Create a free account, or log in

The road less travelled: Why Steve McCarthy quit his chief executive job to build $2.5 million tyre business Road Runner Mobile Tyres

Name: Steve McCarthy Company: Road Runner Mobile Tyres Based: Melbourne As the chief executive of multimillion dollar outdoor advertising company Adshell, Steve McCarthy had already built a hugely successful career before he started to think about launching his own venture in 2011. Likewise, his business partner John Shim had spent 24 years as a consultant […]
Kirsten Robb
Kirsten Robb
The road less travelled: Why Steve McCarthy quit his chief executive job to build $2.5 million tyre business Road Runner Mobile Tyres

Name: Steve McCarthy

Company: Road Runner Mobile Tyres

Based: Melbourne

As the chief executive of multimillion dollar outdoor advertising company Adshell, Steve McCarthy had already built a hugely successful career before he started to think about launching his own venture in 2011.

Likewise, his business partner John Shim had spent 24 years as a consultant at PwC, where heโ€™d worked his way up to partner.

But it was a chance to build something on their own that enticed the two friends, whoโ€™d met years before when Shim headed up an audit team for McCarthy, to quit their comfy corporate gigs and throw their energy into building a business.

โ€œI was looking at some opportunities to get into a business of my own,โ€ McCarthy says.

โ€œAnd at the same time, John was going through the same thought process. So we kind of looked at each other and thought โ€˜weโ€™re probably better off doing something together than we are on our ownโ€™.โ€

Having looked at a number of business opportunities including training organisations and various manufacturing and media businesses, it was Shim that hit upon the pairโ€™s golden idea while sitting for hours on a plastic chair, in the cramped waiting room of a tyre service center.

โ€œHe was going through the process of getting his tyres fitted, and he called me the next day and said, โ€˜Iโ€™ve just had a really average experience as customerโ€™,โ€ says McCarthy.

โ€œI certainly wouldnโ€™t have put buying tyres in the top five things Iโ€™d ever experienced from a customer perspective, but John was very serious about saying, โ€˜there must be a better way in this day and ageโ€™.โ€

The pair launched Road Runner Mobile Tyres, a mobile business that services, fits and aligns tyres, in 2012 with the idea that customer service and convenience could shake up the archaic tyre industry.

But McCarthy admits even with a niche idea and years of experience in the corporate world, launching his own business was not going to be like steering Adshell โ€“ a company heโ€™d helped grow into a $130 million business in 10 years.

โ€œThe big difference between being an entrepreneur and those corporate-type roles is where the money comes from,โ€ he says.

โ€œWhen the big companies are writing the cheques, then life itโ€™s a bit different to when you and your shareholders are writing the cheques.โ€

Two years on and the gamble to go it alone has paid off for McCarthy and Shim, with Road Runner Mobile Tyres now turning over $2.5 million annually and boasting more than 10,000 customers across operations in News South Wales, Victoria and Queensland.

McCarthy sits down with SmartCompany to share the secrets of a strong business partnership and why being a business owner, rather than a chief executive, means wearing many more hats.

ย 

Mornings

ย 

One of the many ways McCarthy and Shim complement each other as business partners is by being on opposite schedules.

โ€œItโ€™s a fluke,โ€ laughs McCarthy. โ€œIโ€™m the morning person and John is a night owl.โ€

McCarthy will get to the office as early as 6.30 or 7am to check on his team on the road, while Shim in known to pull late nights.

โ€œQuite often heโ€™ll be sending spreadsheets at 2am and Iโ€™ll be replying 5am โ€“ it works really well,โ€ he says.

ย 

Daily life

ย 

The pair generally split their daily tasks down the middle, with Shim using his financial expertise to head up shareholder relations and cashflow, while McCarthy takes a lead on customer relations, sales and marketing.

โ€œTo be honest though, we just get in and do it. Thereโ€™s no grand master plan, itโ€™s just who is there at any given time,โ€ he says.

McCarthy says itโ€™s that mutual respect and trust of each otherโ€™s judgment and abilities that is key to a successful business partnership.

โ€œThe starting point needs to be a strong level of mutual trust and respect. I respect his skills and attributes and what he brings to the table and what heโ€™s done, and he respects me. That gives us the strong footing to start with,โ€ he says.

โ€œThe other important thing is having lots of open and honest conversations, thereโ€™s nothing that happens in our business that we donโ€™t talk through. And then lastly, when you do go through issues, you both got to be able to have a bit of laugh and enjoy each othersโ€™ company.โ€

Coming from large corporate environments, McCarthy says the pair had to learn how to function with smaller teams.

โ€œ[As chief executive], we used to have white board sessions and put a lot of different initials next to different tasks that needed to be done. Now, thereโ€™s only so many initials to put on the board โ€“ you have a lot of balls in the air at any one time as business owner.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s no doubt we would not have achieved what we have achieved on our own. Because the reality in business is thereโ€™s just too much to do,โ€ he says.

ย 

Leisure

ย 

McCarthy says he manages his work-life balance with the help of his supportive partner, but admits its something that any entrepreneur struggles with โ€“ especially in the first few years of business.

โ€œNo one gives you something for nothing, so if that means we work a little harder in first years, then so be it,โ€ he says.

When he does get some down time, McCarthy says he likes to prioritise exercise for his physical and mental heath.

โ€œIโ€™m a runner and I also play old man soccer,โ€ he laughs

ย 

The future

ย 

The last two years have been about laying โ€œthe bedrockโ€ of the business, according to McCarthy, who says the near future will be about growing the business into Perth, Adelaide and Canberra.

โ€œI think from our perspective, we do see ourselves as being a national business,โ€ he says.

For a business that is strictly focused on delivering a great customer experiences, McCarthy says he would not rule out the option of one day franchising the businesses, but would not do so at the expense of consistent company values.

โ€œThe franchise opportunity is certainly there, but whatโ€™s really important to us is to grow off the back of great customer service,โ€ he says.

And for the pair of entrepreneurs themselves, McCarthy says he and Shim are both โ€œvery much committedโ€ to the business in a long-term sense.

โ€œWill I be in tyres at age 75? Who knows? But I will probably be doing something โ€“ thereโ€™s too many hours in the day to sit around looking at the water,โ€ he says.ย