Swan Creek in the News . . .
Misery
yields opportunity: Farm family builds, sells deluxe trailers
By Patrick Springer
pspringer@forumcomm.com
The Forum - 03/26/2004
Dan Eckert’s inspiration first seeped
into his consciousness while he was lying uncomfortably inside
his tent on a soggy cow pasture.
His clothes were wet, his spirit was
damp, and his back was a lot less forgiving than it used to be.
“Hey,” he later recalled thinking,
“sleeping on the ground isn’t all that it’s bragged up to
be.”
Eckert looked around and saw scores of
polished Harley Davidson motorcycles parked outside tents --
this pasture happened to be a campground for the Sturgis
Motorcycle Rally in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
It dawned on Eckert that many of those
soggy tents were occupied by people much like himself,
middle-aged men and women who were prepared to spend a lot of
money to pursue their hobby in comfort.
That insight ultimately led to his
idea: He would start a company to build custom trailers that
would serve as towable living spaces, with room to haul
motorcycles or other expensive toys.
A few weeks after Eckert and his wife
Jessica returned to their farm near Ayr, 45 miles northwest of
Fargo, they made a pilgrimage to Elkhart, Ind., capital of the
recreational vehicle industry.
But the captains of the RV industry
couldn’t see profits to be made from Eckert’s vision.
Politely, they showed him the door.
“They all laughed me right out of
there,” he said. “They said bikers don’t have any
money.”
Ah, but plenty of them do. And in the
seven years since, the Eckert family business, Swan Creek
Marketing, has sold a lot of custom trailers, perhaps 75 or 100,
said the Eckerts’ daughter Tanya, who manages the firm’s
business office.
The business has outgrown the old shop,
which wasn’t big enough to accommodate some of the larger
trailers.
Now the Eckerts turn out trailers in a
shop spacious enough to hold local Fourth of July celebrations.
Three generations of Eckerts work in
the trailer business -- Dan’s dad Don is a retired farmer who
helps out full time -- and several nearby farmers, some retired,
pitch in. Hearing aids, for ears subjected to years of exposure
to loud farm machinery and power tools, are common around the
lunch table.
“They’re the best employees you
could have,” Dan Eckert said of his farmers-turned custom
builders. They’re loyal, have decades of experience fixing
things, and they don’t complain.
Prices vary widely, depending on how
lavish a customer’s wishes. One recently delivered trailer
sold for $12,000, while another sold for $55,000. “He had it
extremely decked out,” Tanya said. Others are even more
extremely decked out, with prices occasionally reaching six
figures.
“Our niche is high end,” Dan Eckert
said. “Our customers want ‘wow.’ They want to make a
statement when they drop these ramps down.”
Many customers live in southern
California or the Silicon Valley area, where nouveau riche dot-commers
like to haul their bikes in style.
“As this business has grown, people
are wanting more,” Dan Eckert said. “Now people are looking
for bathrooms.”
Compact, camper-size kitchens and
bathrooms are standard. Beds and tables fold when not in use to
make room to stow motorcycles, snowmobiles, or hunting gear.
Many customers want home entertainment systems, flatscreen
televisions, even surround sound.
One model, under construction, has a
mirror on the ceiling, the first time that feature has been
requested.
“Everything is an option,” Tanya
Eckert said. “We say ‘What do you want?’ and we’ll set
it up for you.”
After consulting with the customer, Dan
Eckert draws up plans on a computer, then sends the digital
floor plans to customer for approval. Every cubic inch is
important.
“We deal in square inches in our
business, not square feet,” he said.
While a trailer is being made, the
Eckerts send digital photos via e-mail to consult with the
customer about the work in progress. Thanks to technology, their
grain and soybean farm in rural Cass County is less remote.
Lately, the demand for custom trailers
has taken the Eckerts in new directions. They recently built a
portable auction office, and have requests to build trailers for
use by owners of purebred canines to take on the dog show
circuit.
The demands of operating a farm and a
growing business on the side can be taxing, especially during
spring planting and harvest seasons. There’s potential to
expand the business further, but that would mean more management
headaches.
Meanwhile, in a variation of the old
adage that the shoemaker’s children go barefoot, Dan and
Jessica Eckert have yet to build a custom trailer for
themselves. They’ll get around to that some day. Until then,
they can dream about options.
“It’s going to have everything in
it,” Dan said.
The days of soggy tents and sore backs
are long behind.