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          Business View Magazine
        
        
          more time operating the tavern. He sold the boat busi-
        
        
          ness to his sons, Tom and Jamie, who had grown up
        
        
          at the lake. The two brothers grew their father’s small,
        
        
          upstart business into a thriving rental operation. Then
        
        
          Tom’s children, Tommy, Steele, and their two sisters,
        
        
          further expanded it into a diversified company con-
        
        
          sisting of a marina with 260 boat slips; a large boat
        
        
          dealership; boat service, storage, and rental; a ski and
        
        
          wakeboard school; a pro shop that sells and rents wa-
        
        
          ter sports equipment; the Boat House Bar & Restau-
        
        
          rant; the Cobalt Lounge, a private party room; and the
        
        
          Bait Shop, a small, snack bar on the pier. “Back in the
        
        
          day, Gordy used to lock the store around Labor Day, go
        
        
          south for the winter, and come back Memorial Day,”
        
        
          says Whowell. “But nowadays, we’re running all year
        
        
          long with the size and diversification that our business
        
        
          has grown to.”  About 50 employees work year round
        
        
          and that number swells to 250 during the height of the
        
        
          summer season.
        
        
          In 1997, Gordy’s picked up a Cobalt dealership, and
        
        
          today rents only Cobalt 20 foot and 22 foot Bowriders,
        
        
          which they also sell.  A few years ago, the company be-
        
        
          gan selling MasterCraft boats, as well. “We’re kind of
        
        
          picky with the boat lines that we carry,” says Whowell.
        
        
          “In a lot of cases, we said ‘No,’ because we didn’t think
        
        
          it would o be a good fit with our team and our culture.”
        
        
          On average, Whowell says they sell about 100 boats a
        
        
          year – 60 percent that are pre-owned and 40 percent,
        
        
          new.
        
        
          Gordy’s has two storefront locations: one on Lake Ge-
        
        
          neva and one in Fox Lake, Illinois.  “Part of our territory
        
        
          is the Illinois/Chicago market where most of our cli-