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2021-02-23 Β |Β β±οΈ 14:46 Β |Β ποΈ 25.7K views Β |Β π 3.2K likes Β |Β π¬ 919 comments
Pea visits Wild Gold Archery in Cebu City and interviews Ken Wildfire, the Australian owner, about building a business in the Philippines as a foreigner. She also takes her first archery lesson from trainer Christian, and the video mixes practical business-in-the-Philippines insights with a fun activity segment.
What's Covered β
Ken Wildfire's background and business concept
- Ken is Australian; two long-term goals were to have a business and to move to the Philippines
- He saw archery businesses operating in Manila and figured Cebu had nothing like it β they'd be the first archery range in Cebu City
- Archery has always been one of his greatest loves/hobbies
- Located on the second floor of SM Seaside City Cebu, on the mall grounds
The reality of starting a business in the Philippines as a foreigner
- Took six months just to negotiate the mall lease β constant back-and-forth bartering on the price per square meter until both sides agreed on a rental/leasing package
- Ken expected Philippine bureaucracy and red tape to be less than Australia because of the relaxed lifestyle β "that was completely false"; it's about the same amount of paperwork
- Immigration was very slow
- Ken is married to a Filipina, which made things significantly easier β without a Filipino spouse, getting a working visa is extremely difficult unless you're a huge corporation like Coca-Cola
- The building/renovation process ran behind schedule "as usual"
Business operations and COVID impact
- Opened January 18, 2018 β just over three years in operation at time of filming
- Had to completely shut down for about eight months during coronavirus lockdown
- All employees had to be let go during the shutdown
- Only three of the original crew came back after the stand-down; they had to hire mostly new staff
- Plans to boost up staffing once the economy picks up and vaccine rollout is effective
Customer demographics
- Ken did serious homework: stood in the mall for months with a counter tracking foot traffic at different times of day
- Original calculation: 95% local Filipinos, 5% tourists β turned out to be fairly accurate
- During COVID: 99% Filipino since tourists aren't allowed in; occasional Chinese, Korean, and Japanese residents pop in
- Greatest number of customers are first-timers
- About 5% are long-term archers who are on holiday or have moved to Cebu and want to continue practicing
Equipment overview (Ken explains)
- Olympic recurve competition bow with stabilizers that reduce shaking, a sight for aiming, a "clicker" that gives an audible sound at full draw extension, an arrow rest with magnets, and a plunger that controls side force
- Sight adjusts in/out depending on shooting distance β far away you extend it out, close distance you keep it near the bow
- Six different arrow types available; skinny carbon fiber arrows are inexpensive
- One high-end arrow can cost 2,500 pesos (~$50-60 USD); best arrows can cost 10x that
- The competition bow shown costs roughly $200-300 USD β still relatively cheap; you can easily pay 10x more
- Also showed a hunting-style bow with "beaver balls" (real beaver fur) on the string that make it quieter for hunting environments β though hunting with bows isn't legal in the Philippines
- Ken emphasizes: expensive equipment doesn't substitute for skill β "it still takes a lot of skill to be a good shot... it's not like you're suddenly Katniss Everdeen"
Future plans: outdoor range
- Building an outdoor archery range that will be big enough for full accredited tournaments
- Visible from the third level of the mall β people can look down at the range from the sky park at a 30-degree angle
- Plans for solar-powered lights and spotlights for nighttime shooting
- People passing in public transport will be able to see archers shooting, which should draw spectators and walk-in customers
- The outdoor range is also safer from a COVID perspective (open-air activities)
Pea's archery lesson with trainer Christian
- Christian demonstrates first with a bullseye shot
- Safety gear: leather arm guard and finger protection β Pea jokes "always use protection"
- Step-by-step form instruction:
- Stand with one foot inside the block line, face sideways
- Square feet, square hips, square shoulders
- Nock the arrow with the same-colored feather facing right
- Use three fingers on the string with the leather finger tab
- Straighten the bow arm, raise the elbow
- Pull all the way to the chin, aim the red dot at the target center
- Release
- Pea's results: first shot hits the blue ring β "not bad for a first timer"; subsequent shots also hit the target
- She's thrilled: "I feel like a warrior now"
Comedic ending bits
- Ken pretends to do a William Tell trick shot with an apple on Pea's head (obviously a joke)
- Pea does a traffic cop comedy skit where she "pulls over" viewers for skipping ads and not subscribing