciding on a
concept and easily raising millions. Instead, he urges a realistic
approach to what entrepreneurs must go through to achieve their
dreams. "You can't go out and buy a home, have a kid, and
do all those things and start a business. You should do it and
understand you have to sacrifice everything of your own private
life-[you have to] live, sleep, eat, breathe it. You're not
going to have a life."
Firmly Rooted:
Regarded as everything from foolish in the beginning to a genius
now, Levy remains grounded-even though his company comprises a
sizable chunk of the U.S. manga industry, estimated at $90 million
to $110 million last year: "You should try to stay focused on
your goal and not be swayed either way by people giving you too
much props or too many insults." -A.Y.P.
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