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How this founder made boozy mini-golf a $50 million business in two years

Holy Moley has rocketed to million-dollar success by reinventing fun pastimes and making them a great social experience.
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell
Holey Moley
FunLab chief executive Michael Schreiber. Source: Supplied.

If you take a tried-and-true mini-golf business model, add alcohol, and then push it towards a millennial market, what do you get?

In Michael Schreiberโ€™s case, about $50 million in revenue over two years.

The doors of Holey Moley, Australiaโ€™s first cocktail bar and mini-golf course opened in 2016 in Melbourne, and since then another 12 stores have opened across the country. The bars are the work of entertainment giant Funlab, the parent company of bowling business Strike Bowling and trampolining business Sky Zone.

Schreiber, FunLabโ€™s chief executive officer, founded Strike in 2002 and scaled the business to over 15 locations across the country before venturing into the trampolining market in 2012. A few years later, Schreiber decided to establish Strike under the umbrella of FunLab, with the goal of evolving the company to have a number of entertainment brands both locally and abroad.

FunLab has just recently celebrated the milestone of hitting $100 million in revenue, coupled with a forecasted 45% growth in its EBITDA for the coming financial year. Speaking to SmartCompany, Schreiber doesnโ€™t shy away from the companyโ€™s dogged focus on the millennial market.

โ€œWeโ€™ve found whatโ€™s resonating with the millennial market is reinventing fun pastimes and making them a great social experience. That thread runs through all our concepts, focusing on that social interaction between 18- to 35-year-olds,โ€ he says.

Along with Holey Moley, FunLab has also opened two new brands with a millennial bent: Archie Brothers Cirque Electriq, an all-in-one indoor boozy amusement park, and B. Lucky & Sons, an arcade and games bar in Melbourne.

With over 35 FunLab venues in Australia, the business is now looking further afield, setting up bars in both New Zealand and Singapore. The business is forecasting $130 million in revenue next year, with Schreiber saying experiences are looking like the future of entertainment retail.

โ€œWeโ€™re selling entertainment experiences, which very much plays into the retail landscape today. Traditional retail is under pressure, so landlords are looking for solutions to get people off the couch,โ€ he says.

โ€œNot many people are doing what weโ€™re doing, and weโ€™ve built up a lot of know-how and experience.โ€

The chief executive and founder also says FunLab has the goal of running the business as much like a startup as possible, despite its near 20 years of existence. For the celebration of the companyโ€™s $100 million milestone, Schreiber randomly gave away a brand new VW GTI car to one of FunLabโ€™s 1,180 team members, which he says was a way to โ€œdo right by the people who make it all happenโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s critical for a people-facing business. What happens in the store directly affects repeat business and customer satisfaction,โ€ he says.

Experiences set to dominate

Looking to the future, Schreiber says the business wonโ€™t be easing up on its relentless focus on experiences, saying FunLab wants to keep โ€œpushing the boundariesโ€ when it comes to new ventures.

Some of those new ventures will be in the augmented and virtual reality space, along with a delve into the eSports market. Immediately on the cards for 2019, however, is an expansion into karaoke, another tried-and-true market ready for a new take.

โ€œItโ€™s a great fun experience, and we donโ€™t see enough venues providing it,โ€ he says.

โ€œWe have to keep pushing the boundaries on our experiences otherwise people get bored. Social meeting is becoming very different, people donโ€™t go to nightclubs to hook up anymore, theyโ€™d prefer to meet people and have fun in a social experience with buddies.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s where we are, and thatโ€™s where the market is growing.โ€

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