Frontenac Success Stories: Smart’s
Marina
By Jeff Green
Time is not easy to find on a summer
morning at Smart's Marina. It is now, officially, the high season on
Lake Mazinaw, but at first it did not seem to be that busy when I
walked into Smart's Marina on Monday, July 5.
Steve Smart was standing next to a
giant outboard motor in the small showroom, near the marina store,
directing traffic as the staff were moving boats and serving
customers at the store.
He ushered me into Pauline Smart's
office. “We'll see if we can get some time to talk,” he said.
Steve Smart grew up spending summers at
Mazinaw Lake, and in 1974 his parents bought the marina from the
Lester family and re-named it Smart's Marina.
In the 1980s he was living in
Peterborough, where he met his wife Pauline. Steve worked at a number
of marinas and eventually at the Three Buoys houseboat business in
Bobcaygeon on the Kawartha Lakes.
So when Steve and Pauline bought the
marina from Steve's parents in 1990, it was the natural extension of
their career paths.
While the number of marinas on local
lakes has been diminishing, Smart's Marina has continued to thrive.
“There is no such thing as a recession-proof business.” Steve
said, “but we find that when boat sales drop back because money is
tight, people spend more money on maintenance and repairs. Since we
sell and repair boats and motors, we get some business either way.”
The marina also provides docking
service for 70 water-access cottages, as well as boat storage
service, etc.
But as Steve was explaining how the
different parts of the business fit together, his eyes began to drift
and he shifted in his chair. “Excuse me,” he finally said as he
looked over to a young man standing at the door “I think I have to
go. Someone is looking at a pontoon boat. I'll be back soon.”
Meanwhile, the phone rang and Pauline,
who was sitting in front of a computer screen, snatched it up.
“I just got the message on email,”
she said to the person on the other end of the line, “I'll get you
that information in the next few minutes. Sorry for missing it. We've
been busy.”
“The accountant,” she explained.
Just then, another employee came in the
office.
“They want gas,” he said
“Give them just 20 litres, no more”
Pauline said to the employee. “That'll get them to the upper
lake.”
“Problems with gas?” I asked.
“There's been no fuel delivery since
June 30,” Pauline explained. “Everybody wanted delivery before
the HST came in, and the truckers had worked so many hours by then
that they stopped delivering over the weekend. We have only a bit
left. Great timing, isn't it?””
By now Steve was back.
His potential customer, who had come up
to Smart's from Beaver Lake, near Tamworth, was still pondering
whether to buy the $20,000 pontoon boat, but Steve wasn't pushing.
Boat sales are an important source of
revenue for the marina, but they are tied in with service. That's how
a small business can compete with the box-store type of selling that
has had an impact on small marinas in recent years.
Steve explained some of the advantages
he can offer.
“The trailer for that pontoon boat
costs $4,000. If he buys the boat here we can deliver it to him, and
in the fall we can come and get it and store it here. So he can save
$4,000. And if he has any problem with it on a Saturday, we can help
him out. Now if he buys a boat at Canadian Tire, what good would that
do him on a Saturday?”
Smart's has a long-standing
relationship with PrinceCraft boats and Mercury motors, which
provides them with a range of boats and motors, and they have
customers on all of the lakes in the region. Steve travels each year
to the major cottage show in Toronto to keep in touch with customers
and with the industry. “We've had a presence at that show, one way
or another, since my father starting going to it in 1974,” Steve
said.
It takes all the accumulated knowledge
of over 30 years for a business that is located on a tiny spit of
land between Highway 41 and Mazinaw Lake to be able to thrive in an
economic climate that has changed so dramatically in recent years.
One example of that is boat technology.
“Motors change as quickly as laptop computers, but one difference
is that the motors are designed to they can be upgraded as new
energy-efficient technology becomes available. With the four stroke
engines that are available now, people can buy bigger boats that have
less impact on the lake”, Steve said.
Both Steve and Pauline pointed out that
the source of their business is one thing that has not changed -
Mazinaw Lake itself.
“The health of the lake is the
bedrock of this entire community. Because of the health of the lake
Bon Echo draws 250,000 people each summer. The cottagers keep coming
back. People come fishing. What would Cloyne be without Mazinaw
Lake?” Steve said.
“We have a role to play in
environmental education,” Pauline said. “Take that boater before
to whom we sold 20 litres of gas. He wanted to fill a jerry can and
carry it to his boat. We don't do that, because you can't pour gas
into a tank with a jerry can without spilling some into the lake. We
make them bring the boat around to the pumps. People need to know
this kind of thing.”
Marinas are also at the forefront of
the safe boating education and licensing system.
Smart's Marina compacts a lot of
enterprise into a small location, and while there have been
opportunities to pick up new property and divide up different parts
of the business in recent years, they have resisted. Two years ago
they put up a new building on the property instead.
It allows them to run the marina as it
has always been run, as a family business.
Five years ago, Steve and Pauline
summed up what their business is all about when they were promoting
an event on National Marina Day in 2005. They wrote: “Local marinas
do much more than just provide boating infrastructure. They provide a
variety of services, such as friendly, helpful advice, education,
assistance and instruction through their trained staff on a variety
of issues including boating safety, boating regulations and
environmentally safe products and practices. In short, marinas
provide an unmatched combination of infrastructure, products, and
services that help those seeking recreation on the water to maximize
their precious leisure time safely and efficiently.” |