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But Kradjian’s foray into entrepreneurship began well before that by setting up a car wash at a petrol station-based mechanic that didn’t trade on the weekends.
“I would have probably been 14 years old,” he said. “Back then there weren’t as many car washes.”
Lesser-known is the fact that Kradjian has also amassed an expansive portfolio of investments in other businesses that range from equities and residential and commercial property to pharmacies to rooftop bars.
“We’ve got property from asset management, construction, investments, development,” he said. “We’ve got interest in health, which are investments in pharmacies and medical centres ... investments in hospitality venues across Sydney, Brisbane, and another business does equities.”
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Booktopia has been one way for him to expand this portfolio: the fundamentals of selling things online remain predominantly the same, whether it’s cameras or books. Booktopia also provides exposure to a different category, and higher margins, while allowing both businesses to retain their sizeable market share.
The entrepreneur’s approach to operating Booktopia appears to be very similar to how he has managed DigiDirect: run a lean, tight ship with a steady hand, keep suppliers and authors happy, invest in the community. Not being a publicly listed company will also mean less scrutiny.
He also doesn’t like to waste time. About a week after getting the keys, Kradjian has moved DigiDirect’s head office, based in Sydney’s St Peters, to Booktopia’s warehouse in South Strathfield. The acquisition has also generated some movement among staff who have expressed interest in jumping over to the other business.
The warehouse is also where Kradjian is investing in creating a dedicated book signing area and setting up a new podcast studio (powered by DigiDirect equipment).
Meanwhile, a new full-time role has been created and filled to manage author relationships.
Out with the old, in with the new
None of Booktopia’s previous management team, what was left of them, have been retained by the new entity (“Everyone was the chief,” Kradjian said of the top-heavy structure). He has purchased the business without needing to pay any of the former entity’s high-interest debts or take on the expensive second office in Rhodes.
One of the biggest proverbial straws to arguably break Booktopia’s back – an ill-timed expensive $12 million investment in the robotics warehouse just before a cost-of-living crunch – is one of Kradjian’s greatest assets as he plots to use the facility, with plenty of spare capacity, for DigiDirect’s operations.
“I always wanted the whole business, but it needed to be cleaned,” he said. “The fat was the extra leases, the debts, the headcount. It was doing similar turnover to my business with twice as many staff.”
“If we ran it the same way we ran Digi – tighter, leaner, with the revenues and margins that Booktopia has – it could actually do very well, profitability-wise.”
Not sated by his recent acquisition, Kradjian is already looking further afield for opportunities to add to his quietly growing empire. DigiDirect and Booktopia could benefit from expanded services, for instance.
“There are a couple [of businesses] we’re still talking to … in the e-commerce space,” he said. “If we can bolt on a few of these couple-hundred-million dollar businesses, I think we can build a stable of companies.”
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