BY Jenna Schnuer
Entrepreneur:
Rick Stafford, inventor, outdoorsman and former oil-field worker on Alaska's
North Slope--the kind of guy "who will take three hours to build a tool to
turn a two-hour job into 30 minutes.
"Aha" moment:
An avid snowmobiler (or, as they call them in the 49th state, snowmachiner), Stafford wished to create an easy-to-pack means to walk
away from vehicles that break down in deep snow. He was inspired, he says, by
two people who were stranded less than a mile from a lodge "but couldn't
walk in the chest-deep snow, and ended up spending the night out there under a
tree. They were found the next day by a rescue group and helicoptered to Anchorage suffering from
hypothermia and frostbite. It was time to do something about that."
Airlite inflatable snowshoes were born.
Airtight solution: Full-size
snowshoes strapped onto the back of a snowmobile can get in the way as riders
zip through trees. Compact models, meanwhile, become as useless as flip-flops
in deep snow. "The first thing that clicked in my mind was, Well, what if
we had something inflatable?" Stafford
recalls. He put a bicycle inner tube, plastic netting, glue and a nylon strap
to work for an early version and, "by golly, they worked."
Stafford knew
his final materials would need to maintain their integrity in extreme cold. He
had an inflatable boat at home that incorporated a "paper-thin material
that was as tough as nails," he says. "So I took it and threw some of
it in my deep freezer, which gets to about 30 below, and after a week I went
out there and played with the material, and it was still just as flexible and
just as tough as the day I put it in there." He contacted the manufacturer
and learned the material was called Deerfield Urethane.
Sporty specs: Airlite snowshoes
are rimmed with an inflatable tube, all made of the extremely
puncture-resistant Deerfield Urethane. They have a binding that can be used
with any shoe and can support up to 280 pounds. They're kid-friendly, too. Stafford recalls a father and his young son--"his
feet had to be about 8 inches long"--trying on the same pair at a trade
show. "Not a problem," he says.
Sold at AirliteSnowshoe.com, the shoes run $168 per pair; a package
that includes an air pump, patch kit, crampons and a storage bag costs $220.
Though the snowshoes were devised for lifesaving, they're sturdy enough for
ongoing recreational use--Stafford has
inflated his original pair hundreds of times.
Tough talk: Growth has come
mostly from word-of-mouth, trade-show appearances and media mentions. In 2012
Stafford won the $10,000 top prize at the University of Alaska
Fairbanks' Arctic Innovation Competition. But
perhaps his greatest promotional tool is a photo, used on the website and in
marketing materials, of an Airlite snowshoe-wearer standing on a bed of nails.
Great outdoors: Stafford has learned that he has a much wider customer
base than he initially imagined, including pilots, fat-bike riders, extreme
campers, skiers, hunters and fishermen. He has sold snowshoes to customers in
the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Up next: Stafford
sees potential in sales to the military or to police organizations. He's also
working on a snowshoe that can handle heavier loads for bigger guys and all
their gear.
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