Entrepreneurs: Tuft & Needle’s Bootstrapped Success
by Miki SaxonYou hear it all the time, “build a product that solves your own problem.”
That’s exactly what JT Marino and Daehee Park, both software engineers, did when they quit their jobs to create mattress company Tuft & Needle, seeding it with $3000 from each each of them.
They didn’t take venture money because they wanted to build the company for the long term and borrowed the money they needed to grow.
“The reason why we turned them down all those times is because we figured it would change the way we operate as a company.”
Instead, Marino, 30, and Park, 27, took out a $500,000 loan, at a rate of 10%, from Bond Street, one of the new breed of alternative lenders, in order to keep control of the company and continue doing things their own way.
They built the business online — no showrooms and no salespeople.
No hassles returning a mattress you hate. And, perhaps most important, no gimmicks on prices, which range from $350 for a twin to $750 for a king.
They’ve considered other products, even developed a few, but with no investors to force them to expand, they are focusing on the mattress business.
Is it paying off? Absolutely, so no problem meeting their loan payments.
By its first year in business, Tuft & Needle had reached $1 million in revenues. And then it just kept growing, hitting $9 million in 2014, then $42 million in 2015. This year, Marino and Park expect revenues to reach between $125 million and $225 million, a three- to five-fold increase over last year. And, yes, it’s profitable.
However, recognizing that not everyone, especially older buyers, are comfortable buying a mattress online, they are opening their first retail store at 637 King Street in San Francisco (where else?) — first and possibly last.
“It could very well be our first and last store, or it could be the first of many,” Marino says.
That’s the priceless reward for bootstrapping.
Call your own shots, experiment as you choose and stay true to your values.
Image credit: Tuft & Needle
January 29th, 2016 at 1:16 am
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