Chelsea Sloan: The student who built a fashion franchise

2013-06-03 08:23:34

By Shanaz Musafer Business reporter, BBC News, New York

"A glutton for punishment" is how 28-year-old Chelsea Sloan describes herself.

Many people are happy to focus solely on their studies (with maybe some

partying thrown in) when they are at college or university.

Not so Chelsea, who decided to put what she was learning on her business major

into direct practice, and set up a business with her brother Scott at the same

time.

But having to juggle her studies with setting up the company, Uptown

Cheapskate, was not always easy.

Going to classes for an hour and a half in the morning then rushing back to the

office to work on business plans, having to miss classes for business trips -

even her friends would ask her how she had time for everything.

But as Chelsea puts it, her motivation was simple: "As an entrepreneur it all

comes down to you. The success or the failure of your store is squarely on your

shoulders."

Uptown Cheapskate store in Augusta, Georgia Clothes have to meet strict

criteria for the company to accept them for resale

The idea for Uptown Cheapskate - a franchise "fashion exchange" - came about

when Chelsea took a year and a half off from her studies to serve a church

mission in Alaska.

"While I was there I started talking to my brother about starting a business.

There were some [companies] out there doing something similar but not very well

and we thought we could do better," she says.

Start Quote

Your business supersedes everything else you're working on. Failure isn't an

option

Chelsea Sloan Uptown Cheapskate

Uptown Cheapskate is a very simple concept - bring your designer brand clothes,

shoes and accessories into a store, the staff will assess them and if they

think they can sell them on, will offer you cash for them. The idea is to make

upmarket brands available to young adults at an affordable price.

"The resale industry just for our demographic is a $2.5bn industry. We wanted

to make an upscale resale experience that doesn't have to feel thrifty," she

says.

On her return from Alaska, she went back to the University of Utah and enrolled

in classes, while simultaneously continuing to work on the business idea with

her brother.

They worked on it for another six months and opened the first Uptown Cheapskate

store in Salt Lake City in 2009.

Balancing act

Chelsea was helped by the fact that her office was just five minutes away from

campus but balancing her classes with the business was a tricky challenge.

"I brought a laptop with me. Not only was I doing the franchise side, but was

also managing the Salt Lake store and a second store remotely.

Chelsea and Scott Sloan Chelsea set up the business with her brother Scott, 31

"But the school that I went to had a no laptop policy in class, [because] most

kids were playing games or surfing the internet. But that made it difficult for

me because I don't like to write when I can type."

Inevitably, she also missed some classes because of work trips and says that

her university did not have a very structured work relief policy to accommodate

that.

"I graduated cum laude but not magna cum laude because I missed a couple of

classes where attendance was mandatory," she says.

But of course, there was one obvious positive element. "I was able to be in

business while being in business school. I got a couple of really good business

ideas," she says.

Although it took her around an extra year to graduate, she says it was "totally

worth it".

And her efforts were rewarded in November 2012 when she became the first woman

to win the Entrepreneurs' Organization's Global Student Entrepreneur Award,

beating off competition from 1,700 candidates in 20 countries.

"I was tremendously surprised [to win]," she laughs. "But I think the best part

for me was it really validated Uptown Cheapskate. We're not a very sexy company

but our owners are making money."

Uptown Cheapskate store in Augusta, Georgia When a new store opens it is empty

and takes about two months to fill

She may be soft-spoken and modest, but she is clearly a very driven young

woman. She believes if you are going to start a business while still at school,

you have to decide whether you have time to do both, but ultimately you have to

put the business first.

"Your business supersedes everything else you're working on," she states.

"You have to put 100% into your business because it rises or falls on you.

Failure isn't an option. If you don't have an idea to do something better or

different than what's already being done, stay in school until you can," she

advises.

Fashion rules

The Sloans' idea certainly seemed to capture people's imagination.

When they open a new store, they have lines of people at the door.

What is a franchise?

A franchise company gives individuals or groups the right to use its trademark

and sell its goods at a certain location

An individual who purchases and runs a franchise at a particular location is

called a franchisee

Franchisees must pay the company (franchisor) a royalty fee

Franchisees are able to own and run their own business, with the benefit of

using an established brand and business model, with training often provided by

the franchisor

Well-known franchise businesses include McDonald's, Subway and 7-Eleven

But they're not coming to buy - and if they are they'll be disappointed - as

the store is empty. They are coming to sell their old clothes - to make some

money, and to provide the store with its stock.

"We spend the first two months buying products from the community," Chelsea

explains.

But if you think you can make a quick buck from a well-worn dress or pair of

jeans that you bought 10 years ago, think again.

The company has very specific standards for what it will and will not accept,

according to the current fashion trends.

There are hard rules - for instance, right now, a T-shirt needs to be longer

than it is wide otherwise it can look too "boxy" - and soft rules - such as

they generally don't buy blouses or shirts that are deemed too short, but there

are some slouchy styles that are ok if they're a current colour.

One of the perils of buying from the public, though, is that you don't know

where they bought the product from in the first place, so you have to be

careful to avoid buying fake brands.

Building a franchise

It is probably not too surprising that Chelsea and Scott ended up in the

industry they did, given their roots.

"My parents had started a children's retail franchise called Kid To Kid, so we

had learned a bit about the retail industry from them," Chelsea says.

Uptown Cheapskate store in Augusta, Georgia The company is careful about only

buying genuine products and not counterfeits

"As with anyone starting a company, you start with something you have a bit of

knowledge of and that you're good at."

She says the franchise model - whereby the company allows individual operators

to use its name and sell its goods in return for a royalty fee - appealed to

her because it allows you "to scale while limiting the risk".

"I'm really a service provider for my company to help my franchisees," she

says. "Each of those owners was able to bring something to it, to manage their

location."

While the return may be less - they receive 5% in royalties compared with 20%

if they ran the stores directly - running the business as a franchise meant

they were able to grow their brand faster than they would have through normal

expansion or by taking on venture capital partners.

Four years after launching, there are now 30 Uptown Cheapskate stores across

the US and 10 more will open by the end of the year.

The Sloans' original goal was to have 100 stores in the first 10 years, but

thanks to their early success, that has now changed to 100 by 2017.

Chelsea is excited about the prospect of expanding outside the US - she has

already been in discussions with people in Australia, Sweden and Ireland - and

believes the resale industry has plenty of room to grow.

"When I look at the European markets I think they're prime for the taking," she

says, "because there isn't really anything there already."