Gary Sharpe

Grand Poobah

When the world zigs, Gary Sharpe zags. If someone says no, he says yes. Sell? Nope. Buy. While such an opposing perspective may have taken its toll on the patience and blood pressure of his parents, looking at life through such a contrarian lens has definitely provided the 1973 MBA grad with a very clear vision of how to best negotiate the congested and cutthroat ways of the business worldand make a lot of money along the way. "The world does not run in straight lines" he says, "so youve got to think differently. The way I see it, if the herd is going in one direction, theres money to be made going in the other direction. Or as companies get bigger, theres a whole bunch of stuff that is going to fall off their truck that you can make money on." This combination of professional revelation and personal self-awareness became apparent to Sharpe early in his career, shortly after he graduated from Ohio State University with a bachelors degree in economic geography with a specialty in thematic cartography. Wait. A degree in what? Sharpe laughs. "There was one job in the world I was qualified for, and it was taken." Still, armed with a degree and eager to get out in the real world and make his mark, he grabbed the first job that came his waydeveloping government contracts for Philips Electronics in its human pharmaceutical branch in Columbus, Ohio. The position reported directly to the CEO and was open for good reason. It was the job no one wanted." Sharpe took it and ran. After a few years, he approached his boss with an idea of how to grow the role: He repeatedly heard talk from his customers about products they needed to help them do their jobs but couldnt find anyone who had them or could produce them. Not interested, his boss told him. Just sell what weve got. That wasnt the answer Sharpe wanted to hear. Go with the flow? No way. And he couldnt just let the opportunity to meet so many needs go unfulfilled. So he did what every good contrarian would do: He quit and went out on his own, creating Health Care Logistics, a one-man-enterprise headquartered in the spare bedroom of his house. The garage was my warehouse, he says. It didnt take long, though, before the business was booming and the bedroom was too small. I went on a sales call in Dayton, Ohio, he says. The director of purchasing was known to be really mean, and before my butt could hit the chair, he said, OK, what are you selling? Sometimes I talk before I think, so I said, What are you looking for that you cant find? He told me. I said, Give me a week. Ill either find one or make one. It evolved from there. Today, the companys a multimillion-dollar enterprise with four warehouses in the United States and one in England, all filled with unique or hard-to-find health care products. Often new innovations make older products outdated, but not every hospital has the newest innovation and still needs to support the older technology. The massive product list includes a handful of products that Sharpe holds the patents on. The patents are mostly defensive, he says. There have been a number of times I helped others create a product and then they would come back and undersell me. I got tired of that. But were always creating new products. Well get a customers request and create something. Or well make a product on our own and throw it against the wall. If it sticks, it stays in the product line. Sharpes love of innovation and entrepreneurship has prompted him to support the Critical Making Program, a new effort within the Williams College of Business that blends innovation with Ignatian values. He also endowed an academic scholarship at Xaviernot for the best and brightest, but for those who may not have the best GPA or SAT score coming out of high school but deserve a chance. A student, he says, like himself. I graduated from high school with honors and an award in science, he says, but I was crappy at taking standardized tests. When I went to OSUs orientation, I was told that I should drop out now because based on my test scores I would flunk out my first quarter or the spring quarter at the latest. I thought, They have to take me, so Im staying. He stayed, of course. What else would a contrarian do? And hes been proving to them and everyone since that success sometimes comes from the other direction.
Gary Sharpe