From Trash to Cash: 1-800-GOT-JUNK Began as a Start-Up and Is Now a Multi-Million-Dollar Company
This multi-million-dollar company began with just an old pickup truck.
Aug. 19, 2011— -- If it's true that one man's junk is another man's treasure, then what happens if you get everyone's junk?
Brian Scudamore is the man who is the king of junk. The CEO of 1-800-GOT-JUNK has grown his multimillion-dollar business into the Starbucks of trash.
1-800-GOT-JUNK is a full-service junk removal company that began in Vancouver, Canada, and has now spread to the United States and Australia. Scudamore's company has become a classic example of a simple idea executed to perfection and raking in millions as a result.
"I'm surprised nobody thought about it," Scudamore said. "I mean, I'm a high school dropout, a university dropout. It's such a simple idea, how did it become what it is today?"
Recently, business has been getting a boost from a strange pop culture phenomenon: hoarders. Not just people hoarding junk in general but from the A&E's hit TV series "Hoarders," which uses 1-800-GOT-JUNK on its house calls.
"Some people, it's just like, you know, 'Clean out my entire garage,' and we get to work doing it and they're kind of watching, and they're like, 'Oh jeez, I didn't even know I had that,'" said Wyatt Skovron, one of the 1-800-GOT-JUNK crew members. "So I think it's for sure people don't realize how much they have until it's time to get rid of it."
But the company has seen tremendous growth overall. It hit its first $1 million year in 1999 and now brings in roughly $100 million each year. One thousand trucks do the simple task of picking up people's unwanted stuff and getting rid of it.
"We had a guy from Ottawa in Canada go to Sydney and spend a few months working in the trucks in Australia, and he said, 'Brian, it's the same junk in every city.'"
And they get a whole host of bizarre stuff, with a few memorable gems, including John Wayne's personal Bible, a truckload of denture molds, a defused World War II bomb, a trophy from a nudist colony, 50 garden gnomes, 18,000 cans of expired sardines and even a live kitten who was found inside of a refrigerator.
After the junk is collected, Scudamore explained, it is taken to transfer stations and recycling depots.
"Landfills are the last resort," he said -- "61.3 percent of what we haul away gets reused, donated, recycled. The goal is 75 percent by the end of 2014."
The 1-800-GOT-JUNK call center is a massive span of phones ringing off the hook, and Scudamore said they sometimes get very strange requests.
"A lady said if we can pick up her cats," said Steven Kadiebwe, one of call center employees. "I said we don't, you know, I know we don't do that!"
There's even a special section of phones where the Australian calls are fed that is staffed with people with Australian accents to give the callers a local feel thousands of miles away. On a record day, Scudamore said 5,000 calls will come into his call center.