Magazine Issues A guide to site selection in Virginia Lobbying, legislation and public policy in Virginia Education and training resources in Virginia Planning resource for meetings and conferences in Virginia Lists and data about Virginia businesses

Search Virginia

filler
 
Small Business Solutions
Mountain Harbor Seafood, Abingdon
Seafood distributor


The Business

Mountain Harbor Seafood of Abingdon, an 11-employee company formed in 1993.

The Players96.jpg (18716 bytes)
Brothers Tim Goodman, 41, and Layne Goodman, 42, who started the business on a roadside in Tazewell County with two 60-quart Igloo coolers of fresh Florida shrimp.

The Problem
The brothers had a small but successful retail seafood business. But growing the business meant competing against regional grocery chains — and at that level their chances in retail didn't look strong. The Goodmans felt their small company needed a new strategy or it would always be small.

The Background
The Goodmans started with $270 and a 1987 Nissan pickup. They bought shrimp in Pensacola, Fla., for $4 a pound and sold it at a roadside stand for $8 a pound. It worked so well they both quit their jobs and started selling seafood full time, driving back and forth to Pensacola.

Their first year they totaled $14,000 in sales. They started supplying a few restaurants and opened retail shops in Abingdon and Richlands. By 1995, sales reached $97,000.

They felt well-prepared to keep the business growing. Tim Goodman had earned an associate's degree in business administration in 1994 from Southwest Virginia Community College, and they scrupulously put their profits back into the business. "The temptation when you get that first big check is to say, 'OK, I'm going to pay myself.' But me and my brother said, 'With this money we can add another cooler, we can buy another truck.'" Even so, the brothers found their business leveling off as they began to compete head-to-head with the big grocery store chains.

The Solution
The brothers studied the market again and spotted an opening. They figured that the same thing that made their retail store profitable — getting fresh seafood to Virginia cheaply — was what the grocery stores didn't have. "It blew our minds that those guys didn't have [an affordable] delivery system," Tim says.

So the brothers closed one of their retail stores and focused on wholesaling. Their first big client was the 100-store Food City chain of grocery stores, which is based in Abingdon. "I found a name, put on my best khakis and went and made a pitch," Tim says. Food City said yes, and the business took off. The Goodmans bought three acres in the Washington County Industrial Park a few blocks from Food City's headquarters and built a distribution center. With Food City and other grocery stores and restaurants as customers, revenues soared to $1 million in 1997, $2.2. million last year and have already passed $3 million this year, Goodman says.

Today, the company distributes to stores in a five-state region. But now they move products both ways: They haul farm-raised trout and blue crabs to Gulf Coast states and come back with seafood and catfish.

The seafood business has been joined by a second business: Abingdon Cold Storage and Express Freight. It handles the deliveries and leases storage space in a freezer to other companies hauling perishable goods through the region.

The brothers stumbled onto the cold-storage business after building a cooler for their seafood operations and realizing that other companies were willing to lease space in it to store perishable goods. In March, they plan to open a new, $900,000 freezer with enough space to hold 100 truckloads of perishables. "That's the real money maker," Tim says. "That's going to be the one that retires me." 

If you have a case study in small-business problem solving, e-mail cleitch@va-business.com.



Back to top
Virginia Business Online | Virginia Business Magazine
Market Research | Site Selection Guide | Lobbying and Politics
Workforce Development | Meeting Planner | Search Virginia

E-mail the editor
©1999, Media General Business Communications Inc., publisher of Virginia Business.
Use of this website is subject to certain terms and conditions.
We may collect personal information on this site,
as described in our privacy policy.