NZ Business + Management

From zero to $1.5m in 18 months

CATHERINE BEARD DISCOVERS AN EXPORT BUSINESS THAT’S HAD SIGNIFICAN­T SUCCESS SELLING GLOBALLY FROM A HOME OFFICE. COULD YOU DO IT TOO?

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MANY KIWI companies are realising the huge benefits to be gained by e-commerce, especially given our geographic­al distance from markets. However, not everyone is maximising the potential to sell online globally, as Sophie Howard found out when she ventured into the world of Amazon and made $1.5 million in sales in her first 18 months!

When I spoke to Sophie she was literally on the road to Wanaka from Wellington, moving her family to a house in their dream location.

This was made possible by the successful sale of her very first Amazon e-store, which sold New Zealand wool products to the US and Europe.

Sophie got into e-commerce after having her second child. She had a choice: either go back to her day job and employ a nanny, or start her own business.

After taking an Amazon course, developing her own unique approach, and drawing on her background in working with startups, within a year she had built up a high-value business.

“I had just done my tax returns in April and thought ‘I wonder what my friend Jock the broker in LA would say this is worth’. So I contacted him and he found me a US seven-figure offer the next day! From there it was all amazingly straightfo­rward overall.”

Sophie’s husband has now also quit his day job running the business improvemen­t team at Sport New Zealand, and has joined her in running Aspiring Entreprene­urs and Sell Global. She also has two Amazon e-stores – one selling organic loose leaf tea and the other selling incontinen­ce products.

“I came up with the idea for selling incontinen­ce products after hearing Bernard Hickey talk about how in Japan they sell more adult diapers than baby diapers. Mine have a point of difference in that they are black instead of white, have higher absorbency and charcoal in them to take away the odour. All very glamorous!” laughs Sophie.

Sophie has a team all around the world – two in Canada, one in the US, a Kiwi who’s on his OE based in the Philippine­s and a friend at Massey University. They take care of customer service, Amazon shipments, inventory orders, stock-taking, tech support, pricing and supplier research, and design.

“Design has been really important, especially with the tea,” explains Sophie. “The packaging is what’s got the tea noticed. Because you’re selling it online, customers can’t smell it or taste it – all you’ve got is something to look at. So I’ve spent a lot of money on brandingre­lated things and not a lot on much else!

“Everyone who works for me is on a remote, freelancin­g arrangemen­t, so I don’t really have any overheads. Lots of New Zealand companies pay quite a lot for the services I outsource. “It’s not perfect but it allows me to go fast. If you focus on everything being perfect, you might not ever get anything done! Outsourcin­g everything has been quite liberating and allowed me to just focus on new products.”

MINIMAL COSTS

Sophie believes that if you want to be a profitable exporter, it pays to minimise office costs.

“It’s nice to be able to work anywhere you are in the world with your laptop and know that everything still happens.

“My plan now is to keep life simple,” says Sophie. This includes focusing on their Sell Global business – Imparting the knowledge and experience gained from selling on Amazon over the past few years to other Kiwi businesses.

“My husband will be working on the New Zealand client side, scaling up our operations to support Kiwi exporters.

“A lot of New Zealand companies have got products that would sell well in the markets we’ve got to know, so we’re keen to help them. Our team basically treat clients’ products as if they’re our own. We write their listings and manage all their dayto-day accounts.

“We’ve already got clients pulling in US$40k a month just on Amazon within their third or fourth month. It’s such a cheap experiment, compared to setting up a sales team, distributo­rs and sending people overseas. You know within the first six months it’s going to work or not.

“In the next year we’ll be building our team, and getting out there telling Kiwi exporters more about the joys of selling online.”

I came up with the idea for selling incontinen­ce products after hearing Bernard Hickey talk about how in Japan they sell more adult diapers than baby diapers.”

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