Once upon a time, in a town called Mason, there was a little boy who wanted nothing more than a bounce house at his birthday party. His mother and father scoured the yellow pages and the internet for a company that rented them, but no matter how hard they tried, they could not find one single business that offered a good service for a reasonable price. The only ones they could find were expensive ($200 or more!), only available for short periods of time (what good is a bounce house if you only have it for two hours?), required that they, the customer, transport, set up and take down the bounce house (that’s not their job!) or, worst of all, were not licensed and insured (that’s not safe or legal!)
That little boy was my brother and his plight made me decide to start my own bounce house rental business. I realized that the other moonwalk rental companies were really only concerned with the big-ticket clients—churches, festivals, schools—and to attract that clientele, they purchased huge, extravagant inflatables that cost tens of thousands of dollars. Because these companies carry so much overhead, they are unable to offer parents who are just hosting a small backyard party a medium-sized bounce house at a fair price. So, when I was only a junior in high school, I took all the money I had saved up from the past two summers of working in an amusement park and bought a bounce house. Along with my good friend and business partner Andrew (who also bought a bounce house), I took out an ad in our local paper in July of 2006 and started renting out the bounce houses. They were a big hit at birthday parties, neighborhood get-togethers and, surprisingly, graduation parties. Because we kept our costs low by only purchasing basic bounce houses, we were also able to keep our prices low. After Andrew left for college, I took over the business by myself and, with the help of my very supportive family, the amount of rentals has increased each and every year since the business was started, including the summers of 2009 and 2010, times that most other businesses struggled.

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