Opening Up the Baghdad Office
Iraq is hot and dangerous and, as Chris Exline has learned, open for business. The founder of Home Essentials, a furniture-leasing company based in Dallas, was among the first entrepreneurs to set up shop in Iraq after American troops swept through the country in 2003. Exline, who doesn't speak Arabic and had no experience working in the Middle East, readily affirms that what he's doing is risky. But he also contends the country is "perfectly suited" not just for the Halliburtons of the world but for American entrepreneurs.
When did you decide to try doing business in Iraq?
Right as the war was starting. I read a story in the Asian Wall Street Journal on the administration's plans for reconstruction and I was awestruck. It was clear that there was no way the indigenous population could do all of this work -- that it would require thousands of expats to come in. So I decided to go on a scouting trip to the Middle East to see where we could establish a toehold. Flying there in April 2003, I practically had the whole plane to myself. I knocked on a lot of doors in Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, and Jordan. And then I went to Dubai, which is 800 miles from Iraq, about the distance from Dallas to Chicago. There's a tariff-free zone, so I decided to set up a distribution facility there. A few months later, I went to Iraq and set up a warehouse in central Baghdad.
How do you cope with the threat to your safety when you are in Iraq? ...
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