The Candy Girl Can
Who can take sugary classics and put them on the Net?
Have you ever wondered what happened to Mallomars cookies, Jiffy
Pop Stovetop Popcorn and the always fun Lik-M-Aid Fun Dip? Look no
further than the Internet-and Hometown Favorites Inc. The West Palm
Beach, Florida-based company specializes in finding hard-to-find
snacks for the consumer who says, "out with the new, in with
the old."
Colleen Chapin, 44, founded Hometown Favorites in 1996 when she
moved to sunny Florida and couldn't find her favorite candy
from her home state of Wisconsin. "As I dug into trying to
find certain products, it just seemed everyone was looking for
something. I thought, 'Maybe there's something here,'
" she says.
It was the perfect fit for Chapin, who had worked for a
mail-order company for nine years, but wanted something she could
do from home while raising her youngest child. With 100 products
and "a couple cases of this and a couple cases of that,"
she started working right out of a room in her house, filling all
the orders and establishing contacts with manufacturers and food
editors. As word-of-mouth spread about her service, she created an
online store (www.hometownfavorites.com)
where Internet shoppers can scroll through lists filled with their
favorite foods of yore.
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"Nobody sells the variety of products that we do, and
nobody else will look for a product for you," Chapin says of
her competitive edge. "Our inventory really is generated by
our customers."
Chapin's store currently carries more than 400 products,
most of them with long, illustrious histories. "[These
products] have been around for 40 or 50 years because they're
great," she says. "The things we carry have a loyal
following."
With a new, spacious warehouse away from home and annual sales
of somewhere between $500,000 and $1 million, Chapin doesn't
foresee an end to her lucrative pastime. "The potential is
limitless," she says, "because [people's favorites]
constantly disappear from the grocery shelf."