Escaping the Drift with John Gafford - From Cybersecurity to Golf Apparel - Scott Martin
Episode Date: May 12, 2026On this episode of Escaping the Drift, we sit down with Scott Martin: cybersecurity advisor to Fortune 500 companies, founder of golf apparel brand Scooter Martini, and a guy currently in the... middle of building something from scratch in real time. Most podcast guests come on after they've crossed the finish line. Scott is still in the race. About 18 months ago he and his wife sketched out a golf brand at the kitchen table, dropped six figures on a first run before they had a single customer, and started learning the apparel game the hard way. In this episode, Scott opens up about getting burned by a middleman manufacturer in China, the freelance designer who saved the project, the $100K bet he placed before validating the market, and the pro shop resistance forcing him to pivot his entire go to market strategy. We dive into the real mechanics of launching a product: what a tech pack actually is, how to find the right manufacturer, why pro shops protect their $125 polo price point, and the cleaner path most first time founders skip when they fall in love with their idea. If you've got a business burning in the back of your head, this is the playbook of what to do and what to avoid before you write the first check. 💬 Did you enjoy this podcast episode? Tell us all about it in the comment section below!☑️ If you liked this video, consider subscribing to Escaping The Drift with John Gafford*************💯 About John Gafford: After appearing on NBC's "The Apprentice", John relocated to the Las Vegas Valley and founded several successful companies in the real estate space. ➡️ The Gafford Group at Simply Vegas, top 1% of all REALTORS nationwide in terms of production. Simply Vegas, a 500 agent brokerage with billions in annual sales Clear Title, a 7-figure full-service title and escrow company. ************* ✅ Follow John Gafford on social media: Instagram ▶️ / thejohngafford Facebook ▶️ / gafford2 🎧 Stream The Escaping The Drift Podcast with John Gafford Episode here:Listen On Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7cWN80g...Listen On Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... ************* #EscapingTheDrift #ScooterMartini #ScottMartin #GolfApparel #StartupStory #Entrepreneurship #GolfBrand #ProductLaunch #SmallBusinessJourney #GolfLifeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Back again, back again for another episode of the podcast of like it says in the opening
man gets you from where you are to where you want to be.
And today, live in the studio, kids, I got something kind of cool for you.
So this is actually a friend of mine who was very, very successful at his career, but just
decided out of the blue a little while back like a year and a half ago to start a completely
another business that's doing very well.
It's kind of starting to take off.
And we always have people on that, you know,
have kind of crossed the finish line.
I've kind of gotten over the finish line.
And I thought it would be really interesting
to kind of grab somebody that was in the middle of the race
and kind of talk about how they got this started,
where it got going.
You know, the idea here is if you're somebody at home
that has an idea that's burning inside of you
and you're thinking, man, I could make that happen
or all the reasons I couldn't make it happen,
this is a dude today that's going to tell you
how he's making it happen.
So, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the program,
the founder, CEO,
chief creative and all-around genius behind the new golf brand Scooter Martini.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the program.
This is Scott Martin.
Scott.
Thank you.
Nice to meet you.
How are you,
pull that a little closer.
First podcast for Scott.
First one.
First one.
So dude, you're a pretty successful guy in your own right.
What's the day job that's gotten you to where you are?
Cybersecurity, more consultant advisor,
dealing with global Fortune 500 companies, really overseeing security,
bringing new technologies to the market, solving complex business outcomes,
trying to show like risk plus cost justification on why they're doing what they're doing.
So that's more my day job.
Yeah.
And at this point, at this point, you've got that pretty much down.
Yep.
Correct.
Yeah.
So life runs pretty smooth, pretty easy.
Life is pretty good.
Yep.
I see you at the club.
It frees up a lot of your time.
You've got time to play golf and do things.
And all of a sudden, you just wake up one morning and say to yourself,
you know what I need is a golf.
brand, a clothing apparel company, which is an incredibly tough business. So walk me through the
idea stage of this coming to you and then deciding to make it happen. Yeah, so it was more my wife
and I talking through it. And it was, if we were going to do something, what would we want to do?
What golf's always been my passion, buying apparel. I've always been a consumer. So it was always
thinking, what would I do different? How would I design something? Where do I think is where,
wear something that I want that I don't see out there today. And then ultimately, the pricing just
started getting to me. Every polo is $125. Every hoodie is $150 bucks hats are up to $90 now for good
quality. So I started thinking there has to be a market to create those high-end quality products,
but bring it together with a good design at a better price point more for the consumer.
So that's the idea. So you have no idea about apparel at this point. Nothing. No clue where to even
start nothing and you're having this conversation with your wife yep and how did that go because look man
the biggest business decision you can ever make us who you marry yeah i think we can all agree with that
so how did that conversation it really good she was a very supportive of it we started brainstorming
around ideas and then you kind of get with a what are you going to name it then you start looking at
domains and social medias and that whole avenue so we kind of decided to build a brand around
like me personally it's my nickname i'm scott martin so it's scudder
there's always my nickname.
And then my last name's Martin.
But if you look back in my family,
the last name was martini.
And they dropped the eye when they came over from Italy.
So we kind of combine my nickname with family and heritage to my Italian roots.
So combine the two into a brand.
Try and make it like a larger than life persona, right?
Like you could be somebody that you're not normally.
It's kind of like a fictitious type guy.
Well, dude, I'm the first one to say that when you go out and it's,
Men's Day at the golf course.
You know Scott's coming.
Yeah, well, actually, that's not true.
You don't know when Scott's coming.
You definitely know what Scooter Martini is going on the corner.
So that is a well-crafted alter ego that I think you've earned on that.
So you talk to the wife.
The wife says, yeah, let's do this.
What was step one?
Really started looking into the manufacturing side, knowing nothing about apparel,
started reaching out to just the apparel manufacturer.
So got burnt a couple times, connected with the wrong people.
Talk about that.
Yeah.
So it's kind of, you know, you're just calling people.
You put a lot of trust in them.
Start going through.
And it was, hey, we're looking to start this up.
Start paying for samples.
And where were you finding people?
The first one was out of China.
It was kind of like a third party told me they were the direct manufacturer,
but come to find out they're kind of like a middleman.
So I was dealing with the middleman that would have.
have to go back to a factory. And it was just very, very slow. It got very expensive where my samples
started to creep up there. Didn't really have a say on the fabrics. Didn't really come to find out,
like, you need a tech pack. Like I need to be in charge of my fit, my fabrics, all that aspect.
I really didn't have that there. They made them, but it wasn't based off stuff I liked and
stuff that I really wanted in there. Then I get my samples waiting four months.
So I'm already probably 7,000 in with this company on samples.
And the polo sleeve comes to you.
Yeah.
And it's like, oh, that's standard on the first run.
And I'm like, something's not right.
Is it?
Is it though?
I don't have time.
Where did you find them at first people?
Was it Al-Baba?
Like it was, there's a show, a couple shows in Vegas.
Magic show?
Yeah, magic show.
And another guy I trust was starting to look at them as well as a company because he was doing
something similar, but a different line.
And it just kind of put a lot of blind faith in people without really doing my research up front.
If you could go back to that stage instead, what would you have done differently?
What we did second step.
Which was right.
Yeah.
So it was kind of scoured the internet and found golf apparel freelance designer.
And she's been huge.
So she started like send us samples you like starting to build.
Well, a lot of people don't know when you build apparel.
It's not like, okay, I want this, just throw this here.
It's like a tech pack.
It's like building a building.
So all the measurements, the sleeve lanes, then customizing how you want to be.
Do you want to be like a slimmer fit brand?
Or do you want to have a little bit of room in it?
So there's a lot of stuff.
So I started pulling apparel that I like.
I like the fit of, send all that over.
And we kind of measured it everything.
Came up with the difference.
And then she pretty much built what's a blueprint, which is called a tech pack.
So then from that,
tech pack, she had some relationships with suppliers out of South Korea that deal with about
15 different golf manufacturers. So we reached out to them. She introduced me. And then they,
it was a whole different experience. Was she based in the U.S.? She's a U.S.-based?
If you don't mind me asking, so what, what, what's the range, you don't tell me exactly what it
was, but if somebody wants to find somebody, so instead of just like obviously, you can go on Alibaba,
right, find hats and then throw some logo on them. That's a hat. There's a hat. There's a
million swag companies where you can just throw something on a t-shirt. This is where you're actually
designing a clothing brand. So how much should somebody expect to pay to hire somebody to do that?
So I would say it's about, it depends. So she had some canned designs that we bought were a little
cheaper because all the work was done. But then some of the ideas were, or designs were taking
ideas out of my head and putting those into an actual design and onto a shirt. So those range
$1,500 just for the TechPack to have the ability to then take that and start sourcing.
$15,000 to $100,500 per design.
$1,500 per design.
Per design, okay, got it.
$1,500 per design.
Okay, got it.
I was like $15 to $100,000.
That seems like a lot.
Yeah, that'd be a lot.
Okay.
So, no, so it's actually pretty affordable.
Yeah.
But so what was the determination when you started this out?
Like how many pieces or how many products did you say, I need this many products before I
have a line.
I can take it.
So for us, it was, we don't want to go too big because it's the first.
run, we want to kind of get the feedback, but each supplier has a 200 minimum quantity,
so I have to order 200. We went in a little bigger. I mean, we start with 11 different polos,
four different hoodies, and four quarterships. So we made a pretty significant investment
up front just because of the time it takes, the time from development, the time when you start
working with the manufacturers, the time you get your samples that they send back, pick your
fabrics. They have to pull the fabrics. They start making it.
So you get one sample of that, and it's about 60 to 90 days.
Before it can come out.
Before I even get that, then I approve it, then it goes into production.
So you're looking at about 120-day process.
From design to actually.
From having the tech pack.
So even if I added that on for the tech pack, you had another two to three weeks to a month.
So you're almost at 150 days before you can have.
have something live that you created.
So you were 150 days and a pretty big order.
And how much did you risk on this overall?
What was your ballpark?
The very first order alone quantity wise was just over $100,000.
Okay.
So we're $100,000 in.
Now, I'm going to go back in time a little bit because I'm going to ask,
did you proof this concept at all or just go, nope, you didn't do that.
Okay.
All right.
Okay.
If you're listening to this, I'm going to give you a little piece of advice that I would
have given Scott this piece of advice prior to him doing this.
I would have done this, which was this.
I would have gone on, like for example, on my desk right now that we just left and I'll
show it to you because you, I didn't see it when you were in there.
I have a $100,000 bottle of vitamins sitting on my desk.
Why do I have a $100,000 bottle of vitamins?
Because at one point, 20 some odd years ago, I decided to create a vitamin supplement,
a nutritional supplement company with my sister where we spent $100,000 on supplements
before we asked anybody if they ever were to buy them.
Turns out, unfortunately, nobody ever did.
majority of it went into the trash, henceforth my $100,000 bottle of vitamins that I have as my
reminder to do this one thing before you do what Scott did, which was proof the market.
Make sure that there's a market for what you want to do.
And the easiest way to do that, if you look at things out there like Kickstarter, like
those things where you can say, hey, here's this thing.
Do you want to buy it?
Right.
Run, it's a lot safer to build a website, which you can spin up for almost nothing.
You could have taken your tech back.
You could have put it up on a website.
You could have run pricing.
And the best part about this is you can do it in stages because you can figure out where
your price point breaks, right?
And you can still do this, right?
Because we're going to get to your digital marketing strategy here, which we were talking
about earlier.
But you can still do this where you start out and you get your avatar for your client
as you want to get.
Then you pinpoint your marketing at them with heavy call to action to your website
at a certain price point.
And then you just get them until they get it in the basket, right?
You don't even have any product yet.
You can't sell it.
But you just want to see how many of those at this price point are going to get in that
basket.
And then you just send him an email and say, oh, we're backstocked.
We'll get back to you when it comes back into stock.
And then you can kind of proof your concept without a lot of risk.
And now you're like, okay, cool.
My ad spend was X.
I got to this.
And then we got to here.
Now, your strategy is a little different, which is why I understand you couldn't have
done a lot of that.
I understand that.
But I'm just saying if you're listening to this and you're thinking about launching a product,
proof the market before you spend the money because it makes sense.
Now, golf apparel is a little different.
And this is why I'm going to answer for you probably as to why you didn't necessarily get on that road.
Because your long-term goal with the brand is, yes, some online sales, but you want to be direct with pro shops because there's a problem with pro shop apparel.
Correct.
Okay. What's that problem?
I just think everything's too high priced, to be honest.
I've been a consumer of it.
But I'm running into backlash as well because pro shops want to maintain the margins and the higher price because then it's
or revenues. So it's kind of a catch 22. I want to be more for the consumer, but I'm met with
some resistance from a pro shop perspective because they don't want to drop pricing. Well, here's,
but here's my thing though. Can't you give the pro shop the same margin? They do. Yeah.
Yeah. So the pro job, they're buying wholesale cheaper from you than they can buy from the
competitors, but they still don't want to bring in the lower pricing. It's more I've,
my reps have heard, you know, we only sell a hundred and twenty five dollar pull
So it doesn't matter on the profit, but it's more of, you know, we're top 50 course in the U.S.
We have standards.
We're going to be at this price.
Our logos on it.
So we demand this dollar figure.
So it's kind of been one of the more interesting aspects that I've learned because I didn't
really foresee that coming in.
I thought, you know, it would be a better option.
You're probably going to sell a lot more if it's good quality at a better price.
And I think that might be part of the fear is the lower price.
point's going to outsell everything and then they'll start seeing that the client and sale revenue.
Because you're getting that resistance that's coming back from them.
Which again, okay, so let's let's so you've gone into pro shops, you've done this.
They want to maintain their margins. They're still buying from you. You're in, you're in several
seven right now. You're in seven right now. So you have seven that are going in.
They're still pricing competitive with everything else they have. They're not,
everybody's holding that pricing. They're just like, we'll make bigger margin on this.
Correct. That's what they're doing. Okay. So that. That's,
That's the direct market. So that doesn't really help you. It actually probably hinders your sales a little bit. A little bit. Yeah, it's been one of the things we've been thinking and I might do a pilot on it. It's like, do I artificially raise my retail for those scenarios, but offer a bigger incentive. So it's, because there is kind of perception in a retail price from a buyer or a consumer perspective, right? So it's. Yeah, there's, there's quality there for sure. But I would also say that, you know,
I don't think you want to be a discount brand.
I think you and I have had that conversation before.
I said the worst thing you can do is just try to be the cheapest option.
Yeah.
I think that's a terrible.
That's a terrible choice.
I think what you can do, and we were talking about this, you know, let's talk about the idea
for online and what we're doing, what you're currently doing and where I think that should go.
And again, if you're watching this on YouTube, feel free to chime in with whatever you want.
You know, if you're an online branding expert, great.
I've been around enough.
I don't claim to be.
But I've got enough business.
is running online. I think I know what I'm doing. So obviously I think there needs to be a little bit
of a pivot because you're going to have resistance as an unknown brand in the pro shops,
budding up against, you know, Travis Mayhue's and those brands that are sitting there that people
know. And that's part of it too. Some pro shops won't bring in a brand unless they're two
to three years old. They want to see consistency. Or my offering isn't big enough. There's not a big
enough selection yet. So part of that's all growth and strategy as we grow more and more opportunity
will come on that area. But it is a big focus because it actually drives our consumer pricing
to be competitive because now through the pro shops and the wholesale setting that up, it drives
the cost of the product down. Yeah. So it's how part of my strategy of how I'm able to provide a
high quality product at a better price point is by leveraging the scale of the company.
But see, I think for me, I think that you can utilize the pro shops.
And to me, pro shops are kind of an impulse buy.
I think people go play a course.
I never bought.
That's it.
Maybe once a year, if it's your club, you drop a hot dog down the front of your shirt.
And you're like, God, Jesus.
I got to go deal with this now.
Maybe once a year.
But the majority of that stuff that gets sold in the pro shops, I think, is one-offs to people
that maybe they're playing a course because it's got the club logo on it, fine.
where design and color may help you there a little bit,
it doesn't matter because they're not really buying the brand as much
is they're buying the name of the course that's embroidered on it.
Correct.
But I think what you can do is just having your brand associated with those
and then it gives you an opportunity to say,
okay, listen, you can buy direct from us and get a better deal.
Well, I shouldn't say better deal.
I want to try and have consistency throughout the brand
because if people are better able to get a better price online,
they're not they're just going to cut out and then the pro shops won't but they won't no no but here's the but here's
the difference right I think again for me anyway I think the fact the pro shop brand is totally different from
the online brand correct here's why yeah because it's got the name of the course embroidered on it
and I think the majority of times unless you have the dreaded spelled hot dog um down the front of
your shirt um most of those are being bought because it has the name of the course on it right um you know
I still have a pullover and says badlands on it.
I can't throw it away just because Badlands was such a cool course.
Used to work there.
Yeah, I just like having a bad.
Something says Badlands on it.
I couldn't even, I think it's a, I don't even know what brand is.
I just know it says Badlands.
Badlands.
Right.
So I think that makes that a little bit of a limited stock run for you that can justify a higher
price on, on site like that.
Makes sense.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I don't know that's right.
You're paying for the logo, right?
If I go play pebble, I'm buying something.
Oh, for sure.
Or a bunch of stuff with the pebble.
with the Pebble logo, just so I have that as a memory.
Sure.
So, yeah, there is a price point to that because of the logo.
That's what's making up the difference.
Okay.
So trouble, so, so the trouble we're having right now is kind of necessarily getting over
the hump with the approach.
The original thought of coming into this with the pro shops were going to sell you cheaper.
That's not happening.
No.
Well, it's successful in certain markets, but the higher end courses, that's where I'm kind of
met with some resistance because they want to charge $120,
for their logo.
Yeah.
Right.
So I need to have a program that adapts to both.
Okay.
Or I just need to pick one segment.
Pick a lane.
And kind of stay to that and make that my specialty.
Where have you,
okay,
so you've got a mixture of those now.
Where have you seen more sales happening in the ones that want to maintain that
125 or the ones that are willing to say,
hey, look,
we just want to make the margin.
We just want to merchandise.
Where are you seeing more sales?
It's been close so far.
Like, it's still pretty new.
So they're just out there.
But we're getting positive feedback from a bunch of them.
kind of on both markets. So just really, I think we'll have a better understanding that in a couple
months because we're still in the winter season. So a lot of people are buying the bulls right now.
They're buying more of the quarter zips and hoodies. So it's, I think we need a little bit more
time to get the right data to make that decision. Okay. But all the feedback's been pretty good
from the shops. All right. Well, let's talk about the online strategy. Yep. So what has that been to
this point? Where are you going with it? Yeah. So social media, we're on Instagram, Facebook and
TikTok. So a lot of it's just really trying to get the brand awareness out there. How do I acquire
new customers if nobody knows who I am? How are they going to go to my website? Why are they going to
buy my brand without really knowing what we represent as a brand and what we're trying to
portray? So we're trying to show a lot of that through social media, starting to show the personality
of the brand, you know, like showing people having fun, having a good time, hanging out with your buddies.
you know, it's a way to kind of escape reality.
And really, I have always felt like you want to look good when you're out there.
It helps you kind of play better.
If you're in a business setting, you're already kind of nervous because you're meeting with clients or potential clients.
The last thing you need to be worried about is if you're comfortable in your apparel.
But I think also, aren't you trying to like this is a little bit of an edge to this?
Be a little bit edgy.
Like we're trying to fly a little bit of a pirate flag over the top of this brand a little bit.
Yep.
Yep.
There's a big side of that too. Really trying to show the personality of golf, why people
golf, why traditional people golf and the fun that people have on the golf course. I mean,
you see cart girls going viral because they're showing what it's like for the guys interacting
with cart girls and most of the followers are actually wives to see what's my husband doing the golf
course. Oh, Jesus. So there's a lot of fun you need is your wife, is your wife following the local
cart girl? That's the last thing. A lot of fun happening on it. So we want to be part of that fun.
And we want to be the apparel company, not over the top,
but we want to kind of push the limits a little bit to bring out the fun side of why people
and why the game's gone crazy since COVID.
Yeah, I think you look at, you know, I think there was a little bit of a breaking point this weekend.
I want your thoughts on this.
It was management this weekend.
I think there was something that happened that might be a little bit of the tipping point,
which is, I don't even if you saw this, but there's this jackass kid that is just,
He's huge on social media named Jack Dorsey.
I hate this kid.
I hate this kid.
I hate that he's famous.
I hate everything about this kid.
And that's strong for me.
I hate this kid.
And he's at waste management,
and he gets his buddy to yell jackass right in the back of somebody's backs.
He paid a guy a hundred bucks.
A hundred bucks paid him to do it.
And then they both got bounced.
And I'm like,
okay, listen,
waste management is his own animal.
I get it.
Like the stadium hole, I get it.
It's supposed to be there.
But I thought that was just, it's a little much.
Over the top.
A little over the top.
Yeah.
Do you think that maybe, you know, obviously I think, I think the PGA is leaning into this a little more,
especially with what happened live golf.
But do you think there's a, you think that might have been a catalyst for maybe,
okay, we got to bring this back a little bit?
Yeah.
I mean, over the years, you can see the tournament, right?
They've shut down alcohol sales on Saturday because it starts to get out of hand.
I think it's kind of like a fine line, right?
And I think it's kind of fine line of what we're trying to do as a brand.
We want to be a fun brand, but we don't want to be over the top, right?
Yeah.
Like what the influencer did, right?
Like to me as a golfer, unacceptable, right?
There's guys out here playing for $1.7 million.
It's their lives.
And you're literally interrupting them interfering with that.
And then trying to play victim that everybody's soft.
It's like, you make your money.
front of a camera. These guys grind, I mean, put forth a ton of effort. I have so much respect
for every pro golfer and what they do. Oh, yeah. They shouldn't be interrupted by some
influencer trying to get views by interfering with what he's doing. So I agree with you. I'm not a
fan of the guy. And I love the stance PGA took because I don't think there's anywhere in the game.
Yeah, I don't think they should ever let that kid anywhere near every day. And I think he got a
lifetime being. Yeah, I think he did. He can't ever go to any of the game. But to that point,
it's a fine line, right? We want to be fun, but I still respect the game. I love the game.
I play the game. And so you've got to stay within the confines of the game.
Well, let's talk about that. So who is, who, who's a scooter martini guy in your mind?
In my guy, in my mind, it's from a player perspective or what I envision.
What do you know just in general? Like, like, if I see a dude wearing scooter martini,
what do I know about that person? They're going to be fun. They're going to be personable.
they're going to be a guy you want to play golf with,
but they're going to respect the game.
They're going to take care of the course,
and you don't have to worry about them as a liability on the course.
I've told my son for many years,
I said, listen,
when it comes to the game of golf,
it's way more important to be entertaining than good.
Than good, yeah.
So it's like I keep going back to it.
It's a fine line.
Like, you know if I want the brand to represent that you're going to be like,
that's a force of my want to be in.
It's going to be a ton of fun.
We're still going to play good golf,
and we're going to respect the course.
Okay.
Well, let's talk about reaching those people now
because obviously the pro shops are,
that was a little bit of a pivot.
Even though we continue this,
it's going to pivot.
So now the strategy is becoming
a little bit more customer direct
via the internet.
And what's the plan for reaching some of these folks?
So I think as we've talked,
I'd love to create kind of an AI vision
and marketing plan of,
I have about 100 different pet peeves of golf
that just drive me crazy.
Right. So I want to really start hammering on those, bring light, make them funny, show the personality side of the brand and really kind of at the same time showcase this is what our brand is. This is kind of what we believe in from a golf perspective. But at the same time, maybe even help some of the courses when it comes to the people playing that they're taking care of the course and they're doing what they should. So the best part about, you know, those AI videos just for for doing stuff like this is you can literally just run tests after test.
test after test and it doesn't matter and see what it works.
Yeah.
But, you know, the thing is with social media anymore is it's such a flood of just nonsense I found.
And, you know, we just hired a new guy full time for our company here.
And I'm like, you know, what do you want to show?
Like, what do you want to do?
And I'm like, I just want to get some real stuff out there, right?
Nothing that's, you know, for example, it's always been the stiff like walking around houses with,
you know, our best looking agents like Vanne White from, you know, like handout like a spokesmodel.
And I think people are just so sick of that.
And so this guy came in and he just was walking around, you know, we were testing him out.
He shot a tester.
And it was my wife and Eugenia, who's our broker and Mel, who's our director of operations,
and me debating push presents.
Like, should you get a push present?
And I was debating that getting my wife a nanny for six years, that was the push present.
I thought that was pretty solid.
And then she was claiming that was for me.
And that video just was like to be in this office on any given.
day, did like 20,000 views in like five minutes, like that quick, just because it was just
really what was happening that day. And I think if you can take that, that stuff that happens
on the golf course and make it funny and make it interesting, but, you know, not so like,
here's my, you know, here's my model turning around and that stuff. I mean, you got to do some
of that stuff to show off your brand because it's a clothing thing. But if you make it something that
people want to engage with and want to want to watch and they want to see what happens next and
and this thing.
I mean,
you and I had talked about before kind of making,
you know,
Scooter Martini,
this mythical character that's like an absolute just terrorist
on a golf course.
And yeah,
even though you don't want to be him,
you know,
it's obvious that he was there.
And he's kind of the menace.
Yeah.
Right.
And it's kind of like,
it's okay to root for the bad guy wrestler,
but you don't want to be the bad guy wrestler,
you know,
I'll buy your t-shirts,
but I'm not going to do the stuff that he does.
It's kind of that image.
And I always,
when you first told me about this,
I always thought about back of the day,
Powell Peralta skateboards in the search for Animal Chin,
that video where they were looking for this mythical little old Asian guy skateboarder.
And it was like this mythical hunt for him.
They never found him.
And I always kind of thought the hunt for Scooter Martini would be similar.
And I want to bring that in.
I want to almost make it like where you're proud to wear it.
And it's like a family.
And you see someone else wearing it.
It's like, oh, nice shirt.
You know, like it's an automatic connection.
You tip the hat.
Yeah.
People.
You see it.
The Jeep wave.
Yeah.
You see it a lot because I'm a big Ohio State fan.
If I wear my Ohio State stuff anywhere, people come up.
Oh, and it starts conversation.
And ask if you're married to your cousin.
No, not to that.
But it's almost like a way to meet people.
And it's almost like being in Ohio, wearing something Ohio State.
Like it's almost like you're part of like this unwritten family.
Right.
And that's what I want Scooter and Martini to represent.
So the question about Ohio State, not to get too far off the thing, is do you feel
that the reason for their recent struggles and failure to win is because Ryan Day's
beard has just died way too black. You feel that that's the issue? I mean, that thing is
just, it is shoe black, black. It's just too black for me. They got the talent. Yeah, they did,
well, I mean, they got the money. That's a whole other thing. So as you start now down this road
with social media, and I know you've hired a firm, talk about hiring, talk about hiring a firm to represent
you for social media. Yeah, no, it's been great. Like, I, I still have a day job. I don't have time
to do that. So it's good to talk with experts to get their ideas. They have the creative background.
So it's it's kind of almost like the design process of a polo, right? I get to talk to an expert of
this is my vision. This is what I'm looking to do for the brand. And then they have the skill
sets to be able to do it and post it and take it to all the different areas and all the stuff that
I could probably figure out on my own over time, but I don't have the time one and I don't have the
bandwidth too. Yeah. So are you using other VAs or no? Uh, just one. Just the one. So you just
hired this one person. Yep. So they're, they, I view them as really a partner in the business.
Yeah. So it's, it's a great relationship. We talk all the time. Are they, are they compensated just
straight up or are they compensated also on sales? Um, straight up. Okay. Got it. Yep. Um, yeah,
it's one of those things where if you're building a business and, you know, a lot of people try to spend so much
time figuring out like every little nuance part of that business themselves. And there's a great book.
If you want to start a business like this, it's called Who Not How, How, How You Should Really
Get Good at figuring out who can do things for you, not how to do them. How's they do it. Yeah.
You know, I'm, I'm right now in the middle of kind of recasting my entire, my entire support system. So
I hired a guy just, just so you understand what's possible out there. I went on Upwork and I ran an ad for
a virtual CLO. And whatever.
I wanted was somebody that could then go through all of my processes and procedures and everything
at KPI dashboards and all that stuff for all of our different companies and then hire a team of
VAs and manage those VAs. And I wound up hiring a guy yesterday actually that's the C.O. of a pretty
big roofing business in Idaho, like $30, $40 million roofing business. And he's like, yeah, I'm getting
the fractional thing. So he's like, this is my first foray into like doing this. Normally I would have
thought, you know, VAs you're thinking Philippines, you're thinking Columbia, you're thinking
Venezuela, you're thinking those countries and Mexico. And we will hire some of the sub-VAs
from there. But to get this first guy for like 20 bucks an hour to come in and build this entire
machine and then hire all these VAs and then manage them is amazing. But I plan on having one VA
that does bookkeeping, one VA that does design, one VA that does social media posting, one VA
that does all the little things that I do, I want one human that does that task.
Yep.
And then does it extremely well and then have one person that manages all of those people
to rope them in.
And I think people spend so much time figuring like, oh, this is going to be so much work.
When if you really, by utilizing upwork, if you're one of those people that thinks that,
go read a book by Tim Ferriss called The 4-Hour Work Week, which is phenomenal.
We'll show you kind of how to start your source, you know, how to start outsourcing your life.
I don't know how much of your stuff you've got to the point yet where you can outsource,
but that's kind of our model, right?
It's my focus is on my day job, mostly.
So it's like, how much of this can I bring in experts that I'm going to bring them in,
pay them for what they do?
It's going to make us stronger.
I'm going to learn from them in the process.
And it helps me kind of streamline it, plus I can react faster.
Yeah.
So it's if I'm in meetings in the day job, I can't have scooter martini at a halt.
I need people that are empowered to do so to move forward.
Yeah, moving behind the scenes.
Yeah, I'm completely behind that.
model and it's the only way I can scale to be honest.
Can scale this. So right now you've got reps out in the out on in the field that are two reps
that are out building relationships with the pro shops because they have pro shop relationships.
So they'll walk in and they'll show the whole line and that's how we're getting a lot of
our own. Don't skip over that because you said they already have relationships. How did how did you get
that? So they're in the industry today. So they represent a couple other brands as well. So we've we've
partnered with them. They're all 1099.
So they're out there representing brands.
They have the relationships with the pro shop.
So as their meetings, then they're showing scooter martini and talking about our brand,
they have the samples.
So they're feeling them.
They're seeing our quality.
So that's how we're getting all our sales today.
So I don't want to skip over that because there's a lot of people.
I've had great success with this over the years where you're like, okay, I've already
got, you know, you try to find people in other businesses that maybe don't necessarily compete
with you that already have products that go to your customers.
And then what you can do is you can go to them and say, listen, let's do a deal where either I get on your mailing list or I get on your newsletter or I can utilize your Salesforce and I will compensate them to push our product.
Like we've had over the years great success with that by utilizing our, let's say our sales force that is entitled to then talk about our mortgage company or other companies.
Like we're already talking to these people.
Let's do this together.
A lot of the joint venture partnerships I have with things like,
solar companies because they're like you guys are already doing all these homes. You have the
Salesforce of all of your agents that are selling all these homes. Let's come in and compensate
those agents to help sell solar. And so by doing these combined sales forces, it's a really
smart way to expand your reach. So anytime you can find people out there that are doing that
kind of a thing, it's a good idea. Let's talk about building a sales force now because we were talking
a little bit about affiliates earlier and trying to get that thing going because nobody's a better
salesman for your brand than a raging fan, right? It just doesn't work. So it does work is what I
meant to say. So what's the long-term plan for Scooter Martinez? So right now, I'm trying to incorporate
technology. Right. And I sell technology from a day to day and age. It's apparel, but I've been
thinking, how do I leverage AI? Or how do I leverage technology even though it's apparel? So a lot of that
is my focus right now is like I have two reps right now. I could go and track down reps in all 50
states, multiple states, and all of a sudden I have, say, 80 reps that are out there pushing the
brand. That becomes a lot as we're talking about to manage. If I was full in all day, didn't have a day
job, I would take that over and manage the reps. I've kind of started thinking and I'm working with
my web designer where I'm building like a wholesale back end. I'm going to leverage the technology
to where a lot of the stuff a sales guy can do that's coming in,
you can do it yourself online.
So you can put in your logo.
You can add your resale certificates.
You can see the whole price book.
You can see everything.
Request samples right from there.
So we're starting to partner and sponsor a lot of PGA Pro,
like club pro type events to where they're coming.
We'll be the sponsor.
We'll give away our apparel so they can see it, feel it,
and then set them up with a code to our website.
to where they can go in the back end and they can start placing ordering.
So a lot of it is how do I streamline this whole process?
Yeah.
Right.
So and I think technology is a big way to do it.
And that's kind of a big focus of ours.
Another area is as part of that reband is starting to build affiliate programs,
starting to build rebate programs,
really starting to reward the customers who love the product or loyal,
bringing others in and really start to compensate them when they're referring us.
we'll pay them back through the rebates or different type of program to where you buy one of my polos,
you tell five people, here's your link, they buy all of a sudden now you get a free polo.
Yeah.
Or you get a free hat or you get whatever you want to do with that credit within our brand.
So now you're getting free stuff by kind of representing the brand and just every day at the golf.
Hey, I like your polo. Where'd you get it? I'll send you a link.
Yeah.
That easy. And now you're starting to get free stuff and that's simple for that.
You know, one of the things that I would recommend that you do, because I know you
Shopify on the back end, like somebody that you can do for online stores, is I would look at,
as you get into more customer relationship, and I don't use Shopify, so I don't know all
the capabilities it has.
But I do know two things.
Number one, to go high level is what we use for pretty much all of our customer data-driven
contact stuff.
It's an unbelievable CRM that does integrate with Shopify.
So it would have a clean back and forth integration with them, but I would, I would
hire somebody that understands how to make that go.
But you can integrate everything there, your website, your forms, everything can go there.
And to go high level.
It's probably the best all-around platform I've seen for just about everything.
Really good.
And then what I would also say is I love the affiliate program back to your, back to your existing clients.
People that love what they do or love your product will sell it.
There's no better mouthpiece than a happy customer.
You know, there's just no better.
Speaking of customers, you know, how are you handling right now customer support as a small?
So it's all through the shops, our reps handle a lot of that and then we get involved when we need to.
But so far, you know, we have the email.
I reach out personally on every single order as well.
So it's like I want to kind of create that relationship with the consumer, right?
So I reach out every order.
I'll shoot them a text because I get the info.
It's like, hey, thank you for the order.
We have automated stuff, but mine's personal.
Like, it's me on the other end.
It's like, hey, I just want to confirm your size.
You know, you're a large, but some of your Excel.
What type of fit do you want?
So I'm trying to get it right up front because I think it shows that we care.
Yeah.
Instead of me just take in an order offline.
There's no personality to it.
And you order a large, I send you a large.
It doesn't fit.
Then you reach out.
It's like, I'm trying to be proactive and understand, interact with.
the customer and making it more personable and really with apparel it's all about the fit so you'll
hear it all the time it's like this brand I'm a large and this brand I'm in Excel how's your fit
yeah and then I'll make recommendations do you have like the sizing chart on the only do we have a lot
of it but as you know like a lot of people don't pay attention to it it's I see something my I wouldn't
pay attention to it personally so you have frequently have frequently long arms you have to pay
attention to stuff like that but it's I feel it's I'm trying to limit the returns by
reaching out making it. You know, I'm asking a couple questions. So I'm getting at the bottom of.
And then I feel like I know our sizing good enough to where I can put you on the right size.
Right. Okay. So when you order stuff, I'm just curious about this, right?
You have to order like X amount of smalls, X amount of mediums because I'm sure at the end of it,
you wind up with box of smalls. That's, that was the big part of the first figuring it out.
I can order whatever I want. Okay. It just needs to be 200. Yeah. But trying to figure out.
out with no data up front, what sizes are going to sell. Who's your customer going to be?
So I reached out to a lot of pro shops, people in the industry I know. What are your most popular
sizes? I kept hearing over and over 2xL, 2xL, 2XL. I buy all these two XLs and my whole
sales so far are large, medium, and small, where it's large, we did a lot, but medium,
small, I very underestimated the grand. Yeah. You did a lot of medium and smalls? I didn't.
Oh, you didn't.
But sales is medium and small.
People are buying mediums and small.
Tons.
I've already,
I've already had to reorder.
See, I would have thought the double XL I would have knock on there.
If I had to guess, just guessing,
I would have had to say the majority of it would be large.
Then it'd be extra large.
And then you'd have a smattering of mediums and just a touch of smalls.
We had a touch of smalls and sold out immediately.
Really?
Yeah.
So, because we're finding too on like our.
hoodies are really, really popular right now, good quality. We're actually a lot of unisex
to wear women want them. So their women fell in love with them too. So they're starting to buy like
the smalls, the mediums and it's kind of a good, because we don't have women yet. It's on the
roadmap and it's coming. We're in samples. But they want to represent the brand and love the sweatshirts.
So I've sold a lot of them to women as well. Fair. Yeah. Unisex. You can do whatever you want.
Yeah. All right. So what's the long term plan? What's the long term goal for this?
It's really just to keep building it up, building the family, building the brand, getting it right,
taking customer feedback and I own the company so I can do what I want.
It's really, that's the part I love is if there's enough demand for something, I can add it.
So I can do, I don't have to get approval from anyone.
I can take it any way I need to go.
Yeah, one of my favorite things I always say is when my kid was, when Hayden was like probably eight years old,
said to me one day he goes, dad, I want to do what you do?
Okay.
What do I do?
He goes, you're the boss.
And I said, okay, why do you want to be the boss?
And he goes, because nobody gets to tell you what to do.
Yeah.
I said, yep, I said, do you want to know what the hardest thing about being the boss is?
You said, what?
I go, nobody tells me what to do.
Yeah.
That's the hardest part.
It's super rewarding, but it's also the biggest challenge because there's no roadman.
Well, cool.
Well, Scott, if they want to find the brand, they want to buy some stuff,
they want to check it out where they find it.
Scooter martini.com.
Scooter martini.com.
Well, dude, I look forward to.
They register. It's 20% off as well.
20% off if you go check it out now. Look at that.
And I can create a promo code specifically to this and I'll do 35% off.
35% off. If you type in escaping, just type if you type in escape, it's 35% off.
That's dope. Dude, that's amazing. So cool. Well, dude, I wish you nothing but success.
One last question before we jump off. If you could go back in time and do one thing different,
what would you have done? First call would have been to a designer. We would be probably
probably two years up with sales and we're seven months.
Oh,
it would have saved us about a year and a half.
Oh, wow.
Well, there you go.
Dude, it's not what you know.
It's who you know.
Well, dude, thanks for coming by.
Listen, if you listened to that today
and inspired you to start your own business,
again, I think the best lesson that you can take away from today
is obviously it's not what you know.
It's who you know.
So plan this stuff out.
A good plan up front.
We'll save you a lot of heartache in the long run.
We'll see you next week.
