BCBusiness

October 2016 Entrepreneur of the Year

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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66 BCBusiness OCTOBER 2016 lEfT: adam + kEv; RighT: phOTOs COuRTEsy Of pETER duCOmmun eter Ducommun is not sure that he's the best sub- ject for a business maga- zine feature. "To tell you the truth, we're kind of anti-business here," says the 53-year-old owner of Skull Skates, Canada's oldest skateboard com- pany. For Ducommun, or PD as everyone calls him, being a business owner has been a way to indulge his passion—something he's been doing since age 14 when he began sell- ing grey market skateboard gear by mail order from his family home in Nanaimo. It's also been a way to help build a sense of community among all the like-minded hardcore skaters and, in the process, spread the gospel about his chosen sport. "We try and keep it as sincere as pos- sible," says Ducommun in his smooth, understated voice. "We advertise, but we're just trying to bring people to our doors. It's not like some companies who want to crawl inside people's heads. We're not trying to deceive customers. Our goal is turn people into skateboarders." We are talking inside the eclectic con- ˆnes of Skull Skates' Vancouver retail out- let, PD's Hot Shop, on West 10th Avenue. Ducommun looks the part of the skater dude—albeit one who has put a few miles on the odometer. He's wearing black-and- white skate shoes and a black shirt with an elaborate skull design snaking down one sleeve (written in capital letters at the neckline is the word SKUL). He's also got on a pair of bag•y, tan-coloured skater shorts that extend to mid-calf, expos- ing scars from two injuries he picked up while skateboarding. A six-inch metal plate now holds his left ankle in place, while his lower right leg is stabilized by a piece of pipe screwed into the bone that connects his shin to his ankle. PD's Hot Shop is very much a re—ec- tion of Ducommun's sensibilities, jammed with a vibrant array of posters, graphics, signs and art, rows of gleaming skateboards arranged precisely on the walls like art pieces, and racks of hats and clothing, most of it black and white and emblazoned with a distinctive skull logo. The storefront itself, with its glar- ing Skull Skates emblem, black walls and creepy Gothic script, sits incongruously sandwiched between a children's art stu- dio and a French bistro. If the location in sleepy, gentriˆed Dunbar seems unlikely, it's just one element in a larger business story ˆlled with improbable details. Skull Skates has existed far longer than any other Canadian skateboard company and longer than all but two U.S. enterprises. It's an amazing run of longevity, especially considering that Ducommun has managed this feat in a notoriously volatile, trend-driven indus- try and done it while ignoring several of the standard rules for business success. He claims that the lessons he learned ConCrete PlAygrounD (Clockwise from left) Skateboarders cruise at the Vancouver Skate Plaza; PD's Hot Shop Nanaimo store in 1986; a 1986 Skull Skates ad featuring Peter Ducommun and three pro skateboarders

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