Manufacturing
winner:
Parker
Compound Bows scores a bull's eye with archery equipment
Related
stories:
This year's Fantastic 50
(intro)
The 2002 Fantastic 50 (chart)
Highest Overall Growth Rate: RGI
- Robinson Gareiss
Manufacturing winner: Parker Compound Bows
Retail-Wholesale winner: Schiller
International
Service winner: The
Cube Corp. Technology winner: TechBooks
by Brett Lieberman
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image to enlarge
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Robert
Errett's timing probably wasn't the best when he decided
to go into the bow-making business. It was the mid-1990s,
and nearly two dozen manufacturers were carving up an
already-soft archery market. "It [wasn't] a very
promising time to start a new company," concedes
Errett.
There
might have been plenty of competition but fortunately
it wasn't very good. Errett had been in the distribution
end of the archery business for 10 years and wasn't
impressed by many of the companies he was dealing with.
Bow manufacturers took weeks to ship to stores. Quality
was erratic. Their bows were mostly one-size-fits-all,
and customer service was nearly nonexistent.
Errett's
idea for a new company was simple: Produce high-quality
bows with only the best components. Pay close attention
to details and cosmetics. And most important - provide
the best possible customer service. As obvious as his
plan may sound, it wasn't the rule in the archery business,
which helps explain why Parker Compound Bows has been
right on target since its 1996 launch. Its bows are
made of a special fiber glass known as carbon glass.
The handles are crafted from high-tech aircraft aluminum.
"Everything about the bows is the absolute best
quality. We don't spare a dime. When you do all that,
you end up with a better product," Errett says.
The
Mint Spring-based company's revenues have risen 660
percent to $3.9 million in 2000, from $593,000 in 1997,
making it the leader among manufacturing firms in the
Fantastic 50. The number of employees has more than
tripled to 30 and Parker Bows has established a foothold
as an industry standout. Parker Bows' success is no
longer limited to the archery world - Inc magazine recognized
it last year as No. 231 on its annual list of the 500
fastest-growing private companies in the United States.
Parker
Bows has quickly become the bow of choice for many archery
pro shops and gun dealers selling archery gear, in large
part because of the products' relative ease of use.
The ready-to-shoot Parker Outfitter model sells itself
in five minutes, because it comes prepackaged with the
best-fitting arrows, quivers and string selected by
the manufacturer. It instills confidence in customers
since they know the gear is appropriate for that model,
and it's a timesaver for salesmen who do not need to
spend more than an hour working with a customer to configure
a system.
The
Outfitter was initially targeted to beginners, but pro
shops routinely recommend the bow for more advanced
archers as well because it is a quality product and
not just a basic model. Parker can also ship a bow to
a dealer in a day or two, as opposed to two to four
weeks for competitors. All its bows also come with an
unconditional warranty. But perhaps the greatest compliment
is from Parker Bow's competitors, who now sell their
own version of the Outfitter.
Parker
Bows is also finding suburban areas, often more opposed
to hunting, to be a lucrative new market. As urban sprawl
pushes subdivisions further into the countryside, larger
deer populations have become a sensitive issue for neighbors,
who don't want deer nibbling on their flowers but also
oppose organized deer kills. Municipal leaders in areas
such as Northern Virginia, Charlottesville and Roanoke
have found archers a partial solution, because bows
make less noise and arrows travel a shorter distance
than bullets.
Probably
the biggest difference between Parker Bows and other
archery manufacturers is Errett's constant focus on
quality. Pro shop owners, such as Bob J. Norris of B
& B Archery in Manassas, say the company's focus
on customer service and quality is unparalleled. "The
best thing in business is customer service, and that's
what they have," Norris says. "It helps me
and it makes us both look good."
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