How
skateboard legend Tony Hawk plans for the long road ahead
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[May 08, 2017]
By Burt Helm
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When most people
hear the name Tony Hawk, they picture him whirling through a 900 on
his skateboard at ESPN's X-Games, or on the cover of the iconic
video game series, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, which has collectively
sold millions of copies.
But Hawk, 48, is also successful off a skateboard, working as an
entrepreneur, philanthropist and investor. Over the past three
decades, he has founded Birdhouse Skateboards, the Tony Hawk
Foundation and invested in tech companies from DocuSign to Nest.
Hawk recently spoke with Reuters about the financial lessons he has
learned over the years, from his days as a high-flying teenage skate
champion to a father of teenagers today.
Q: Did you have any jobs before skateboarding professionally?
A: My only real job was a paper route for a while. I turned pro in
skating when I was 14. It wasn't lucrative at the time, but for a
14-year-old, making like $150 at a competition was a pretty big
deal. I basically saved all my earnings until I was 16, and I had
enough to buy a moped. To me that was functioning as a semi-adult.
Q: When did your career take off?
A: There were bigger sponsors involved in the competitions; the
prize money was going up into the thousands. I was 16, and suddenly
making six figures a year. And when you're 16, that seems like it's
never going to end.
Q: How did you handle that much money as a teenager?
A: I was lucky that I had my dad to give me a dose of reality. He
said: 'You really should be putting this money away for the future.'
I wasn't really looking toward the future. I was just looking at,
like, I could buy a cool car, and I could take all my friends to
Hawaii, and stuff like that. He just encouraged me to invest, so I
actually bought a house in Carlsbad, California, while I was a
senior in high school.
Looking back, I was thankful for that because in '91, '92,
everything came to a screeching halt for skating. My income was
dropping by half every month. I had this safety net in this house. I
ended up moving back to that place.
Q: Why did you start Birdhouse Skateboards, your equipment and
apparel company, in 1992?
A: I sensed that my pro skate career was ending. I actually took out
a second mortgage on that house, and pooled my funds with another
former pro skater. We started a brand based on the idea that
skateboarding would come back around. That was a big gamble.
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Skateboarder Tony Hawk performs during the Tony Hawk and Friends
European Skateboarding Tour in Brighton July 21, 2010. REUTERS/Luke
MacGregor
Q: How do you invest your money today?
A: At first my investment strategy was pretty standard - just mutual
funds and stocks, things like that. But I've started dabbling in
startup investing.
I invested in Nest early on (the Internet-enabled thermostat maker
was acquired by Google for $3.2 billion in 2014). I've invested in
Blue Bottle Coffee and a brewery in San Diego called Black Plague.
Also DocuSign and a few other tech companies. I like startups
because I like being on the ground floor of stuff, when my support
matters.
Q: The Tony Hawk Foundation has built over 550 skate parks in
low-income areas in the United States. Why skate parks?
A: I saw how prolific skateboarding had become, but most of the
facilities were built in affluent areas. And city councils were not
including local skaters in the process of design or construction. I
remember I got invited to a few of these grand openings of skate
parks. They'd hired the lowest-bidding cement contractors, and the
design made no sense - there was a set of stairs that ended with a
wall. I thought, 'I can bridge this gap.'
Q: What lessons do you want to pass on to your own children?
A: You can live comfortably and be happy and not always aspire for
something bigger and better – for more. I did that for a big part of
my life, and realized that it's more fun to embrace what you have
and to enjoy those things, even if it's not the most expensive or
flashiest.
(Editing by Lauren Young, G Crosse) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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