Turning Adversity into Opportunity
Posted on March 2, 2020
#SouthSuccessStories is an ongoing series featuring 小蝌蚪APP alumni who are life-savers, innovators, game-changers, music-makers and creative-thinkers, successful in their careers and supportive of their communities.
When Andy Vickers walked across the Mitchell Center stage in 2015 to collect his University of South Alabama degree, he had unconventional post-graduation plans: to launch a career as a professional wakeboarder. 鈥淚t was my sole focus,鈥 he said.
Within a month, though, he suffered a career-ending injury in his first competition. A three-month recovery from one reconstructive surgery grew into a nearly yearlong ordeal with rejected hardware, infections and more operations.
鈥淚t was a complete redirect,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ooking back, it was a blessing. I wouldn鈥檛 have done the things I have in business had that not happened.鈥
Vickers鈥 ability to recover and bounce back has been key in his professional journey.
Today, Vickers runs two F45 fitness training studios in Mobile and Daphne, and he鈥檚 on the cusp of opening a third location in Pensacola, Fla. He鈥檚 already reinvented his career several times, and he鈥檚 OK with that.
鈥淚 have learned more from the things I tried that I don鈥檛 want to do, the things I shouldn鈥檛 do, the ways not to manage others, ways not to do other things. I鈥檓 a firm believer in that,鈥 he said.
Jumping out of a plane
Vickers, who earned a scholarship to USA, majored in business management and was among the first students to declare a concentration in entrepreneurship. When Vickers was a senior, he decided to pursue an internship. It wasn鈥檛 required at the time, but an episode of 鈥淪hark Tank鈥 featuring Mobile businessman Scott Tindle spurred an idea.
Dr. Donald Mosley Jr., executive director of the Mitchell College of Business's Melton Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, was one of Vickers鈥 professors at the time and remembers Vickers鈥 drive.
鈥淭he entrepreneurship program was very new, so there were few internship opportunities compared to what we have today,鈥 Mosley said. But that drive and Vickers鈥 fearlessness 鈥 key characteristics for an entrepreneur 鈥 helped him land an internship and find a 鈥減erfect mentor鈥 in the process, Mosley said.
Vickers invited Tindle to lunch through a mutual connection, and the student鈥檚 calculated meet-up paid off. Tindle, then executive director of Mobile鈥檚 Greater Gulf State Fairgrounds, agreed to bring Vickers on as an intern. Among the student鈥檚 first challenges was to help Tindle鈥檚 team move toward a more Disney-centric customer service model 鈥 away from the traveling carnival approach.
Tindle also wanted to bring new events to the fairground and charged Vickers with developing a plan for a professional barbecue competition.
鈥淭hat was my first confidence builder, to take an idea, put action behind it and learn as I go,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 often describe entrepreneurship as 鈥榃e鈥檙e jumping out of a plane, and we鈥檙e building a parachute on the way down.鈥欌
After Vickers鈥 injury, he had an opportunity to manage a wakeboard and watersports park in North Carolina. He emptied his savings, packed his bags and relocated. But his first 鈥渂ig-boy job鈥 was another setback. 鈥淚 was back in Mobile within a month.鈥
Like any good entrepreneur, Vickers started to search out another opportunity. He sank on one project 鈥 as the branding manager for a screenprinting startup. 鈥淣one of us knew anything about screenprinting. We were making more mistakes than we were doing things right.鈥 Then he learned to swim again. Float, actually.
An old idea Vickers and Tindle had discussed was new again: Launching a tourism business with amphibious boats.
Gulf Coast Duck Boat Tours took off, growing to 40 employees and multiple World War II-era DUKW boats. Tindle and Vickers, as general manager, expanded the enterprise, adding maintenance and property management businesses as well as The Fort of Colonial Mobile under the holding company, Think Bigger.
Next adventure
In 2018, an investor group approached Vickers about opening F45 gyms along the Gulf Coast. He jumped at it.
With two F45s open, one in Mobile and the other in Daphne, Vickers is in the final stages of settling on the Pensacola location. In F45, Vickers is following a personal love of fitness while taking advantage of a national trend in the industry that is seeing more and more people join boutique studios. F45 focuses on functional training in the form of high-intensity 45-minute workouts.
At first, he was putting in 17-hour days, serving as the manager, trainer and janitor. He has since focused on building the gyms鈥 leadership teams so they can run without him.
He has also revived another interest: real estate investment. While working at Think Bigger, he obtained a real estate license. Now, two years later, he just launched his own real estate brokerage, Wellhouse Real Estate.
鈥淚 knew absolutely nothing about it, so I just started networking and reaching out,鈥 he said of his initial interest in real estate. Vickers says he would urge students interested in entrepreneurship to do the same. He credits his resilience to his willingness to reach out.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 stress enough the importance of reaching out to somebody if you are interested in something. The worst thing they can say is no,鈥 he said.
As a Mitchell College of Business graduate, Vickers is on the advisory council for the department of management. He still regularly visits professors who have become mentors.
鈥淚 built relationships that have been foundational to my success,鈥 Vickers said of his time at South. 鈥淚 also credit my experience at South to the redirection of my family tree. I鈥檓 a first-generation college graduate and plan on changing the course of future Vickers generations to come by showing them what is possible with an education.鈥
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