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Unlike most industries, vending
machine operators tend to benefit from an economic downturn.
In recessionary times, consumers who cut
down or eliminate larger expenses such as new appliances,
cars or meals outside the home often remain willing to part
with their change for a soda or handful of candy, peanuts
or bubble gum.
Their coins quickly add up.
Last year alone, America's machine vendors
nickel-and-dimed their way to $25.6 billion in revenues,
according to a report prepared for the trade publication
Automatic Merchandiser. That total represented a nearly
5 percent increase from 1999, and this year promises to
be even bigger.
Despite the presence of more than 60 competitors
in Southern Nevada, Russ Kashka knows firsthand the value
of operating a local vending machine concession. A
partner in Sky Top Vending since 1977, Kashka said his family-owned
operation has prospered through both good and bad economic
climates.
"(Vending) is recession-proof because everyone's
got change in their pockets," said Kashka, whose company
currently maintains 800 to 1,000 snack and entertainment
machines at sites across the Las Vegas Valley. "We're
constantly taking our equipment from business to business
and we're as busy as we've always been. As the town
grows, so do we."
While Sky Top's revenue typically remains
stable, its actual sources of income are anything but staid,
Kashka said. With offices, bars, shopping centers
and other vending sites opening and closing on a weekly
basis, one of the biggest challenges faced by the company's
45 employees is the constant reshuffling of equipment from
lessee to lessee.
"We have companies that close up, so we
pick up their equipment," Kashka said. "The next week,
someone else comes into town, hires 50 people and decides
they want to put coffee and soda machines in the snack and
break room. ... We're always picking up and dropping locations."
Kashka said it's still too soon to tell
if the current economic downturn will impact his business.
If a slowdown does come, however, Kashka said the presence
of seldom-used coins will mark its arrival.
"I can tell when things are getting hard
because I start seeing silver coins in the drops," Kashka
said. "I'll see Mercury dimes or silver quarters,
wartime silver nickels. ... When that happens, I know people
are scraping the bottom of their barrel."
Randy Francis, general manager of Idaho-based
vending manufacture (manufactures the U-Spin Spacesaver),
has spent the past decade promoting his company's bulk candy
vending business across the United States and in more than
a dozen foreign countries. Thanks to the recent economic
slowdown, he expects his vending business will increase
substantially in the future.
"People won't spend the money to buy their
kid a $2 or $3 toy they normally would, but they'll give
them some quarters out of their pocket to buy a toy capsule
or candy from a vending machine," Francis said. "It
seems like every time there's a downturn in the economy,
our business picks up."
The Idaho based vending company generates
its revenues by selling candy vending machines to private
entrepreneurs who subsequently place and support their machines
as part of a home-based business. Despite start up
costs of $300 to $500 per machine (depending upon how many
customer orders), Francis said he's never seen a business
that allows investors to recoup their investments so quickly.
"Gumballs that sell for 25 cents only cost
vendors 2 cents. That's one of the reasons vending
works as well as it does," Francis said. "Even if
you open up a dispenser to its widest setting for a product
like M&Ms, it cost you about 11 cents per pull."
"Compared to what they get buying candy
in a grocery store, the (vending) customer still gets a
good handful of product for a quarter, but the vendor is
still making a significant profit."
Despite giving a percentage of their earnings
to the owners of the stores or offices the average U-Spin
Spacesaver takes in a monthly gross profit of $50 to $100
for each machine in operation, although actual earnings
vary from location to location. He said the Las Vegas
Valley's rapid growth makes it a prime site for those looking
to enter the industry.
"It's almost impossible for a Mom &
Pop operator to get machines placed in the casinos or big
(grocery or retail store) chains because they contract out
with vending corporations, but there are still plenty of
places to place machines there," Francis said.
Not everyone is convinced of the vending
industry's infallibility, however.
John Corcoran, who has owned Ice Cold Vendors
of Nevada since 1973, said rising product costs have cut
into profit margins at his small business.
Corcoran said on a per-machine basis, revenue
has stayed steady regardless of the economy, although the
costs of purchasing and maintaining his machines have risen
in recent years. Automation of the workplace has also
cut into his profits, Corcoran said.
"Because of computers, a lot of offices
have less people in them and that translates to smaller
accounts," he said. "I've been in big monstrous warehouses
where there are only five people working there."
Automatic Merchandiser's report also cited
increased expenses for gasoline, electricity and employee
benefits as factors that negatively influenced vendors'
profitability in 2000 and early 2001.
-INBUSINESS Las Vegas - October 2001 - Article written by Chris
Jones/IBLV Staff
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