National Post

DOG’S WORLD

WHY THE PET INDUSTRY HAS BECOME A GOLD MINE FOR SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS.

- DENISE DEVEAU

When Emma Harris welcomed her new yellow lab puppy, Bo, into her home in 2016, little did she realize he would become the inspiratio­n for starting her own business.

Harris has long been interested in supporting entreprene­urship through her studies and working with various startups in finance, sales and marketing roles. But when Bo came on to the scene, “I quickly found out he had lungworm. Dealing with that was so stressful because I was always travelling on my job and the vet clinic was always closed by dinnertime. Every time I had a question I had to book an appointmen­t.”

Telemedici­ne seemed to be a practical solution. But her research showed that vets were not allowed to practise medicine by any form of digital interactio­n. In 2017, however, a policy statement was issued that allowed vets to serve consumers digitally.

At that point, Harris was armed and ready with her plan for Healthy Pets, a subscripti­on-based digital platform for veterinary consultati­ons that costs a mere fraction of a clinic visit.

Last year, her pitch on Dragons’ Den got the attention of Arlene Dickinson, who subsequent­ly invested $500,000 through her District Ventures Capital VC fund. Up to that point, Harris says she had taken out a $30,000 line of credit and funded her business through pitch competitio­ns.

Healthy Pets has since signed on 30 clinics in Ontario with more coming on board at a steady pace. In homage to the company’s roots, the now-healthy Bo has been given the honorary title of Chief Inspiratio­n Officer.

“What they are trying to do with telemedici­ne in the pet space is cutting edge and definitely addresses a need in our industry,” says Brendan Laing, veterinari­an at the Town & Country Animal Hospital in Stouffvill­e, Ont., and co-founder of Furiendly, a mobile vet clinic. “It’s a place where veterinari­ans can triage patients without the owner having to take time off work, to travel or pay for parking.”

The pet industry represents a gold mine of opportunit­y on a number of fronts, Harris says. “Spending on pets is astronomic­al. In North America, owners spend US$90 billion a year, and the number is growing by eight per cent each year.”

According to Packaged Facts, the Canadian pet industry is worth around $7 billion including food, supplies and services. “About 65 per cent of Canadian households own at least one pet,” Harris adds.

Not only that, they are humanizing their pets more than ever before, which opens the doors to a wealth of business opportunit­ies.

Laing says the pet industry’s growth can be attributed to the major demographi­c shift from baby boomers to millennial­s. “Basically millennial­s use them as starter kids. They’re pet parents, not pet owners. In fact, millennial­s spend more on their pets on average, even though statistics show they don’t have as much discretion­ary income as baby boomers. Many will take a job (where) they can bring their dogs to work, even it’s less pay. They’re more willing to spend money for a pet costume than they spend on themselves. It’s a big shift that I think is great.”

Willson Cross is further down the entreprene­urial path with his company, GoFetch Technologi­es Inc. The 25-year-old Vancouver-based entreprene­ur co-founded the company in 2015, which last year received $3.4 million in a third round of funding.

GoFetch.ca builds on the marketplac­e model used by the likes of Uber and Airbnb to create an online community where pet owners can connect with dog walkers, sitters and boarders in their area. He says marketplac­es like GoFetch.ca succeed largely through having a network effect. “Once you have that going, you can disrupt the industry. It’s such a slimmargin game, you need massive volume. The greater the volume, the more valuable the marketplac­e becomes.”

Acquisitio­n interest in innovative pet ideas is a telling sign of how hot the market is, he adds. SoftBank Vision Fund recently invested $300 million in Wag!, the U.S.-based on-demand dog walking and dog-care app. PetSmart bought the Chewy. com e-commerce site for US$3.35 billion in April 2017. “That was the largest ecommerce acquisitio­n ever,” Cross notes. (PetSmart has since spun off a 20-per-cent stake to BC Partners, a private equity firm.) And in mid-June, Cross announced that GoFetch had been acquired for an undisclose­d sum by Future Pet Animal Health.)

Pet care is definitely an industry in which an entreprene­ur can thrive with the right formula, Cross adds. “Food delivery, home services, transporta­tion and hospitalit­y (have been disrupted). Now we’re seeing it in pets. In an age where we’re seeing a lot of millennial­s owning pets instead of having children, the timing makes perfect sense.”

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 ?? JEFF WASSERMAN FOR POSTMEDIA ?? Emma Harris, founder and Chief executive of Healthy Pets, with her dog Bo, the startup’s Chief Inspiratio­n Officer.
JEFF WASSERMAN FOR POSTMEDIA Emma Harris, founder and Chief executive of Healthy Pets, with her dog Bo, the startup’s Chief Inspiratio­n Officer.

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