I received the following from one of the classiest IR firms I've yet to come in contact with (hint: Andrew just posted here). I've dealt mostly with Darcy Taylor, his email is darcy@vericom.ca - email him and Veritas will put you on their TMOT "hot list"(gg)
Excerpts from CNNfn Segment "ENTREPRENEURS ONLY", February 17, 1999.
DONALD VAN DE MARK, CNNfn ANCHOR, ENTREPRENEURS ONLY: Patrick Keery spent 18 tortured months as a management consultant before he realized he could be practicing what he preached. So Keery turned his own personal passion, turned to that, motorcycles, and turned it into a business expected to bring in more than $55 million in sales this year. But first Patrick had to convince dear old dad. Lauren Thierry takes a look at the son and father team steering Titan Motorcycles.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
LAUREN THIERRY, CNNfn CORRESPONDENT, ENTREPRENEURS ONLY (voice-over): What a ride it's been for Patrick Keery. At 29 his lifelong dream is taking off. Keery builds high-performance motorcycles. Each one custom-designed, and handcrafted from the ground up.
PATRICK KEERY, PRESIDENT, TITAN MOTORCYCLE: My father gave me the sage advice of; do something that you love, so that way if you don't make any money doing it, you're still successful 90 percent of the time. So I said motorcycles, which he about fell out of his chair. So the one time I followed his advice, then he wished he hadn't given it.
THIERRY: Today, father and son have joined forces. Patrick Keery is president of Phoenix based Titan Motorcycles. His father Frank is CEO. Together they've built a company, which in five short years, has become a leader in the high-end segment of the motorcycle industry.
PATRICK KEERY: It's a very good combination in that he brings the gray hair, and I bring the young attitude, so that marrying of the two makes the financial community comfortable, it makes the bike community comfortable, and it makes the whole thing mesh together.
THIERRY: But things didn't always mesh so well.
FRANK KEERY, CEO, TITAN MOTORCYCLE: He and I had an interesting adolescent period and he spent most of his time on motorcycles and I spent most of my time trying to get him off of motorcycles. So it would seem kind of ironic that we ended up working together.
THIERRY: Frank Keery's long list of business credentials includes Investment Banker, and consultant with a specialty in manufacturing turn-arounds. Independently wealthy, he was between projects when his son approached him.
FRANK KEERY: The only thing was I was semi-retired at the time. I had had a career in manufacturing, and various phases of manufacturing, and he asked me if I wouldn't help him. Was there some way that I could bring my expertise, my business acumen, some money to his dream.
PATRICK KEERY: He was at the point where mom wouldn't go to lunch with him anymore. She didn't want to hang out and do matinees, and was contemplating going to get a job because he was driving her crazy.
FRANK KEERY: And I thought this is a great opportunity to work with my son.
THIERRY: But long before Frank Keery would put a dime into the business, Patrick had to prove there was a business. He started out customizing Harley-Davidson (Company: Harley-Davidson Incorporated; Ticker: HDI; URL: harley-davidson.com motorcycles in the back of a garage.
PATRICK KEERY: I was getting paid a lot of money by people who would want a bike torn totally apart, frame repainted, all new parts added on, and a whole bunch of stuff was thrown away. Instead of having all that energy that was wasted, the money that was wasted by taking it apart, and throwing away parts, we decided that we would start with a clean piece of paper, and design a bike that integrated all the things that we saw the customers as wanting.
THEIRRY: Those customers who would spend from $10 to $30 thousand to customize a Harley-Davidson became Titan's target market. CHARLES BRADY, ANALYST, CREDIT LYONNAIS: The average Harley buyer adds 50 percent more in value to their bike after their purchase. Now what Titan is doing is saving them all that effort, and saying how would you like that customized before you pick it up, rather than after you pick it up?
THIERRY: The Keery's put together a unique team of mechanics, and installed to sell manufacturing system. First the V-twin engine is hand built. The customer chooses custom parts, and paint designs. Then one person builds the entire motorcycle. Titan's tag line is; one-man, one-bike.
PATRICK KEERY: One man will put the whole motorcycle together, and then he'll ride the bike for about 30 miles. So he gets instant feedback as to; I forgot to tighten this, or that's too loose, or the fallow-weight on the front end isn't right. So he gets instant feedback as to things as to things that the next time he builds a bike, he needs to do differently. So the builders get progressively better.
ED WALSH, BUILDER, TITAN MOTORCYCLE: What I get out of here is personal pride, because they let you do the right job. They don't shortcut, they use all quality parts, and component.
WADE ANDERSON, BUILDER, TITAN MOTORCYCLE: This has been my life dream, is to build custom motorcycles, and they give you a chance and train you how they want them done.
TERRY: Titan builds 32 bikes a week. Retailing at $33 thousand with some as high as $50,000, they are about the most expensive motorcycle you can buy. About 50 percent more than a Harley-Davidson. Revenues have doubled every year. The company recently became profitable, and its stock was upgraded to Nasdaq small-cap. But like any luxury business the company could suffer in an economic down turn.
BRADY: I think there is a growing market, but I don't think it would be fair to say it is an extremely stable market. As you see with motorcycles in general, not just the high-end of the motorcycle business, as you see with cars and trucks, with the ebbs and flows of the economy, so you see the ebbs and flows of demand for these kind of products.
TERRY: Despite global economic instability, international demand has been strong. Titan has 20 overseas dealerships. They've partnered with Playboy Enterprises (Company: Playboy Enterprises Inc.; Ticker: PLA; URL: playboy.com , and Reebok (Company: Reebok International Ltd ; Ticker: RBK ; URL: reebok.com on cross-merchandising. This year they'll introduce and entry level model for $20,000, which will compete directly with Harley, and broaden their market. For Patrick Kerry the payoff is in the ride.
PATRICK KEERY: There is a term in Japan that my agent sales manager uses, and its that the ride is tasty. And that is all the elements of the ride, the vibration, the noise that comes out of the tailpipe, the feeling of the acceleration, the wind in your hair, the freedom, the departing from the daily doldrums and into the freedom of it. I think that what the whole motorcycle experience is all about.
TERRY: For ENTREPRENEURS ONLY, I'm Lauren Thierry, CNN financial news.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
VAN DE MARK: Hell's Angels make good. As for personal if not public endorsements, John Elway and Shaquille O'Neill both own a Titan. As Lauren mentioned Titan is a publicly traded company based in Phoenix. Today its stock gained nearly five percent, or 25 cents a share to close at $4.50 a share. |