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Traditions Classic Home Furnishings

By Home Furnishings Business in on October 2012

A key to Traditions Classic€™s growth has been its ability to get on its high-end clientele€™s €œbee path.€

€œWe€™re very small and we take that high-end boutique approach to a furniture store,€ said President Suzanne Schumann, who owns the three-store operation with husband, Mike. €œOur store is always in motion. Since we€™re happy to sell off the floor, from week to week we€™ll see 20 to 30 pieces leave. The result is customers stop in to see what€™s new.€

Mike added that customer€™s coming in a month after their last visit won€™t see something €œa little different, it€™s completely different.€

€œThe atmosphere€™s the same, but at least half the items weren€™t on the floor the first time you came in,€ he said. €œAnd, if it was on the floor earlier, it€™s not in the same place in the store, not in the same vignette. Our target customers are affluent women, and we€™ve gotten on their regular circuit along with their hairdresser. People come into our store when they€™re recreationally shopping.

€œThe advantage to that is though our stores average 3,000 square feet, effectively they€™re much larger. The amount of product we can expose to our customers is two or three times the square footage we have.€

Keeping the floors that fresh is a challenge.

€œWhat you have to understand is that what we do involves an incredible amount of work,€ Mike said. €œEvery Wednesday, for example, in our Naples (Fla.) store, guys from the warehouse are juggling the store layout for two to three hours in the morning. And it€™s not just accessories€”it€™s large items, moving sectionals and cases around. Suzanne and her staff spend the rest of the day re-merchandising the store.€

The model took some figuring out on vendors€™ part as well, and Mike said it took some convincing on the Schumann€™s part.

€œMost vendors have standard rules on how much floor space has to be dedicated to their line, and some minimums are larger than one of our entire stores,€ he said.

€œOur vendors, over the years, have gotten to understand our model and bent the rules.€

A commitment to maintaining its merchandising philosophy€”and a conservative attitude toward debt€”helped the store during the recession. While many stores kept showing the same merchandise, Traditions Classic always had a new look to interest the shoppers that were out there.

€œWe got a lot of gray hair and more wrinkles,€ Suzanne said of the downturn. €œWe went very, very lean on inventory, but continued to change out the floor constantly.€

The Schumann€™s also had ways to keep employee spirits up during downtime.
€œWe took the opportunity to freshen the stores,€ Suzanne said. €œIn Naples, they said it€™s quiet, we€™ll just paint the store. They took the lead, and everyone ran with it. We kept the energy going just by keeping ourselves moving.€



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