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Whitefish teen with a knack for business

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| February 9, 2011 8:14 AM

Miles Friedman might be a 40-year-old

chief executive trapped in a 13-year-old’s body. It’s certainly

easy to forget he’s only in seventh grade after glancing over his

daily routine.

Wake up at 5:45 a.m. and check business

e-mails until 8 a.m. Go to school until 3:30 p.m., then it’s back

to the office to fill and package orders — and answer more

e-mails.

Squeeze in a little homework, eat

dinner and fill more orders until it’s finally time for bed at

10:30 p.m.

Eerily absent from this routine are

mindless video games and TV time. But Friedman isn’t a typical

teenager — he’s a full-fledged business owner pulling down more

cash in a week than the average high school graduate will pocket in

a month.

The Whitefish Middle School student

owns and operates the Creekwood Fingerboard Store out of his

upstairs bedroom. In two years, Friedman has grown the company into

one of the most recognizable brands on the fingerboard market.

Fingerboards are micro skateboards

about the size of stick of gum that riders perform skateboarding

tricks with using only two fingers. The boards are often used in

miniature fingerboard skate parks featuring tiny ramps and rails.

The activity is widely popular among teens, especially in

Europe.

Friedman isn’t exactly a fanatic about

fingerboarding. He simply sees entrepreneurial potential in a

“scene that is growing tremendously.”

“I’d been looking to start some kind of

business,” Friedman said about the start-up. “It could have been

anything, T-shirts or whatever. I’ve always had a knack for money —

I was mowing lawns at eight years old.”

After coming across online videos of

fingerboarding, he was sold on the activity as a business

concept.

Friedman saved up thousands of dollars

to buy his first fingerboard mold. He designed the boards using CAD

software and spent the next year perfecting the construction

process.

Each board features five layers of

veneer wood pressed together using a special glue concoction. The

shape is sanded, and a lacquer is applied to protect it. Tiny skate

trucks and wheels are added separately.

Creekwood’s niche in the market comes

from Friedman’s ability to do custom designs and pay attention to

the details of each board. He wants to be the Lexus or Rolls Royce

of fingerboard companies, not the Wal-Mart.

“I want to put out the perfect

product,” he said. “If it isn’t just right, it goes in the

garbage.”

Friedman’s marketing is mostly through

online fingerboard forums and YouTube videos, yet his boards have

touched nearly every corner of the globe, including Europe, Asia

and the Americas. He rarely sells boards locally, noting that

fingerboarding isn’t very popular here.

To amp up the business’ image, he

recently launched a fingerboard team that sponsors stand-out riders

using Creekwood products — a marketing tactic often used by skate

and snowboard shops. A group of his riders will go to Boston this

year for a competition and he’s paying to send a rider to Germany

for one of the largest fingerboard expos in the world.

Through a combination of his superior

product and business smarts, Friedman’s company is healthily on the

black side of the accounting ledger. He’s making up to $1,000 in

sales a day and can fill 80 orders at a time.

Currently, he’s making six boards a day

that sell for $12 to $25 a piece. His goal for the next year is to

grow production to 30-50 boards a day, but for that he’d need

employees.

“My goal for next year is to have a

small office and a 1-800 number and to be able to handle more

volume,” Friedman said. “At this rate, I won’t need to get a job in

high school.”

Creekwood isn’t a business model

Friedman is banking on to last forever. He says the scene could

“crash and burn any day,” but he knows he’ll be involved with the

business world in some form throughout his career — a career that’s

starting alongside puberty.

“I don’t just want to sit around and

watch TV or play video games,” Friedman said, “I want to do

something with my childhood.”

To learn more about Creekwood products,

visit online at www.creekwoodfbs.com.