USA TODAY US Edition

How one small biz grew too fast

Tenn. flag company cutting back on orders.

- Cassandra Stephenson Jackson Sun USA TODAY NETWORK – Tennessee

JACKSON, Tenn. – Army veteran Justin Scott started his business in a Tennessee garage in 2014 with the intent to sell detailed, hand-crafted wooden flags and employ fellow veterans.

Within three years, the Rustic Flag Company was pulling in $8 million in sales from around the nation and employing 54 people, mostly veterans and family members of veterans. The business expanded at a rapid rate – too fast, Scott now says.

Soon, those 54 employees were working 84-hour weeks, and costs skyrockete­d because of overtime and payroll taxes. Scott found his company struggling to keep up with orders, and late delivery complaints mounted. Eventually, he stopped accepting new purchases so he and a bare-bones team could focus on filling all the outstandin­g orders.

“I was at a point where I said, you know, I can keep this big shovel digging, and keep selling orders and be fine for another couple of years, and keep dealing with being behind, but I don’t want to be that way,” Scott said. “Eventually, it gets to a point where I’m going to be selling a flag that I know I can’t send out. And I didn’t want to do that.”

The Rustic Flag Company has shipped about 112,000 orders since it opened for business in 2014. They’ve sold about 135,000 flags. Scott said he and his team currently have about 10,000 orders behind on production and another 10,000 that are not late – yet.

With no more capital coming in to offset mounting production and shipping costs, Scott has pared back his team to about eight people. They are now working as fast as they can to fill as many orders as possible, he said, or provide refunds to those who don’t want to wait.

“I’m going to do everything I can to float it for as long as I can, to be an honest person and get everybody’s orders out, (and) not worry about trying to take in any more money,” Scott said.

The waiting game

Even when the Rustic Flag Company was at peak production with a full staff, hand-crafted wooden flags take time to make. The company’s website, which now bears a large message on its homepage explaining that no new orders will be accepted, also states that its handmade products have a lead time of several weeks for production.

The company’s trademarke­d “split flags” take as long as 14 weeks to create and ship.

But with the overwhelmi­ng demand and now-short staff, these wait times have stretched from weeks to months, and Scott said he’s reluctant to guarantee customers an exact delivery date for fear of disappoint­ing them again.

In the meantime, customers are getting worried. Scott said his inbox is full of thousands of emails. Thousands more comment on the company’s Facebook page. The Rustic Flag Company’s Better Business Bureau page now shows an “F” rating due to more than 300 complaints about late delivery.

Scott says he does read his emails and frequently goes through all the comments on Facebook, but responding to all the inquiries while trying to fill all the orders has become nearly impossible.

Rob Scarpa, a customer from New Jersey, is one of hundreds who commented on a post Scott made in October trying to explain the delay in orders. Like several other commenters, Scarpa wrote he had to wait for the flag he ordered but that he was elated with the product when it arrived.

Scarpa told The Jackson Sun he ordered a large American flag and received it about six months ago, a few weeks later than the expected delivery date. It now hangs in his office, and he said he couldn’t be happier. “It’s gorgeous,” he said.

Scarpa said he recommende­d the company to at least 10 of his friends and family, who also received their products up to six weeks late but were very pleased with their quality once they arrived.

Ed Clark, a customer from Colorado, said he has not heard back from anyone at the company since August. When they stopped responding to his phone calls and took down the phone number on the website, Clark said he started to get nervous.

Scott said he understand­s that some customers might not want to wait to receive their products, and said he’s doing his best to give full refunds to any customers that request them. So far, the Rustic Flag Company has issued nearly 3,000 full refunds.

Clark said he would rather have the flag he ordered than get his money back.

A perfect storm

Scott did not expect any of this, he said.

He served in the Army and paid his wife’s way through nursing school. His wife worked as a nurse once she graduated to pay his way through school to be an engineer. When he graduated, he made his first flag in his garage, which was purchased by a friend. More friends were interested and Scott’s flags quickly grew a following on Facebook. He suddenly had a full-fledged business on his hands and a family with four young children.

The business quickly began pulling in orders and money. In its second year, they took in $5.5 million in sales. Scott took some of that revenue and bought a new building, along with new machines, to make production of some of their products easier.

Suddenly, with an influx of orders, Scott’s staff was working overtime to meet demand.

Scott said he’s determined to try to fill all the outstandin­g orders Rustic Flag Company has but he doesn’t plan to take any more orders after that.

“I want to do the right thing, and this is what I keep coming back to. That’s what I’m going to keep doing.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY RUSTIC FLAG COMPANY ?? The Rustic Flag Company, which makes wooden flags, grew a little too fast for its owner.
PHOTOS BY RUSTIC FLAG COMPANY The Rustic Flag Company, which makes wooden flags, grew a little too fast for its owner.
 ??  ?? There has been overwhelmi­ng demand for the company’s products, which include this Pledge of Allegiance flag with hand-painted script on spruce.
There has been overwhelmi­ng demand for the company’s products, which include this Pledge of Allegiance flag with hand-painted script on spruce.

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