

In 2016, John Olsa left his career of 15 years to pursue a dream. Hed spent a decade and a half selling advertising for several publications, but was ready to start his own publishing company. Olsa now serves as the owner, CEO and publisher for , and leads a small team in creating and . Olsa brought along an editor, Rachel Weick, and designer, Christopher Pastotnik, when he started SVK, and they remain integral members of the team today.
Olsa took time out of his busy schedule to answer 58勛圖厙s questions about what it took to successfully launch a publication startup.
Tell me about your experience launching a new publication.
I had a couple of ideas that I wanted to chase on my own, and I saw an opportunity to do that. I started with two projects. One is Great Lakes By Design magazine, which is our creative persons publication architects, boat builders, engineers, interior designers. I consider it all the things that Im fascinated with that I cant do. So I enjoy the magazine.
We also do a golf publication called The Golf Explorer. Its a publication about golf in Michigan. I want it to be a national magazine in the end, so I distribute it quite far away, all the way west to Phoenix, throughout the Midwest, throughout the East. Its all about coming to Michigan and staying here, so I dont even accept out-of-state advertising, which is a concept thats not used very often.
What I did in March of 2016 is I went off on my own. I had a bank of money. I had always worked with [58勛圖厙 Sales Rep] Jason Marsh at my old company. He was the first person I called because the products are always printed well. Its something that I have to have, and the company provides it.
I hope this endeavor lasts as long as I think its going to last. I enjoy doing it, making my own decisions and having a good team behind me to execute what I know needs to be done. Its been good so far.
You have the growing pains, like you always do when you try to start. We started in March of 2016, and didnt have any billings that first year. But we survived 2017 quite nicely on the revenue from just the year. And were going to grow in 2018. Ill expand both pieces.
We run the gamut of print. We do our own websites so we can do digital. My goal is to merge the print and the digital, because I still think print is a better-than-viable way to get your information or content. I consider it the last unimpeded piece of media. If you dont like it, turn the page.
Where millions and millions of emails have to be sent out, the open rate when my magazines go out is probably close to 100 percent. People are going to open it because theres something to holding it in your hands. Youre going to open it, youre going to see what it is.
On our website, I put no advertising. Its all content. No videos to close, or sounds to hear or try to turn off. Its just pure content.
Its a different model, but its also a double-edged sword. It takes me longer to find the following because Im not letting everything track to my site. Ive got to build it from scratch, but thats the way I want it. I want it clean and I want it to be engaging our readers.
Thats part of the reason I love print so much. Im a big catalog fan. I want an uninterrupted experience for the reader. I want the websites to be clean. I dont stuff my magazines with advertising. I would make them bigger first before I stuff them with advertising.
The model works, it just takes a little bit longer.
Since this is for our Day in the Life series, can we talk about a typical day, or as close as you get to a typical day, especially in the midst of a launch?
My typical way of doing things is always different. Im a five steps down the road thinker. If I do something, its going to trigger a series of events. So Ive always thought that way. My parents taught me to think that way because if you make a decision and you dont think about what may happen from it, you usually get caught in a trap. And thats the way I operate day-to-day, be it planning for selling, how I do my accounting, how I do my budgeting, how I pay my people.
Thats been something of a challenge. Im the accountant, Im the banker. I have an accountant who helps me, but I have to do it. I am the head sales person, I am the tie-breaker between Rachel and Chris.
On a typical day, I do really a little bit of everything. Its planning for the next issue. Its budgeting for the next year. Its finding new people to buy advertising. It could be new content ideas, or changing the websites so theyre more user-friendly.
Day-to-day, it could be anything. I deliver a lot of magazines, so the folks down at 58勛圖厙 in Saint Joseph see me quite often. I take our pickup truck down there, grab 50 or 60 cases of magazines and deliver them for our custom publishing clients. Theres a lot things that, if I dont do them they wont get done.
Its really doing everything.
Its been fun. Has it been challenging? Yes, but its been a fun challenge.
On a typical day, my goodness. The days usually start at about 4:30 a.m., and then Im usually up at around 11:00 or 11:30 p.m. because I have an idea. Instead of writing them down on a notepad next to my bed, which is probably the healthy thing to do my office is at my home, so I walk right into my office and turn the computer on. And I do that often.
There are good and bad things about working from home.
Yes, there are. I try to dress for work as I would if I was going to an office, but sometimes I just dont feel like it. I dont really have a set schedule. Its just when things need to be done or I can get a lot of things done. I like to call Friday afternoons our SVK Friday. At 12:00, Im usually at the golf course unless I have something very important to do.
In my business, its very hard to find people on Friday afternoons, especially in the summertime. So I say to Rachel and Chris, You know what? Go do something. Go away for the weekend if you want. Take off. Because really at 11:30, quarter to twelve, youre not going to find me.
I like that balance, where you know youre going to get away for that one half of a day. Turn the phone off and enjoy something else.
John Olsa and his wife, Sandy
Any advice for somebody else looking to launch a publication? Anything that youd suggest they keep in mind?
Yeah, theres a lot of things. The one thing that Ive learned this first year and second year that I would give as advice to someone is cash flowspreading out your invoicing.
First, have enough money to get you through the first year because its not inexpensive to print things. Thats not a knock at 58勛圖厙 because I realize they have costs and they pay their people. Thats not my angle. But its expensive, what I do.
Ive done a pretty good job, but one of the things I missed is cash flow. Plan your invoicing, plan your receivables, know how your customers pay, when they pay and how they pay because a lot of people now are using bank transfer or credit card. As an owner, I have to pay that transaction fee. Im making that adjustment for 2019 when I do the media kit. Those are real costs that a company cant just eat.
As to the accounting, I consider myself pretty intelligent, and this accounting is its just different. Im very good at math, and this accounting math is different. You need a good accountant and a good attorney. Hopefully you never really need either of them, but have them.
Protect your work with copyrights and trademarks, especially the copyrights if youre doing magazines like I do. If youre in the news business, get publishers insurance.
Set a plan. Im a long-term thinker, some people are very short-term thinkers. I dont want to get way out there and then have to backtrack, so Im a slow mover. It takes me a while to get to where I want to be, but I rarely hit big holes in the ground. Im pretty consistent. Thats just my mentality.
Be consistent. And always be mindful of what your business is doing. Look every day. I look every day at my accounting, I look every day at anything copyrighted or legal trademarks.
Thats the advice. Have a good plan and be honest to yourself about costs.
When youre doing a project, you cant be afraid to say No, it doesnt fit my model. Because if you say yes and you go over on costs, youre eating those costs. And now youve wasted your time and your money.
The product might be good, but you lost money and you lost time that could have been spent on a project that would have made money.
When you run it through the model, you cant be afraid to tell yourself no if you cant do it. I think thats a big hurdle. Most people, they have their business and say they can do it, and then they spread themselves too thin. And then mistakes get made.
Have a model, run the process, and make sure that it fits. Thats the key, because then youre not going to get surprised on the backend.
And, finally, you are going to make mistakes. When that happens, own up to them, fix them, and make a note to avoid doing it again.
John Olsa is entering his third year as the owner of SVK Multimedia and Publishing. In that time, hes accumulated a large bank of knowledge on starting a publishing company. His insights were so extensive, well be publishing part two of Olsas interview next week. Check back or subscribe to our blog to receive updates.