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In the Press

The Washington Post
Aaron Sacks

Age: 16 Personalized Playing Cards

Monday, March 26, 2007; Page B01

Sixteen-year-old Aaron Sacks has built a successful business by cutting corners.

Not the kind of cutting that attracts the attention of, say, the feds, but the kind that keeps your customers from getting injured when they handle your product.


(Photos By Marvin Joseph -- The Washington Post)

This is how it happened:

About the time Aaron, a junior at Montgomery Blair High School in Silver Spring, was preparing to launch his personalized playing-card sales business, You're On Deck, he discovered a problem with the cards he was selling over the Internet: The corners were too sharp. Aaron worried that sharp corners could mean bloody fingers.

The solution was his first major business investment: a corner-cutting machine, purchased with money from his first major investor: Grandma Barbara.

Aaron had researched many possibilities before he settled on the personalized playing-card business. He'd fantasized about opening an arcade or some kind of sports facility, but franchise fees were far beyond a teenager's reach. So he chose an idea closer to home.

He decided to cash in on the poker craze that's swept across the country. Judging from the reception the family received when it distributed souvenir decks of cards at his brother Jacob's Bar Mitzvah, he had a hunch he could succeed with a business selling personalized decks.

Customers send Aaron the photographs or logos they want printed on their cards. He then prints them out on special paper, using the printing shop his parents run out of their Wheaton home.

Aaron has a shy, low-key manner. But get him talking about You're On Deck ( http://yodcards.com), and he shifts into sales mode.

He says his cards are inexpensive. Most business require a minimum order of maybe 20 decks, but Aaron will sell you as few as five. According to his Web site, the price per deck ranges from $5 for five to $2 for 250.

Although many playing cards come in cardboard boxes, his are in plastic containers, which protect them and make it easier to get to them. They're also classier, he says.

"If you want to convince other people you're the best and to buy from you, you have to believe you're the best," Aaron said.

Aaron suspects his first customer bought cards from him as a favor for his parents.

"They bought 10 decks at first, and I knew they were just being nice," he said. "When they ordered 75 more, I knew they really liked them."

Most people who purchase cards through his Web site don't realize they're dealing with a teenager, at least not until he shows up to personally deliver the decks. His mother or father usually drives him, because he doesn't have a license.

Youth could be a marketing advantage. Judges at a recent business competition were so wowed by his fledgling business that they hooked him up with his biggest job to date: 1,000 decks featuring a drawing of former D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams, which were given to those who attended his roast.

"I was surprised it took off the way it did," said Aaron's father, David. "But he can think well on his feet, which is the key for selling."


Did you see me on December 26th - on WUSA 9 News
(Washington DC)
and in the Silver Spring Gazette?


See me on YouTube now:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKMCn-tWVXo



From "Silver Chips" Aaron Sacks
image preview
Junior Aaron Sacks's business "You're On Deck" creates custom playing cards. Photo by Ariana McLean.
When Aaron Sacks was asked to develop a business plan in January, 2006, customizing cards instantly came to mind. In 2005, he and his family had customized cards for his brother's Bar Mitzvah, which had a casino theme. With the help of his parents, who own a printing company, Sack's business, "You're on Deck," was up and running by mid-February that same year. "You're on Deck" allows customers to pick a custom graphic to be printed on the back of a deck of cards.

Sacks's primary target is small businesses. "I do a lot of company logos for marketing. In competitions they like to see that," Sacks explains. But he also does business with people on an individual level. Regardless of who it is, Sacks is available for their custom card needs. "I'm going to continue it as long as the customers are still there," Sacks says.

contact us:  sales@yodcards.com