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It took only 8 years.
The crazy part?
It doesn’t even have 200 employees.
Buckle up for this one
In 1967, his family moved to the US so his dad could get his PhD at Wharton.
His family went from Indian affluence to living in an $80 per month West Philly apt.
At age 17, he started his first business.
Despite the danger and rough work, he made $600 that summer. After turning his first profit, he was hooked.
In 1972, he got into a little college called Princeton.
A year later, he dropped out.
To make matters worse, it was the “stagflation” economy, so he couldn’t find work!
So 2 years later, with few options, he moved back to India to pursue a spiritual quest with the Hanslok Ashram. For 12 years, he focused on one thing:
Meditation
His parents owned a struggling plastics business.
After turning their company around, he spent a decade and a half buying struggling businesses in plastics and chemicals. And then turning them around.
This would be very important later.
At a natural products trade show, he drank an “energy drink” that was 16 ounces and claimed to boost productivity. True to form, it worked on him!
He noted the ingredients. Mmm… this reminded him of something, Chemicals!
What if you could have the energy without the liquid?
He figured out how to mix the ingredients into a 2.5oz shot and “5-hour energy” was born!
But Bhargava came up with a few genius strategies.
He targeted truckers (who better than truckers? They need the energy but don’t want liquid).
To get them to market: he focused on Mom/Pop Convenience stores.
It was an impulse buy.
To further drive sales, 5-hour paid a 50% retail margin to the stores. For a $3 bottle, they gave the store $1.50 per bottle.
The floodgates opened.
Lots of competitors popped up: 6-hour energy, 8-hour energy. Bhargava played tough, suing them out of existence.
To what does Bhargava attribute this?
The product: “It’s not the little bottle. It’s not the placement. It’s the product. You can con people one time, but nobody pays $3 twice.”
Bhargava (68 today) still owns over 90% of the company.
He has also aggressively taken up philanthropy notably signing the “Giving Pledge” to donate 99% of his fortune.
What you DO need: a great product, creative/smart distribution and a ton of tenacity. Some luck never hurts either.
Follow me @jspujji for more stories on “Bootstrapped Giants,” DTC, Growth Marketing and entrepreneurship!!
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