These College Kids Bought a Failing Company With Their Bar Mitzvah Money. Now It’s a $40 Million Business

These College Kids Bought a Failing Company With Their Bar Mitzvah Money. Now It’s a $40 Million Business
From left: Fresh Prints owners Josh Arbit, Jolijt Tamanaha, and Jacob Goodman shake up the business of collegiate hoodies, tees, and sweats. Courtesy of Fresh Prints
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Fresh Prints is a thriving business that began with a very bad decision. “We bought the company pretty blind,” says Jacob Goodman. This was 10 years ago, when Goodman and his fraternity brother Josh Arbit were students at Washington University in St. Louis. At the time, Fresh Prints was a failing clothing company that sold fraternity, sorority, and college-branded merch, started by a few other students. The two friends bought it for $16,000, paying with Arbit’s bar mitzvah money. They figured it would be an education. They were right.
“We didn’t know what due diligence was. And we were like, ‘Oh, are we going to have to shut this thing down right away?’” Goodman says. That’s because, within a month, they were scammed by a customer for $8,000 and owed $25,000 for licensing royalties that hadn’t been reported by the founders. But once they solved that, they started innovating—and today, Fresh Prints has 290 full-time employees and annual revenue of $40 million. Here’s how they did it.

Fix the Foundation

The guys had already spent the bar mitzvah money, and they were now facing back payments and losses. “So we had another bar mitzvah!” Arbit jokes. Seriously, what they did was tell their vendors (printers, wholesalers, FedEx) that they had a temporary cash-flow problem, and they asked for a 30- or 60-day extension to pay. Most said yes; it was a lesson in having honest conversations. Then they secured licenses from the universities, fraternities, and sororities whose marks they wanted to print on their apparel—creating a real foundation to build from.

Build a Sales Force

Their target customers were students, so they figured their sales force should be, too. At first, they just roped in their friends at other colleges and trained them on a video meet with a Google doc of instructions. “But we needed to figure out how to scale this,” says Jolijt Tamanaha, who came on as the third co-owner in 2015. They created recruiting channels, like cold outreach on LinkedIn and referral campaigns, and developed a three-week training program with a dedicated internal team (now 13 people) to provide ongoing support.

Separate From the Competition

Custom apparel is an old and crowded industry, but Fresh Prints spotted an upside: “Basically, everyone in our space is buying from the same five wholesale distributors that carry styles released like 10 years ago,” says Tamanaha, “and it gives these garments a budget throwaway vibe.” So in 2019, they zeroed in on trendy graphics. Then in 2021, they launched their own high-quality clothing line with a sweat set (matching sweatshirt and sweatpants), which was all the rage on campus and drove more than $1 million in sales the first year.

Redefine the Company

“We’ve really leaned into making the transition from a custom apparel company to a fashion company,” says Goodman. Meanwhile, they’re venturing off campus into corporate America with clients like Google, Amazon, and Uber for a whole new revenue stream: “swag management”—mugs, water bottles, sweatshirts, journals, and other merch customized with company logos for, say, an annual retreat or holiday gifts.

Never Forget the Basics

As Fresh Prints grows, it still stays close to students; in fact, it now has 625 campus managers driving sales. “The biggest thing we teach them is how many times they’re going to have to get rejected and fall on their face in order to make it,” says Goodman. “There’s no class in college called Perseverance 101.”
The Epoch Times Copyright © 2022 The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors. They are meant for general informational purposes only and should not be construed or interpreted as a recommendation or solicitation. The Epoch Times does not provide investment, tax, legal, financial planning, estate planning, or any other personal finance advice. The Epoch Times holds no liability for the accuracy or timeliness of the information provided.
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