Small
Business Solutions
The Lollipop garden
Retail Wholesale
The Business
The Lollipop Garden, a specialty retailer in Newport News.The
Players
John Zinck and Michael Jensen, who took over the business last January. Jensen is the sole
owner.
The Problem
It seemed the business was for suckers only: Lollipops were a novelty gift, not a staple
of anyones diet. The shops sales were anemic.
The Background
The two men stumbled upon the Lollipop Garden after leaving behind earlier careers. Jensen
spent 10 years in the Navy stationed at Norfolk until he retired in 1996. Zinck was a
nurse at a hospital in Philadelphia. They thought about going into the upholstery
business, or catering. "We kept looking until we found something that piqued our
interest," Zinck says.
Then they hit on the Lollipop Garden, a 5-year-old business tucked in a strip mall.
Its run like a florist shop only it has a kitchen in back where the two men
and one employee make lollipops "and then arrange them like a florist would arrange
flowers," Zinck says.
They sold balloons and cookies, too, and made a killing during that first
Valentines Day season. "But when summer came, there was not enough retail
business. It was enough to keep us going, but there was nothing else. We wanted more out
of the store," he says.
The Solution
In August, Zinck and Jensen met Sheila Guillette, an instructor with the Hampton Roads
Small Business Development Center. Guillette teaches a new course called the NxLevel
Program. NxLevel is a pilot program thats actually two courses one for
start-ups and one for existing small businesses. The second-level course offers businesses
help from experienced professionals.
Zinck and Jensen signed up and "got slapped in the head" during
Guillettes first lecture when she started talking about the wholesale market. The
two realized they were limiting themselves by not marketing to wholesale buyers such as
amusement parks and larger retailers, Zinck says. "Who cares where it goes, as long
as were selling it?"
Using what theyd learned in that first class, the two developed a plan for
pricing wholesale products and creating a catalog. Then they got really lucky. They had
begun describing themselves as "wholesalers" on their Web page. In November they
received a call from a Maryland-based company working on a Disney on Ice production of the
musical "Grease." The company wanted some lollipop samples and asked if the two
could create 1950s-style lollipops.
Zinck and Jensen came up with music notes, poodles and lightning bolts. They also
created a new item three lollipops together in the silhouette of Mickey Mouse.
Disney liked what it saw. It ordered 1,300 each of the three Grease-oriented lollipops
and 4,800 of the Mickey sets.
The lollipops will go on sale when the "Grease on Ice" show starts in
Buffalo, N.Y., this month. The Disney deal has turned them into dedicated wholesalers. The
next step is to finish the catalog and get other wholesale customers. They also plan to
set up a larger production facility. "We want them all," Zinck says. "All
the amusement parks. ... Were not afraid of work."
If you have a case study in small-business problem solving, e-mail llarance@va-business.com.
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