The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Making the connection

P.E.I. exporter says face-to-face contact and quality products keys to success for Top Dog Manufactur­ing

- BY TERRENCE MCEACHERN

For a P.E.I. company exporting to 23 countries, there’s more to being successful than knowing trade agreements.

Stephen Hurst, owner and president of Top Dog Manufactur­ing in Bedeque, says personal connection­s and quality products are keys to success. Hurst’s business was named P.E.I.’s 2018 exporter of the year, an award presented by Premier Wade MacLauchla­n in September during Export Day.

Hurst launched the company in 2004 with business partner Wayne Linkletter, who was bought out in 2017.

Top Dog Manufactur­ing makes reusable, antimicrob­ial, protective garments – such as aprons, sleeves, caps and gowns – from a polyuretha­ne film for use in food processing facilities.

The 23 countries it exports to includes the U.S., Mexico, Russia, South Africa, Iceland and a number of places in Europe and South America.

Top Dog ships by truck or by boat out of Halifax or Montreal for overseas orders. Some customers also pay for shipments to be flown in.

Hurst tries to find distributo­rs that are family-owned businesses. Establishi­ng that personal connection cannot be done over the phone or by video conferenci­ng. It has to be happen face-to-face, and Hurst has the stamps on his passport to prove it.

“Our largest customers – one in Russia and one in Mexico – they’ve actually been to my home in P.E.I., stayed in our home overnight, ate at our dining room table. And, I’ve been in their homes at the other end. So, that’s quite unique as how we really do lock down the personal piece,” he said.

“Our distributo­rs find it the most refreshing approach to doing business because they do business with other internatio­nal suppliers and they don’t get that. So, that’s a huge challenge that we tackled from the outset. And, we nurture it all the time.”

He explains that the quality of the products – and the reason they’re more expensive than competitor­s – is that that they’re durable and don’t have to be replaced as often.

Hurst uses the analogy of buying a more expensive BMW compared to a vehicle of lower-price and lesser quality.

“It’s the engineerin­g. It’s the ride. It’s how long you’re on the ride and how long that will last,” he said.

That’s the basis for the company’s slogan – “Save Big with Durability”.

“We always say: ‘Are you interested in learning how you can save money by paying more for a product?’ ”

Top Dog Manufactur­ing also promotes being a Canadian company.

“We make sure the Canadian flag is on all our boxes and bags and artwork because buying from Canadians settled people down a lot. We, as a manufactur­ing country, are well-regarded.”

Jennifer Hambly, the company’s general manager, is in charge of the day-to-day activities, which requires being up to date on trade agreements.

“Every country is different and requires different paperwork,” she said.

The company also recently hired John Percival as its director of business growth. He said Top Dog Manufactur­ing is currently looking to expand into more European markets, such as in Denmark, Spain, Germany and Slovakia.

Hurst said people are still surprised to hear about the company’s accomplish­ments given that it’s based in a small P.E.I. community.

“To us it’s not (a surprise) because we do it every day,” he said.

But being based on P.E.I. can also mean it has to answer more questions from potential European customers than if it was based in a larger, more wellknown city like Toronto.

Even so, exporting to other countries has been a learning experience, both in terms of cultural learning as well as managing large orders to different places. Hurst recalled when the company broke through into the European market with its first Russian order in November of 2007.

The challenge early on was meeting the needs and shipping on time to large Russian container orders as well as other customers.

“We’re an overnight success, but it took us 15 years,” Hurst said.

 ?? TERRENCE MCEACHERN/THE GUARDIAN ?? Stephen Hurst is the president and founder of Top Dog Manufactur­ing.
TERRENCE MCEACHERN/THE GUARDIAN Stephen Hurst is the president and founder of Top Dog Manufactur­ing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada