It turns out the snowplowing business is a tad more sophisticated than my vision of it as mainly involving a blade attached to the front of somebody's aging pickup.
That's the way Steve Bartz started out, all right, but in the decade since he founded Twin City Outdoor Services (TCOS), the Plymouth company has soared far beyond that image.
Today, it's a business that focuses on the largest corporate and commercial clients and offers everything from weather-forecasting services to eco-friendly de-icing products to nearly a million bucks' worth of snow-melting equipment that resolves the question of where to pile all that white stuff.
Not to mention extensive "snow management plans" created with the help of 120 years of weather data crunched by Bartz, a self-taught weather enthusiast.
The result is a client list that includes the corporate campuses of Target, Best Buy, Medtronic and Valspar and the high-end retail sites developed by the likes of Opus Northwest Management, Ryan Companies and Told Development.
And the payoff: Revenue has grown at a compound rate of 20 percent in the past five years, reaching $7.98 million in fiscal 2009, which ended June 30.
Bartz, 40, didn't do it alone. In 2001, hunting buddy Rich Byrne left a stable, well-paying job as a Jostens Inc. sales manager to sign on as TCOS' sales and marketing vice president and minority partner to help Bartz persuade high-end client prospects to hire the upstart company.
There are several reasons for the focus on high-end clients, Bartz said: Not only are they more stable during economic ups and downs, but "they tend to have a zero tolerance for snow, whereas a smaller client might have a 2-inch trigger for plowing." Translation: more work for the crews, more revenue for the company.