Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Turn Your Passion Into Profit


Turn Your Passion Into Profit

Roy Van Broekhuizen got a call from his church one day...head to Indonesia and help the tsunami victims any way you can.
Now Roy and his wife manage a million-dollar business that keeps on giving to the people of Indonesia.
Read on to find out how Roy turned his passion for service into a successful business that still helps those in need.

After the Tsunami: Why I Started a Business in Indonesia
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2008
Dear Reader,

After the tsunami hit Indonesia in December 2004, many of the survivors had no homes, food, or jobs. I couldn’t stand by and watch this suffering continue, so I sat down to devise a plan to try to ease the situation. I didn’t realize that this would create a million-dollar business that would not only help people rebuild their lives but allow us to travel the world at our leisure.

My wife Louise and I came up with the idea of employing local artisans in the small villages to make one-of-a-kind embroidered handbags that incorporated native patterns passed down from generation to generation which Louise would bring back to the States and sell to her friends.

Louise remained in the States while I was stuck in a number of different projects in Indonesia. Every trip home, I would bring back some boxes: two large boxes the first time, then five, then 11, until in August 2006 we both realized that the demand had grown so much that we had to bring them in another way. That’s when Laga Designs International, Inc. officially launched and began growing at a rapid pace.

Early in 2007 The Orange County Register, the largest newspaper in Orange County, California, where we lived, called and said they would like to do a story on us which we agreed to. A few weeks later the story appeared. The phone started ringing at 6 a.m. at our condo office and I awoke to an inbox of over 921 emails and $3,000 worth of internet sales in the first hour of that day. One of the answering machine messages was that the newspaper put their story on the full first page and last page of the business section.

There was so much response, that Louise ended up going to Indonesia by herself, and I stayed in the office filling orders and running the whole operation. Needless to say, it was crazy, chaotic, frantic, and at the same time, it was fun. There are bags all over the place, in the garage, living room, and family room. Out of three bedrooms, two are used for offices, which now includes one full-time assistant, one part-time assistant, and five volunteers.

In August 2007 we brought our first 40-foot container from Indonesia to Orange County. All the Laga bags are being stored in the parking lot behind a building that is leased by a friend-- who is not charging us for the space.

With the factories half a world away, filling orders quickly can present challenges. We started our own factory and training center two years ago with 12 young women, mostly in their 20’s who have lost family members and friends. Today we are proud and feel honored to help 150 survivors, mostly women, and co-op with three other factories to meet the demand. To see those women now, how they are so empowered gives us all hope. We do our little part to help people and make someone else happy and smile, it makes us realize how blessed and fortunate we are.

Roy Van Broekhuizen
For International Living
Editor’s Note: Start your own Import-Export business today and you could be as successful as Roy and Louise by this time next year.
Checkout International Living Import-Export kit

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