How holiday businesses stay lucrative year-round
From the age of 12, I was putting up and taking down succahs together with my brother, first for our family and then for neighbors. Eventually, it grew into a business. As we got older, we realized the succahs on the market weren’t sturdy enough. Customers would get upset that their succahs were flying away in the wind, but we hadn’t designed them, we’d only put them up! But our clients’ frustration inspired us to design our own structurally sound, high-end, quality, lifetime product that would also be easy to store.
We never stop. Our succahs are handmade, and we’re manufacturing succahs all year long.
For about three weeks, we’re all working 18 to 20-hour days nonstop. Even during Chol Hamoed, we’re busy putting up succahs for simchahs like bar mitzvahs and upsherens. And it doesn’t just end when Succos is over — we get busy then taking down succahs and processing orders for the next year.
About a month after Succos until January.
We don’t have leftover stock. Everything is made-to-order, and we have an inventory of rentals.
We’re still making succahs. I have multiple shops and locations so I’m always running back and forth to check what’s needed.
It’s tricky trying to gauge the market because we don’t want to overproduce and lose money. We never really know what will happen. During Covid, more people were home instead of going to Israel, so they bought their first succah, but who knows what’s going to happen next year?
It can be hard to get seasonal workers, and during peak season, we’re always adding more trucks and teams. But it works.
I can’t say I really crash after peak season — I’ve been doing it my whole life so I’m kind of used to it. But I do take a month off to decompress (I enjoy skiing and surfing) and to get organized, getting all my notes in order for the next year.
I didn’t know how much of my income would have to be reinvested back into the business once I started manufacturing. It’s like a never-ending reinvestment.
You need a good name more than anything else. I don’t think people can just enter this business. You need good reports going around about your work.
We made a custom succah for Amare Stoudemire… he’s six feet-ten inches, so it had to be tall. He put it up outside his Brooklyn apartment without any issues. This year there was an HBO sports special on him, and it showed him davening in his Litton succah.
(Originally featured in Mishpacha, Issue 892)