Hult Magazine Issue 4 | Page 14

ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT Marination madness Voted "America’s Best Food Truck" by ABC's Good Morning America Weekend show, Roz Edison’s Marination Mobile, which serves up delicious Hawaiian-Korean cuisine, has now expanded to include two brick and mortar locations in Seattle. Discover the secret behind Marination’s spicy road to success. NPower I was looking for my next career move; however the economy was struggling and it looked more and more like it would take some creativity to stay strong financially. By 2009 my partner and I were looking for ways to diversify our investments, and Marination was born, in part, as a hedge against the performance of Wall Street. Q:  ell us how Marination evolved from one T truck to two permanent locations. Marination Station and Marination Ma Kai were the result of extraordinary luck. Once the truck operation was up and running we knew that it would be desirable to have a place with a few seats, that could operate longer than three hours per day, and that might even out some of the seasonality of the truck business. We happened to learn about a retail space in a neighborhood we wanted to be in, via a friend. We would not have stood a chance with the building owner if we hadn’t been lucky enough to have a colleague in common. Q: Roz, tell us more about your journey from Hult via the public education sector to Marination. When I graduated from Hult, which was the Arthur D. Little School of Management back then, I was very interested in public education. One day I discovered the concept of Charter Schools during an informational interview set up by my ADL adviser and it seemed like the perfect fit for me—business and public education. I started working for Massachusetts Charter School Resource Center as a program assistant. After attending the Technology in Education program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education I gained another teaching job followed by a program manager position at the MATCH School. A couple of years later, after launching the MATCH Corps program I relocated to Seattle, where after a short stint working as a project manager for 14 Our Ma Kai location also came about by chance. We were not actively looking for waterfront property, h owever I was on the Seattle Parks website doing some research for one of our truck locations, and there happened to be an RFP for a concessionaire at the Seacrest Boathouse. I had never heard of the Seacrest Boathouse but I jumped in my car, drove over and just gawked at the incredible view of Seattle from this place. It was too unique a property and opportunity to pass up, so we submitted a bid and the rest is history. Q:  hat have been the highs and lows of your entrepreneurial W journey? How did you deal with the lows? The highs and lows of this journey have come from customers. The highs are all the customers who write us nice notes, send us pictures of their kids eating tacos, and tell us how they miss us when they move or travel. All of those interactions have been so fun and flattering.