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Return to Virginia Business - May 2003

Minding your business

Creature Comforts

by Heather B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
May 2003

A saddle is a saddle is a saddle, right? Not according to Tad Coffin’s four-legged clients. Coffin, a Ruckersville resident and former Olympic gold medal-winning equestrian turned entrepreneur, has managed to turn the traditional craft of saddle-making into a real science, employing state-of-the-art materials and engineering techniques to design a more horse-friendly product.

After trying out Coffin’s A-5 jumping saddle, one horse enthusiastically remarked to an animal translator hired for the demonstration by a skeptical owner that the new saddle was — and we’re quoting here — “Like going from high heels to sneakers.”
This is nonsense, of course, and Coffin laughs whenever he repeats that particular testimonial. But there’s no doubt that his saddles are more comfortable. In just five years, the Tad Coffin Performance Saddle has become the saddle of choice for the top strata of competitive riders in show jumping, hunter classes and three-day-eventing.

The entire U.S. three-day eventing team at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, for example, purchased and rode in Coffin’s A-5 jumping saddle, including individual gold medalist David O’Connor. “Our saddles are purposefully designed so they don’t pinch backs or inhibit a horse’s movement,” says Coffin. “The effect that they’ve had on some horses has been quite dramatic.”

Coffin’s saddle-making shop is housed in a stable on his Greene County farm, along with six horses that work as testers and a crew of 14 employees, who mold and stitch 18 hours a day, seven days a week to keep up with demand. The company sells direct and has yet to advertise its products, building each saddle to order. Last year, Coffin sold nearly 500 saddles, with gross revenues topping $1.5 million.

The key to success? Innovation and intuition. Coffin, who had no prior experience making a product or running a business, simply felt that his horses were being adversely affected by his saddle and decided to tear the thing down and start over. In rebuilding it, Coffin’s experiment revolutionized the inner mechanics of the English saddle without changing its classic look.

“With other brands, people talk about how much they love their saddles,” the former rider declares. “With our product, they talk about how much their horse loves their saddle. The horses perform more willingly and they win more competitions.” No horsing around — that’s talk that doesn’t need translation.

 

Return to Virginia Business - May 2003


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