Young Millionaires
Phil Shawe, 30, and Liz Elting, 33
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- Richard Allred, 36
- Phil Shawe, 30, and Liz Elting, 33
- Alexis Abramson, 32
- Andrea Keating, 38
- Brad Aronson, 28
- Walter Latham, 28
- Tarina Tarantino, 30 and Alfonso Campos, 30
- Per Welinder, 36 and Tony Hawk, 31
- Dennis D'Alessio, 34
- Rosemary Jordano, 36
- Mike Manclark, 35
- David Watkins, 31
- John Jerit, 37
Working out of a small, cramped dorm room may not be the most
comfortable way to start a business, but that didn't stop Phil
Shawe and Liz Elting. With a rented computer, homemade brochures
and a bevy of resources at their fingertips, the two then-NYU grad
students dreamed their 1992 start-up, TransPerfect Translations
Inc., would be among the largest service-oriented translations
firms in the industry.
The partners spent virtually every waking hour promoting and
marketing or calling and mass-mailing to long lists of businesses
and executives-efforts funded solely on their student budgets and
an eventual $5,000 credit-card advance. "There was no
difference between living expenses, food expenses and business
expenses," says Shawe. "We put as much as we could into
the business, then we paid the utilities, then the rent-only then
did we feed ourselves."
Within a few weeks, Shawe and Elting landed their first project and
eventually started seeing repeat clients. Using contacts from a
translation company that Elting previously worked for, they
acquired a vast network of subcontracted professional translators
and handled all their development, marketing and accounting
functions from a couch in their desk-void dorm room. Four months
into the business, the mother of all projects arrived: a 600-page
mining feasibility study requiring Russian translation within nine
days. Knowing the project had to be done in-house and right away,
Shawe and Elting somehow persuaded several Russian-speaking
geologists to fly to New York City and work right in their dorm
room. "I don't think either one of us slept for eight or
nine days," says Shawe. "Our room was like a casino full
of rousing Russian geologist translators. It was amazing!" The
translated study was on a plane half an hour before the client left
for Russia.
Their company has been thriving ever since. Long gone are the dorm
days: Today, this $15 million firm has 14 offices on three
continents, a network of 3,300 subcontractors, and big-name clients
like American Express and Coca-Cola. The Stern Business School
grads attribute their success to a blatant business philosophy:
hard work.
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"We went right into business after college, so we were used to
living like students," says Shawe. "It would have been
nice to have some money upfront, but I think learning to get by
without excess helped us later on."
Adds Elting, "If we could do it all over again, we would do it
the same way."
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