Company aims to help you get organized while staying green
By Elizabeth Chang
Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Noel Sweeney has taken two household fads — getting organized and going green — and combined them into a niche business that he hopes to turn into another trend: eco-friendly closet systems.
Sweeney, 32, grew up in County Donegal in Ireland and attended the University of Ulster in Belfast, where he received a degree in construction engineering and management.
Because "opportunities always seem to be great in America," he crossed the Atlantic in 1997 for a job with C.J. Coakely, an interior construction firm based in Falls Church, Va.
He worked at Coakely for eight years, but also built a couple of Irish pubs with some partners, eventually leaving Coakely to focus on the pubs. He bought, fixed up, rented and later sold four houses in Arlington, Va. The schedule, he says, "was just insane."
Sweeney wanted to get back into construction and decided to "pick a specialty market, focus on one product and give good customer service for that particular market." By perusing the Yellow Pages in various cities, he noticed that the Washington region had a relative dearth of closet-organizing companies. He determined that the way to stand out would be to offer green products. "Why not do it from a socially responsible perspective and make money?" he says.
Sweeney trademarked Eco-nize (a combination of ecology and organize), as well as several other names. Then he picked out an environmentally certified composite panel made of recycled wood. He invested about $200,000 in startup costs, using profits from his other endeavors, and launched the company in January.
Sweeney says he can make eco-friendly closet spaces available for the same cost as other closet systems, in part because he's not paying huge franchising or warehouse fees and has low overhead; his business is on the historic farm he and his wife own in Clifton, Va. His systems range from $600 to "whatever the heck you would like." He makes an effort to be eco-friendly beyond his product, printing brochures on recycled paper, using recycled shipping containers and installing energy-efficient lighting at his warehouse, a 100-year-old barn on the property.
Eco-nize Closets has two designers and two two-person installation crews. It has done about 80 jobs and has brought in close to $400,000 in sales. Sweeney, who was making about $80,000 a year as an engineer, is able to pay himself almost double that.
Sweeney is quite pleased with how Eco-nize is doing, especially considering the economic downturn. "We're so busy it's hard to keep up," he says. "The scary thing is, what the heck is going to happen when we have good times? It's just going to explode."