How this Retailer Started with Pickleball Paddles and Built a $33 Mln Business on Amazon

Ethan McAfee, founder and sole owner of Amify, at the company's offices in Alexandria. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
Ethan McAfee, founder and sole owner of Amify, at the company's offices in Alexandria. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
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How this Retailer Started with Pickleball Paddles and Built a $33 Mln Business on Amazon

Ethan McAfee, founder and sole owner of Amify, at the company's offices in Alexandria. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
Ethan McAfee, founder and sole owner of Amify, at the company's offices in Alexandria. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)

Little Alexandria-based Amify is the 21st-century version of the thousands of enterprises that thrived around the railroads 150 years ago. Meatpackers, farmers and mail-order retailer Montgomery Ward are just a few examples of businesses that reached customers through the railroads.

Instead of railroads, Amify has latched on to retail supertanker Amazon.com, which has redefined how people today buy just about everything.

Amazon (founded and chaired by Washington Post owner Jeffrey P. Bezos) just a few days ago became the second-most-valuable company in the world, behind Apple.

Amify is one of about 3 million “third-party sellers” that use the Amazon platform to sell their products, paying a 15 percent commission to Amazon in return. Ethan McAfee, 41, Amify’s founder and sole owner, wants to capi­tal­ize on Amazon’s growing dominance and seize what he believes is a rare opportunity.

“We think there is a land rush going on,” McAfee said. “We have all these tail winds pushing us along. We are trying to grow this baby, hitting the accelerator and taking a long-term vision.”

Amify’s niche amounts to a tiny slice of the Amazon juggernaut. The Seattle-based giant sells an estimated $330 billion in merchandise each year — about two-thirds of which is sold by renters such as Amify.

McAfee expects to generate revenue of $33 million this year on 600,000 orders for Asics shoes, high-end Fender guitars (they expect to sell 8,000 this year), and binoculars and telescopes made by Vortex Optics, to name a few of his 350 sources.

About 90 percent of Amify’s revenue comes from being a third-party seller. The rest comes from Amify’s “value add.” That means coaching clients on how to sell more through better-looking Web pages, buying Amazon advertising and combating counterfeiters.

Amify’s secret sauce is knowing which products to make money on, McAfee said. “The higher price points usually have a higher margin than low price points. It’s harder selling a $15 item,” he said, “but with a $100 item, you can probably do it and make a profit. You can use technology to figure out which ones are the best bets.”

Amify’s biggest costs are the goods it buys and then resells on Amazon and its labor force. The usual profit for a retailer is 3 to 5 percent of gross sales, which would put Amify’s profits in the neighborhood of $1 million this year. McAfee said he is plowing every cent of profit back into the business, adding to its sales team, opening up a second warehouse in Las Vegas to lower shipping costs and hiring technology people to expand its consulting business.

“We tell brands to work with us, and we will help you sell more products, clean up your Amazon channel and maximize it,” McAfee said of the consulting business. “We help increase their selection and give good products at quality prices. They know they need an Amazon strategy.”

The company has been growing fast and is one of the largest in the third-party Amazon market. Most competitors are smaller mom-and-pops, so Amify uses its relative size to create its own technology, which it sells in its consulting practice.

Amify has a payroll of 42 people, 30 full-timers in the United States and 12 outsourced full-timers in the Philippines.

Amify has been profitable since McAfee started the business as Pickleball Direct in 2011 in a rented townhouse in the Court House area of Arlington. Pickleball is a game played with paddles, similar to tennis and badminton but requiring less running, which makes it popular among retired baby boomers.

McAfee graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in accounting information systems. He was hired at Baltimore-based asset manager T. Rowe Price, where he helped pick stocks for the firm’s $5 billion science and technology fund starting in 1998, which was near the apex of the dot-com era.

“I was the low person on the totem pole,” he said. But he closely followed the start-ups that promoted themselves to T. Rowe as they were going to the public markets. He got a close look at many of the winners and losers from that era. He sat in on meetings with some of the biggest technology names, including former eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and its then-chief executive Meg Whitman and Mark Cuban, who was promoting his start-up Broadcast.com.

“Meg was polished,” he said. “A lot of Internet entrepreneurs, as they are today, were young people wearing hoodies. So a polished person really strikes you as impressive.”

His few years at T. Rowe Price in his early 20s helped him develop an eye for spotting the fake companies from the real thing.

“We were trying to pick what would be the real businesses that would survive the dot-com explosion that we knew was going to happen,” he said. “The good ones would probably go down 70 percent, but the bad ones would go down 100 percent.”

He left T. Rowe in 2001 and joined a hedge fund in Northern Virginia headed by Russ Ramsey, one of the founders of Friedman, Billings & Ramsey, an Arlington-based asset manager.

“It was my job to help figure out what we were going to invest in,” McAfee said. “This was 2001, after the Internet bubble had burst, and the idea was that there were going to be a whole bunch of Internet companies that you could buy for pennies on the dollar. We did pretty good.”

He stayed until 2009, earning enough money to take a year off. He got a master’s at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University and figured out his next move.

His eye for Internet survivors steered him toward Amazon, which had survived the blow-up, and at a far cheaper price for its stock.

“I saw something, it seems obvious now,” he said. “Amazon was getting bigger and bigger.”

The more he thought about it, the more he realized Amazon was dramatically altering the retail landscape.

“Retailers only would sell things that are really profitable and that would sell a lot,” he said. “Retailers didn’t want to stock your niche products. The Internet changed all that. You could now go to the Internet and buy any product you wanted.”

So, as crazy as it sounds, around 2010, he started selling pickleball paddles.

“My parents played this down in Florida, and they said ‘We can never find the equipment,’ ” McAfee said. “At the same time, I was looking to start selling stuff online.” It was love at first pickleball sight.

McAfee chose pickleball paddles for his test run on selling niche products on the Internet because he could buy them in small batches, instead of thousands at a time.

He ran Pickleball Direct out of a bedroom in his Arlington townhouse. For the next two years, Pickleball Direct expanded into tennis shoes, hockey skates, roller skates and sunglasses.

His homeowners association evicted him after seeing the pallets full of sporting goods dropped at the townhouse driveway. He moved to an Old Town Alexandria storefront in 2013 and began hiring people and turning his project into a real business. Revenue went from $300,000 to $1.2 million to $5 million, $10 million and, last year, $25 million. He made the Inc. 500 list twice.

Last year, McAfee changed the name to Amify, which is a combination of Amazon and amplify. He also moved Amify into larger offices. McAfee’s office is just a pickleball’s whack from the Potomac River.

The Washington Post



IMF and Arab Monetary Fund Sign MoU to Enhance Cooperation

The MoU was signed by IMF Managing Director Dr. Kristalina Georgieva and AMF Director General Dr. Fahad Alturki - SPA
The MoU was signed by IMF Managing Director Dr. Kristalina Georgieva and AMF Director General Dr. Fahad Alturki - SPA
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IMF and Arab Monetary Fund Sign MoU to Enhance Cooperation

The MoU was signed by IMF Managing Director Dr. Kristalina Georgieva and AMF Director General Dr. Fahad Alturki - SPA
The MoU was signed by IMF Managing Director Dr. Kristalina Georgieva and AMF Director General Dr. Fahad Alturki - SPA

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Arab Monetary Fund (AMF) signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on the sidelines of the AlUla Conference on Emerging Market Economies (EME) to enhance cooperation between the two institutions.

The MoU was signed by IMF Managing Director Dr. Kristalina Georgieva and AMF Director General Dr. Fahad Alturki, SPA reported.

The agreement aims to strengthen coordination in economic and financial policy areas, including surveillance and lending activities, data and analytical exchange, capacity building, and the provision of technical assistance, in support of regional financial and economic stability.

Both sides affirmed that the MoU represents an important step toward deepening their strategic partnership and strengthening the regional financial safety net, serving member countries and enhancing their ability to address economic challenges.


Saudi Chambers Federation Announces First Saudi-Kuwaiti Business Council

File photo of the Saudi flag/AAWSAT
File photo of the Saudi flag/AAWSAT
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Saudi Chambers Federation Announces First Saudi-Kuwaiti Business Council

File photo of the Saudi flag/AAWSAT
File photo of the Saudi flag/AAWSAT

The Federation of Saudi Chambers announced the formation of the first joint Saudi-Kuwaiti Business Council for its inaugural term (1447–1451 AH) and the election of Salman bin Hassan Al-Oqayel as its chairman.

Al-Oqayel said the council’s formation marks a pivotal milestone in economic relations between Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, reflecting a practical approach to enabling the business sectors in both countries to capitalize on promising investment opportunities and strengthen bilateral trade and investment partnerships, SPA reported.

He noted that trade between Saudi Arabia and Kuwait reached approximately SAR9.5 billion by the end of November 2025, including SAR8 billion in Saudi exports and SAR1.5 billion in Kuwaiti imports.


Leading Harvard Trade Economist Says Saudi Arabia Holds Key to Success in Fragmented Global Economy

Professor Pol Antràs speaks during a panel discussion at the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies (Asharq Al-Awsat).
Professor Pol Antràs speaks during a panel discussion at the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies (Asharq Al-Awsat).
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Leading Harvard Trade Economist Says Saudi Arabia Holds Key to Success in Fragmented Global Economy

Professor Pol Antràs speaks during a panel discussion at the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies (Asharq Al-Awsat).
Professor Pol Antràs speaks during a panel discussion at the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies (Asharq Al-Awsat).

Harvard University economics professor Pol Antràs said Saudi Arabia represents an exceptional model in the shifting global trade landscape, differing fundamentally from traditional emerging-market frameworks. He also stressed that globalization has not ended but has instead re-formed into what he describes as fragmented integration.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on the sidelines of the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies, Antràs said Saudi Arabia’s Vision-driven structural reforms position the Kingdom to benefit from the ongoing phase of fragmented integration, adding that the country’s strategic focus on logistics transformation and artificial intelligence constitutes a key engine for sustainable growth that extends beyond the volatility of global crises.

Antràs, the Robert G. Ory Professor of Economics at Harvard University, is one of the leading contemporary theorists of international trade. His research, which reshaped understanding of global value chains, focuses on how firms organize cross-border production and how regulation and technological change influence global trade flows and corporate decision-making.

He said conventional classifications of economies often obscure important structural differences, noting that the term emerging markets groups together countries with widely divergent industrial bases. Economies that depend heavily on manufacturing exports rely critically on market access and trade integration and therefore face stronger competitive pressures from Chinese exports that are increasingly shifting toward alternative markets.

Saudi Arabia, by contrast, exports extensively while facing limited direct competition from China in its primary export commodity, a situation that creates a strategic opportunity. The current environment allows the Kingdom to obtain imports from China at lower cost and access a broader range of goods that previously flowed largely toward the United States market.

Addressing how emerging economies should respond to dumping pressures and rising competition, Antràs said countries should minimize protectionist tendencies and instead position themselves as committed participants in the multilateral trading system, allowing foreign producers to access domestic markets while encouraging domestic firms to expand internationally.

He noted that although Chinese dumping presents concerns for countries with manufacturing sectors that compete directly with Chinese production, the risk is lower for Saudi Arabia because it does not maintain a large manufacturing base that overlaps directly with Chinese exports. Lower-cost imports could benefit Saudi consumers, while targeted policy tools such as credit programs, subsidies, and support for firms seeking to redesign and upgrade business models represent more effective responses than broad protectionist measures.

Globalization has not ended

Antràs said globalization continues but through more complex structures, with trade agreements increasingly negotiated through diverse arrangements rather than relying primarily on multilateral negotiations. Trade deals will continue to be concluded, but they are likely to become more complex, with uncertainty remaining a defining feature of the global trading environment.

Interest rates and artificial intelligence

According to Antràs, high global interest rates, combined with the additional risk premiums faced by emerging markets, are constraining investment, particularly in sectors that require export financing, capital expenditure, and continuous quality upgrading.

However, he noted that elevated interest rates partly reflect expectations of stronger long-term growth driven by artificial intelligence and broader technological transformation.

He also said if those growth expectations materialize, productivity gains could enable small and medium-sized enterprises to forecast demand more accurately and identify previously untapped markets, partially offsetting the negative effects of higher borrowing costs.

Employment concerns and the role of government

The Harvard professor warned that labor markets face a dual challenge stemming from intensified Chinese export competition and accelerating job automation driven by artificial intelligence, developments that could lead to significant disruptions, particularly among younger workers. He said governments must adopt proactive strategies requiring substantial fiscal resources to mitigate near-term labor-market shocks.

According to Antràs, productivity growth remains the central condition for success: if new technologies deliver the anticipated productivity gains, governments will gain the fiscal space needed to compensate affected groups and retrain the workforce, achieving a balance between addressing short-term disruptions and investing in long-term strategic gains.