Felipe Flores is charmingly joyous, so itโs easy to understand how his start-up business has won some major contracts.
Born in South America, his accent still has its native tones, as he talks with boyish excitement about his big data business Clear Blue Water.
Flores came to Australia for the first time when he was 19 years old with his sister. He was on summer break and had intended to stay for two months and then move back to his homeland. Ten years later, heโs still here.
Never afraid to take on a challenge, Flores decided to attend university in Australia despite only speaking broken English at the time. His first job down under was as a door-to-door salesman, and it took him two and a half years to realise when people asked him which โmobโ he was from, they werenโt accusing him of being a gangster.
After completing a degree in computer systems engineering in Brisbane, setting a record at an international karate club for the fastest time to get a black belt, and working at a data analytics consulting company, Flores started Clear Blue Water alongside cofounder Mark James.
Now, Clear Blue Water turns over just under $2 million annually, has users in 67 countries and more than 40 clients. It was also ranked as one of Australiaโs top 50 start-ups at this yearโs StartupSmart Awards. Flores spoke to SmartCompany about working with a cofounder who was once his boss, winning major clients such as Foxtel and salsa dancing.
Name: Felipe Flores
Company: Clear Blue Water
Location: Burwood East, Victoria
Mornings
Like most successful entrepreneurs Flores is an early riser.
โI get up at 5am and I go to the gym before work. Iโll arrive at work between 7:30am and 8am.
โThe first thing I do is plan the day and do some strategy work. Basically, thatโs working out whatโs going to give us as a company the greatest benefit to do that day or for the week, and I do that for myself personally as well.โ
Flores then spends the first part of the morning focusing on his most important tasks.
โAt 10am Iโll start ringing existing clients, so thatโs all about touching base with our customers and exploring how we can add further value to them,โ he says.
โBecause we have good relationships with our clients that usually gets me really pumped up because weโre doing really well, and theyโre doing really well, and we can help them. Then Iโll ring prospective customers when Iโm feeling pumped.โ
Daily life
Within Clear Blue Water, Flores is in charge of sales, marketing and business development, while his cofounder James focuses on the software development side.
โHe is a technology genius. Heโs extremely visionary and he lives five years in the future in terms of technology,โ he says.
โHeโs an IT architect where he sees the big picture of the software, but I challenge him on the real world application of it and how weโre going to get benefit from those things. So together we structure what we want the developers to build.โ
Flores describes his staff as a โteam of superstarsโ.
โThey get to work on their individual parts with complete power and complete responsibility,โ he says.
โThey can build the software and do the data analysis in any way, at any time and they can work from wherever, but it has to produce the output that we need and if it doesnโt itโs on them.โ
Since starting the business, Flores and James have perfected a hiring technique which involves four interview stages incorporating personality, aptitude and coding tests.
โWe want to see everything that the person is. We also have a 7am interview in the city which is specifically there for the people who are quite keen.
โWe look for people who are up-starters, who take a lot of ownership in their work. We strive for people who Mark describes as โalphasโ. We want them to drive their ideas and do their best work at Clear Blue Water.โ
Floresโ business relationship with James has undergone a transition. Prior to starting Clear Blue Water, James had been Floresโ boss in their previous workplace and changing this dynamic proved to be a test.
โWhen we started this company that dynamic stuck around for a while and it definitely took a little bit of time for me to rise up and for us to have a new way of working together where we were equal,โ Flores says.
โIf you want to go fast, go alone but if you want to go far, go together. At some points in the first year it felt like it was one of us leading the company, but now weโre settling in and working more as a block.โ
That first year of business saw numerous fights between the pair, but the foundation of their relationship has kept them going.
โItโs no bullshit, a lot of respect, a lot of care, and thatโs the same way we treat our employees,โ Flores says.
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