Create a free account, or log in

My biggest mistake: Ammar Issa, founder of AMR Hair and Beauty

Ammar Issa has been in the beauty industry since he was 11-years-old. All of these years in business mean he’s no stranger to making mistakes โ€” but thereโ€™s one that sticks out the most.
Sophie Venz
Sophie Venz
ammar-issa-amr
Ammar Issa, founder of AMR Hair and Beauty. Source: supplied.

Ammar Issa has entrepreneurial spirit running through his veins.

At 11-years-old he was already working in the beauty industry, packing boxes out the back of a local shop. He took to reselling products at school, and, after realising he would have to build his own brands to make a name for himself, Issa started his own company at 14-years-old โ€” although he couldnโ€™t register the business name until he turned 16.

The business name registered was AMR Hair and Beauty, and itโ€™s a company that now earns more than $100 million in revenue a year.

All of these years in business โ€” especially at such a young age โ€” mean Issa is no stranger to making mistakes. And thereโ€™s one that sticks out the most.

The mistake

For Issa, partnering with a third-party logistics company was not only his biggest business mistake, โ€œit was the start of the biggest mistake of my life,โ€ he says.

Off the bat, the partnership with CS Logistics โ€” a company that has since become insolvent โ€” saw AMRโ€™s rent go from $150,000 per year to $500,000 per month.

โ€œWe were in a huge losing battle, but we were in a contract,โ€ Issa tells SmartCompany Plus.

โ€œI had signed the contract, just under the pretense of the owner. It was a billion dollar business,โ€ he explains.

Issa loved the other companies that CS Logistics was working with at the time (Sass and Bide and TUMI Bags, to name a few) and admits thatโ€™s why he โ€œjumped to itโ€.

But the rose-coloured glasses quickly wore off, and by then and with the contract signed, there was no easy way out.

โ€œEvery time we told the third-party logistics company, โ€˜hey, we want out of thisโ€™, they would say, โ€˜Okay, well we’ve got your stock and we’ve got your warehouse, so weโ€™ll lock it all up,โ€ Issa recalls.

โ€œIt was like we were drowning constantly.โ€

Of the whole experience, Issa says he โ€œneeded it as a wake-up callโ€.

โ€œI wish it was a smaller mistake, not as big as [what it was], but I got my wake up call one way or another.โ€

The context

In 2015, AMR went from $9 million dollars to $16 million in turnover. But with rapid growth comes rapid responsibility, and the company was still only in its tween-aged years.

โ€œWe were young and, excuse my language, [we were] idiots,โ€ Issa says.

โ€œWe were just running around trying to make do with every order we got, trying to impress that customer.โ€

The growth meant AMR needed to upgrade from the 1500 square metre warehouse it was operating out of, so Issa began looking for a larger building in the area.

โ€œEvery single real estate institution I sat down with, well theyโ€™d love the story,โ€ he says.

โ€œBut the minute you walk out, they’ll send you an email and say, โ€˜hey we need, you know, 12 months of bank guaranteeโ€™. That was about $1.8 million to $2.5 million.โ€

A lot of big companies donโ€™t have to get a bank guarantee, due to their reputation or ASX listing.

But AMR was not โ€” and is still not โ€” listed, so Issa realised he wouldnโ€™t be able to get a big warehouse on his own. And he knew he needed a big warehouse to keep up with the companyโ€™s growth.

โ€œThe only method I found was to partner up with a third-party logistics (3PL) company,โ€ Issa explains.

CS Logistics came in, looked at what AMR was doing โ€” and what Issa was paying โ€” and told him โ€œthis is crazy. Youโ€™ve got 14 staff. We could do this many orders for you with only three or four staffโ€.

The impact

Financially, Issa says AMR lost $5 million dollars before he could get out of the contract, which happened after โ€œa very dark 12 monthsโ€.

Issa emphasises that the $5 million figure is just in costs paid. It doesnโ€™t include the business AMR potentially lost while customers were waiting for their orders, or the business it could have gained from new customers.

But itโ€™s not just the revenue loss that affected the business. Currently, AMR doesnโ€™t have any investors โ€” and Issa is the sole owner.

When asked if he is considering getting investors on board, Issa says heโ€™s not completely shying away from the idea, although he is โ€œsuper, super cautiousโ€.

Thatโ€™s because while Issaโ€™s mistake was playing out in real-time, AMR did have an investor interested.

The potential investor saw the problem with the 3PL company early, and told Issa in the beginning that they didnโ€™t think it was a good idea. When the contract was signed and the deal commenced, the investor decided not to go through with the funding.

โ€œI think it was best for both of us,โ€ Issa admits.

The lesson

For Issa, there wasnโ€™t really a โ€˜fixโ€™ to this mistake; AMR was able to leave the contract after 12 months and things got better from there. But there are three key lessons that Issa learnt along the way.

First, he says he doesnโ€™t believe heโ€™ll โ€œmake another mistake as big as this oneโ€.

Second, heโ€™s realised stronger due diligence is necessary when it comes to contracts.

โ€œIโ€™ve now put things in place where, for a contract like that, even if itโ€™s the most important person in the company, they canโ€™t sign anything without proper mechanisms going forward,โ€ Issa explains.

These mechanisms include proper service-level agreements and key performance indicators, and making sure they are all clearly stated in the contract.

โ€œThat means if a month goes by and thatโ€™s not done, we could raise that as a concern and adapt the contract,โ€ Issa says. If he could turn back the clock, these mechanisms are something he โ€œabsolutelyโ€ would have done.

The final โ€” perhaps most enlightening lesson โ€” was understanding that AMRโ€™s products need their own warehouse, because theyโ€™re โ€œvery, very complicatedโ€ in terms of customers, as hairdressers often want to order specific brands.

โ€œIf Sophie loves Lโ€™Orรฉal, she will only use Lโ€™Orรฉal,โ€ Issa says as an example.

โ€œBut with 3PL companies, they base it on the highest sellers to the lowest sellers, and they base your warehouse across that. So then you would have to walk down every single aisle for one Lโ€™Orรฉal order.โ€

Issa says that in his business (or for any business the size of AMR, which has around 11,000 stock keeping units), โ€œyou have got to do your own warehousingโ€.

โ€œIn order to take care of your customers, and to love your customers just as much as they love you to give you your business, youโ€™ve got to be able to take care of the order yourself.โ€