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I left my dad's vet clinic to start a pet health brand — and sold it for millions
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本文讲述了James Bascharon,Vetnique公司的创始人,从一名兽医到创立宠物健康公司的创业历程。他最初在车库里创业,通过解决宠物常见的健康问题,如肛门腺问题,开发出Glandex等产品,获得了成功。Vetnique公司逐渐发展壮大,产品线不断丰富,最终被私募股权公司收购。Bascharon分享了他的创业经验,强调了产品创新、与兽医建立合作关系以及满足市场需求的重要性。他的故事展示了创业的艰辛与成就,以及对宠物健康的承诺。

🐾 **创业初衷与挑战:** James Bascharon最初希望继承父亲的兽医诊所,但由于父亲另有计划,他决定离开,并通过兼职工作维持生计。这段经历让他深刻体会到独立的重要性,并激发了他创业的决心。

💡 **产品创新与市场机会:** Bascharon在工作中观察到宠物肛门腺问题的普遍性,但现有解决方案效果不佳。他意识到这是一个未被满足的市场需求,于是开始研发针对该问题的产品Glandex,并亲自在地下室制作。

🤝 **建立合作与拓展:** 为了推广Glandex,Bascharon没有选择大规模广告,而是着重与兽医建立合作关系,通过口碑传播产品。同时,他积极拓展销售渠道,包括线上平台、宠物店和兽医会议,使得产品迅速推广。

💰 **公司发展与收购:** Vetnique公司不断发展壮大,产品线逐渐丰富,并于2023年被私募股权公司收购。Bascharon仍然担任CEO,公司持续增长,业务遍及全球多个国家。

Dr. James Bascharon, the founder of Vetnique, started the company out of his garage. It has grown to more than 200 employees worldwide.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with James Bascharon, the founder and CEO of Vetnique. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I always begin my story with my parents.

My dad is a veterinarian, and my parents immigrated to the US from Egypt with almost nothing. My father started out cleaning dog cages, and my mother — a trained pharmacist — cleaned hotel rooms.

Eventually, my dad earned his veterinary license and opened two animal hospitals. Watching him build something from the ground up inspired my deep appreciation for both animal care and entrepreneurship.

Growing up in suburban Chicago, I was the kid who always said I wanted to be a vet. But I was also inventing product ideas and brainstorming businesses before I even understood what a startup was. I was equally drawn to the white coat and the balance sheet.

When it came time to choose a path, I decided to follow the family legacy. I studied pre-vet at the University of Illinois, then took a risk and left early for veterinary school in Grenada. After completing my clinical year back in Illinois, I returned home ready to join the family practice.

But reality hit hard.

Working with my father wasn't what I'd hoped for

I thought I'd be part of growing the family business — scaling our two clinics into a larger network, maybe even becoming a national player. But my dad had other plans: He wanted me to be a vet, not a partner.

It was clear I wasn't going to get a seat at the table the way I'd imagined. So I took a second risk: I applied to two emergency vet clinics for night and weekend shifts. Despite little ER experience, I got both jobs. I needed space — professionally and emotionally — from my father's clinic. And I needed the income. At the time, new vets earned less than nurses for humans, and I had loans to pay.

Still, I wasn't satisfied.

To reclaim a sense of independence, I launched a house-call veterinary service around Chicago. It was just me and my wife, who helped out with scheduling and support. We provided high-end, in-home care, often euthanasia — helping pets pass peacefully under their favorite tree or on their family's couch.

It was fulfilling and proved I could build something myself. But it wasn't scalable, and I was exhausted, juggling three vet jobs and always on call.

That's when I began to brainstorm product ideas. I didn't sleep much that year. I thought about everything from franchising the house-call model to launching new pet supplements.

Then one day, a lightbulb went off.

I saw the same problem again and again — and realized no one was solving it

As a vet, I saw countless dogs with anal gland issues. They'd scoot across the carpet, sometimes rupture glands, and end up needing expensive surgery. The only solution we had was adding fiber to their diet — canned pumpkin or prescription food — neither of which was very effective.

One client came in frustrated. He'd been back every three weeks for months. "Is there anything else we can do?" he asked.

I didn't have a good answer, and I hated that.

So I went home and started researching. No product was on the market tailored specifically for this common condition, so that night, my idea for Glandex was born.

I created the formula myself, mixing soluble and insoluble fiber with other gut-supportive ingredients. I made the first batches in five-gallon Home Depot buckets in my basement. My wife and I packed and labeled everything by hand.

Eventually, I launched Glandex online with a tongue-in-cheek campaign: "Boot the Scoot."

It wasn't an overnight success, but early Amazon reviews called it a miracle product. That was my proof of concept. We earned two patents and built the company — Vetnique — on the idea that science-backed, vet-formulated products could fill critical gaps in pet care.

I didn't have money for major ad campaigns, so I leaned into my network. I knew that if I could get veterinarians to recommend Glandex, it would spread faster — and more credibly — than any influencer campaign.

We sold directly to consumers and through Amazon and Chewy, but I also started building distributor partnerships and exhibiting at vet conferences.

It worked. By 2015, we were in PetSmart and Petco. We expanded into grooming products, probiotics, and joint supplements. Slowly, I stopped practicing clinical vet med and went full-time at Vetnique in 2017.

I sold the company in a multimillion-dollar deal — and stayed on to grow it

In 2023, I sold Vetnique to a private equity firm, Gryphon, in a multimillion-dollar deal. I still own about 10% of the company and remain CEO. We now have over 200 employees globally, including about 55 in the US.

Since the acquisition, we've doubled in size by acquiring UK-based pet supplement brand YuMOVE, entered Walmart, and expanded to over 25 countries. Our growth continues at over 30% year over year.

Our mission is to help pets thrive for life by addressing the biggest health needs: digestive issues, joint health, allergies, dental care, and ear care. But more than that, we aim to raise the bar in pet wellness by delivering science-based, vet-developed products that solve real problems.

More than 100,000 veterinarians worldwide recommend our products, and we now support the health of over 5 million pets each year.

I never imagined the path would take me from my father's clinic to building a global company — but I'm proud of every step.

And yes, my dad is proud, too.

Do you have a unique side hustle, or has your side hustle replaced your full-time job? Email Katherine Tangalakis-Lippert at ktangalakislippert@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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兽医创业 宠物健康 产品创新 市场营销
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