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Changing

By Home Furnishings Business in on December 2012

Considering the economy in recent years, in retrospect 2005 might not have been the best time to start a furniture retail operation, but that€™s when then-23-year-old Jay Howard launched I.O. Metro, a contemporary leaning retailer based in Northwest Arkansas.

While a lot of home furnishings retailers have closed since then, I.O. Metro has grown to 17 locations across Arkansas, Alabama, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee, Mississippi and Georgia.

Howard, CEO and president, oversees all merchandising and marketing aspects of the company, and has worked hard in product development and sourcing to serve a model that depends largely on private label merchandise the retailer can call its own.
Howard was first inspired to start a furniture retail operation after he found himself frustrated in his own shopping for home furnishings.

€œI was young and probably naïve, didn€™t really know that much about the business, but I have a personality that if I get into something I€™ll make it work,€ he said.

€œDuring the first 12 to 18 months, we were just out doing our own thing€”it was driven by my desire to start something and a will to succeed.€

Even during a slow period for most of the furniture retail business, I.O. Metro has continued to add stores.

€œWe haven€™t had a negative year yet,€ Howard said. €œWe€™re a young company, and we€™re still learning the business. I think youth and an entrepreneurial vibe made us innovate.€

For example, in the midst of the recession, I.O. Metro introduced a custom upholstery program, which now accounts for 50 percent of its upholstery business.

€œThat alone kept us from having year-over-year negative comps,€ Howard said.
2012 has seen more of the same at I.O. Metro, which bills itself as €œA Different Kind of Furniture Store.€ Plans call for another Dallas location to open in 2013, and the company is looking for real estate to add three to four stores a year moving ahead.

THREE POINT PLAY I.O. Metro looks to build upon that momentum with a three-tier strategy that combines its brick-and-mortar operations with e-commerce capability it launched on its Web site a little over a year ago; and a brand-new catalog that debuted in November.
€œBusiness has been particularly good this year, and initial results from the catalog in November are very strong,€ Howard said. €œThree things have been very important to us: custom upholstery; nailing down core items and backing those up with additional inventory; and finally, our catalog.€
Lou Spagna joined the company this year as chief operating officer, and he€™s played an integral role a recent logistics restructuring that allows I.O. Metro to ship nationwide in support of its e-commerce and catalog business; and has helped streamline customer service in general.
Consistency across touch points has been key to I.O. Metro€™s approach to brick-and-mortar, online and catalog retailing. The Web site has product icons identifying items as part of its various collections, whose billings include €œEco-Metro,€ €œMetro Custom,€ €œReal Wood€ and €œLocal Art.€
Those same icons identify products both in the stores and within the catalog.  Design associates in the stores use the Web site a lot when dealing with customers, so it is also important for the site to offer as much information as possible, as well as appropriate product photography.
I.O. Metro also has an online room planner that customers and designers use to determine how products will fit within their spaces. The Web site is mobile- and tablet-friendly and was designed to respond to whichever device it€™s being viewed on and adjusts itself accordingly.
€œRight now we€™re using iPads in the store to take people to our Web site,€ Howard said.
He views e-commerce as strong growth area, but that channel is a ways from meeting eventual expectations.
€œWe€™re hoping it will account for 15 to 20 percent of our business within the next three years,€ Howard noted.

REMOTE SERVICE Customer service has been an at times problematic issue for retailers looking to expand their reach through the Internet and catalogs. Earlier this year, I.O. Metro developed a corporate customer service department to serve as the hub for customer issues. Redirecting that function, previously done at the store level, was key in making sure customers receive the attention and information they need for both online and in-store purchases. A personal touch remains key.
€œIt€™s always much easier to interact with the customer personally,€ Howard said. €œIf we get an e-mail from a customer, we try to get a call to discuss the issue so you€™re relating to them on a personal level. The other key is to keep the customer informed. If there€™s an issue with a product, don€™t cover it up, and let them know what€™s going on and what their options are.€
The catalog I.O. Metro debuted in early November was a long time coming for the brand and made sense for a furniture company founded on principles of good design. The idea was to go beyond the typical online presentation of home furnishings€”pages of photos on a white background€”and give consumers a truer sense of how the home furnishings would look in their own space.
€œIt€™s all about painting the picture for the customer, and it€™s tough to establish a look with a white-background picture on the Internet,€ Howard said. €œIt takes a while to look through all our product on the Web site, and you can see it all in a 36-page catalog€”and see it in a home setting.
€œIt€™s largely to drive our online business, but we see the catalog as our strongest marketing tool for presenting our brand before someone gets to our Web site or goes into one of our stores.€

PULLING IT ALL TOGETHER Catalog and e-commerce aside, the core of I.O. Metro€™s business remains in its network of brick and more locations. Along with striving for consistency across all consumer touch points, the company wants to make sure people coming to shop get the sort of experience Howard was looking for when he was inspired to start the business.
€œOur motto is €˜A Different Kind of Furniture Store,€™€ Howard said. If you€™re a shopper walking into an I.O. Metro location €œyou hear fun, upbeat music. Salespeople greet you but don€™t attack you.€
The hip mood strikes a chord with a lot of the business€™ older customers.
€œThirty-five to 54 is definitely our core demographic, but a big bulk of our customers are 45-plus,€ Howard said, with incomes in the $75,000-$125,000 range. €œWhen you look at us, most people think our customer is 25 to 35, but that€™s not our core.
€œA lot of these middle-age people are looking to simplify or to update their homes. They like change, and they want to de-clutter. It was good timing on our part.€
Stores are merchandised in vignettes, not rows and rows of sofas.
€œWe echoed that thought in our catalog€”if you can show a customer looking to make a change what it will look like they won€™t be scared to buy it,€ Howard said.
Core product is consistent, but store managers use accessorization to keep the stores€™ look fresh and different.
How does I.O. Metro express that retail vision in marketing and advertising efforts, or social media?
Sometimes simple is better, and that€™s how the company  approaches merchandising and marketing efforts€”drawing customers to a look that€™s clean, simple and sometimes striking; and marketing reflects that.
I.O. Metro is on all major social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram.
Christine Howard, Jay€™s wife, writes the store€™s in-house blog, €œHello Metro,€ where she shares design tips and trends
€œWe€™ve always felt we offered great values, but the customer has pushed us to a little more of a higher-end approach,€ Howard said. €œBefore, it was everyday low price €¦ Today we reward our customers who€™ve been loyal to us.€
That€™s done through promotions and deals that customers might not see on the retail floor, through social media, e-mail and some direct mail. HFB

The HFB Power 50 Rankings

By Home Furnishings Business in on December 2012

Welcome to our second annual Home Furnishings Business power 50 ranking. The ranking€”our take on how the industry€™s retailers should be ranked€”takes into account retail sales volume, industry involvement, social media power through Klout scores, the popular vote and our editorial board€™s opinion.

It€™s a different look at home furnishings retail rankings, and throughout the section you€™ll see the different ways in which we€™ve sliced and diced the data.

To those who took the time to vote: Thank you. Without your input, this would likely be just another retail ranking by sales volume.

Enjoy the read.

1    Jeff Seaman    Rooms To Go (Seffner, Fla.)
2    Laura Alber    Williams-Sonoma (San Francisco)
3    Gordon Segal    Crate & Barrel (Northbrook, Ill.)

4    The Blumkins,    Nebraska Furniture Mart, R.C. Willey, Star
    Jeff Child, Bill Kimbrell    Furniture, Jordan€™s Furniture and Homemakers
    Eliot Tatelman,
    The Merschmans
5    The Wanek Family    Ashley Furniture HomeStores (Arcadia, Wis.)
6    The Goldbergs    Raymour & Flanigan (Liverpool, N.Y.)
7    Alex Smith    Pier 1 Imports (Fort Worth, Texas)
8    Kurt Darrow    La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries (Monroe, Mich.)
9    Art Van Elslander    Art Van Furniture (Warren, Mich.)
10    Jay Schottenstein    American Signature (Columbus, Ohio)
11    Lee Aaronson    Lacks Valley Stores (Pharr, Texas)
12    Mikael Ohlsson    Ikea (Conshohocken, Pa.)
13    Clarence Smith    Havertys Furniture Co. (Atlanta)
14    Steve Stagner    Mattress Firm (Houston, Texas)
15    Farooq Kathwari    Ethan Allen (Danbury, Conn.)
16    David Acker    Sleepy€™s (Hicksville, N.Y.)
17    Carlos Alberini    Restoration Hardware (Corte Madera, Calif.)
18    Niraj Shah    Wayfair Furniture (Boston)
29    Ted English    Bob€™s Discount (Manchester, Conn.)
20    Barry Feld    Cost Plus World Market (Oakland, Calif.)
21    Steve Freeman    Room & Board (Minneapolis,Minn.)
22    Bill Mathis    Mathis Brothers (Oklahoma City)
23    Shelly Ibach    Select Comfort (Minneapolis, Minn.)
24    Rob Spilman    Bassett Home Furnishings (Bassett, Va.)
25    Jake Jabs    American Furniture Warehouse (Thornton, Colo.)
26    Ed Teplitz    Thomasville Home Furnishings (Thomasville, N.C.)
27    Bill McKendry    Furniture Row Cos. (Denver, Colo.)
28    Dale Carlson    The Sleep Train (Citrus Heights, Calif.)
29    Terry Lundgren    Macy€™s (New York)
30    Kenny Larson    Slumberland (Little Canada, Minn.)
31    The Navarras,    Jerome€™s (San Diego)
    Lee Goodman
32    The Harris Family    Furnitureland South (Jamestown, N.C.)
33    The Capo Family    El Dorado (Miami Gardens, Fla.)
34    The Johansen Family    HOM Furniture (Coon Rapids, Minn.)
35    Mike Price    Badcock Home Furniture & more (Mulberry, Fla.)
36    Joe and Mike Zeiden    Z Gallerie (Gardena, Calif.)
37    John Edelman    Design Within Reach (Stamford, Conn.)
38    Paulette Cole    ABC Carpet & Home (New York)
39    E.J. Strelitz    Haynes Furniture (Virginia Beach, Va.)
40    Chris Pelcher    Levin Furniture (Smithton, Pa.)
41    The Baer Family    Baer€™s (Pompano Beach, Fla.)
42    John Reed    Arhaus Furniture (Walton Hills, Ohio)
43    Jim McIngvale    Gallery Furniture (Houston, Texas)
44    The Haux Family    Mor Furniture for Less (San Diego)
45    The Rubin Family    Bernie & Phyl€™s (Norton, Mass.)
46    Mark Stuart    Regency Furniture (Brandywine, Md.)
47    Grover Geiselman,    Living Spaces (Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.)
    Sharm Scheuerman
48    Irwin Novack    Kane€™s Furniture (Pinellas Park, Fla.)
49    Keith Koenig    City Furniture (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
50    George Cartledge III    Grand Home Furnishings (Roanoke, Va.)

The Top 50 (Based on Retail Sales Volume):

People love comparisons, and companies are no different. We in the furniture industry fall in line with that. Here you€™ll find our Power 50 ranking based on retail sales volume for companies in our pool. Please note that the Berkshire Hathaway family of home furnishings retailers are grouped together, as are the Williams-Sonoma Inc. stable of companies.

 1    Ron and Todd Wanek    Ashley Furniture HomeStores (Arcadia, Wis.)    $2,686.0
 2     Mikael Ohlsson    Ikea (Conshohocken, Pa.)    $2,280.0
 3     Jeff Seaman    Rooms To Go (Seffner, Fla.)    $1,500.0
 4     Laura Alber    Williams-Sonoma (San Francisco)    $1,480.1
 5     The Blumkins, Jeff Child,    Nebraska Furniture Mart, R.C. Willey, Star Furniture,    $1,208.2
      Bill Kimbrell, Eliot Tatelman,    Jordan€™s Furniture and Homemakers
      The Merschmans
 6    Neil Goldberg    Raymour & Flanigan (Liverpool, N.Y.) $1,008.8
 7      Jay Schottenstein    American Signature (Columbus, Ohio)    $965.8
 8    Alex Smith    Pier 1 Imports (Fort Worth, Texas)    $957.0
 9    David Acker    Sleepy€™s (Hicksville, N.Y.)    $846.0
10    Steve Stagner    Mattress Firm (Houston, Texas)    $831.2
11    Kurt Darrow    La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries (Monroe, Mich.)    $820.0
12    Gordon Segal    Crate & Barrel (Northbrook, Ill.)    $717.7
13    Shelly Ibach    Select Comfort (Minneapolis)    $713.5
14    Farooq Kathwari    Ethan Allen (Danbury, Conn.)    $695.0
15    Bill McKendry    Furniture Row (Denver, Colo.)    $640.0
16    Ted English    Bob€™s Discount Furniture (Manchester, Conn.)    $638.8
17    Clarence Smith    Havertys (Atlanta)    $621.0
18    Carlos Alberini    Restoration Hardware (Corte Madera, Calif.)    $515.0
19    Art Van Elslander    Art Van (Warren, Mich.)    $470.2
20    Niraj Shah    Wayfair Furniture (Boston)    $400.0
21    Kenny Larson    Slumberland (Little Canada, Minn.)    $383.7
22    Dale Carlson    The Sleep Train (Citrus Heights, Calif.)    $371.8
23    Bill Mathis    Mathis Brothers (Oklahoma City)    $344.8
24    Barry Feld    Cost Plus World Market (Oakland, Calif.)    $332.0
25    Jake Jabs    American Furniture Warehouse (Englewood, Colo.)    $323.0
26    Mike Price    Badcock Home Furniture & More (Mulberry, Fla.)    $305.0
27    Rob Spilman    Bassett Home Furnishings (Bassett, Va.)    $268.0
28    Steve Freeman    Room & Board (Minneapolis)    $264
29    E.J. Strelitz    Haynes Furniture (Virginia Beach, Va.)    $262.0
30    Ed Teplitz    Thomasville Home Furnishings Stores (Thomasville, N.C.)    $240.1
31    The Haux Family    Mor Furniture for Less (San Diego)    $238.4
32    The Johansen Family    HOM Furniture (Coon Rapids, Minn.)    $202.5
33    Terry Lundgren    Macy€™s Furniture Gallery (New York, N.Y.)    $202.0
34    Grover Geiselman and    Living Spaces (Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.)    $185.0
      Sharm Scheuerman
35    Chris Pelcher    Levin Furniture (Smithton, Pa.)    $175.0
36    John Reed    Arhaus Furniture (Walton Hills, Ohio.)    $165.0
37    John Edelman    Design Within Reach (Stamford, Conn.)    $160.0
38    The Capo Family    El Dorado Furniture (Miami Gardens, Fla.)    $159.1
39    Bruce Berman    The RoomPlace (Lombard, Ill.)    $151.0
40    Irwin Novack    Kane€™s Furniture (Pinellas Park, Fla.)    $133.0
41    The Baer Family    Baer€™s (Pompano Beach, Fla.)    $132.0
42    Paulette Cole    ABC Carpet & Home (New York)    $130.0
43    The Harris Family    Furnitureland South (Jamestown, N.C.)    $129.5
44    Gordy Wallenstein    Furniture Mart USA (Sioux Falls, S.D.)    $124.4
45    Joe and Mike Zeiden    Z Gallerie (Gardena, Calif.)    $119.3
46    Jim McIngvale    Gallery Furniture (Houston, Texas)    $115.8
47    George Cartledge III    Grand Home Furnishings (Roanoke, Va.)    $110.0
48    Gary Steinhafel    Steinhafels (Waukesha, Wis.)    $109.3
49    Humberto Garza Valdez    FAMSA (Santa Fe Springs, Calif.)    $108.8
50    The Navarra Family and    Jerome€™s (San Diego, Calif.)    $102.0
       Lee Goodman

The Top 50 (Based on Social Influence):

Just how influential is the home furnishings retail family? Thanks to Klout, that€™s not as hard to figure out as it once was.

The Klout Score, a number between one and 100, is a representation of a person€™s or entity€™s overall social media influence. The science behind the score looks at more than 400 variables on multiple social networks beyond your number of followers and friends. It examines who engages with the content and with whom they then share that information.

Klout.com features an algorithm that measures the effectiveness of your social media usage with sites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google+, LinkedIn, foursquare and Wikipedia. It€™s simple to determine. Login, input your Twitter name and out comes your Klout score.

While no one comes close to President Barack Obama€™s Klout score of 99 or Justin Beiber€™s 91, furniture retailers aren€™t too shabby.

Specialty retailer Pier 1 Imports is on fire with social media with its ranking of 83, four points ahead Williams-Sonoma at 79. From there, Klout scores start to drop off rather dramatically.

Here€™s a look at how those in our Power 50 pool shake out on Klout:

 1    Pier 1 Imports    83    Online shopping, Personal Finance, Kitchen
 2    Williams-Sonoma    79    Shopping, Food, Branding
 3    Z Gallerie    68    Dining, Kentucky Derby, Frankenstein
 4    Crate & Barrel    64    Dining, Mother€™s Day, Online Shopping
 5    RC Willey Furniture    63    Dining, Camcorder, Digital Cameras
 6     Wayfair Furniture    61    Memorial Day, Recessions, Personal Finance
 7     Mattress Firm    60    Facebook, Sales, Shopping
 8     Macy€™s    57    Whitney Houston, Black History Month, Hudson River
 9    Furnitureland South    55    Customer Service, Apps, Facebook
10    Art Van    53    Furniture, The Future, Nelly Furtado
11    Rooms To Go    53    Family, Customer Service, Kitchen
12    La-Z-Boy Furniture    52    Customer Service, Facebook, Chicago
13    Nebraska Furntiure Mart    51    Customer Service, Kitchen, Fifa
14    Restoration Hardware    51   
15    Raymour & Flanigan    50    Dining, Personal Finance, Customer Service
16    Room & Board    50    Dining, Electricity, Customer Service
17    Jerome€™s Furniture    49    Pizza, Facebook, Sales
18    Sleepy€™s    49    Greenwich, Mother€™s Day, Customer Service
19    ABC Carpet & Home    48    Kitchen, Andrea Bocelli, Cookbooks
20    Gardner-White    48    Billboards, Detroit 1-8-7, Metro Detroit
21    Circle Furniture    47    Rachel Ray, Community, Facebook
22    Star Furniture    47    Sales, Retail, Law
23    Sit €˜N Sleep    47    Billboards, L.A. Times, Sales
24    The Sleep Train    47    Customer Service, Community, Sales
25    Havertys    46    Customer Service, Community, Sales
26    Walter E. Smithe    46    Facebook, Chicago, Brighton
27    American Signature    46    Customer Service, Shopping, Football
28    Ikea    44    Dining, Ikea, Burbank
29    Ashley Furniture HomeStores    43    Customer Service, Sales, Television
30    Mealey€™s Furniture    43    Furniture
31    Select Comfort    43    Customer Service, Sales, Health
32    FAMSA    43    Msi
33    Bob€™s Discount Furniture    42    New Jersey, Money
34    HD Buttercup    42    Facebook, Shopping, Money
35    Kane€™s Furniture    41    Pizza, Sales, Internet Marketing
36    Belfort Furniture    40    Internet Marketing, Social Media, Furniture
37    Walker Furniture    40
38    Mathis Brothers    38    Sales, Moms, Money
39    Miskelly Furniture    38    Coupons, Family
40    Weego Home    38    Santa Monica
41    City Furniture    37    Business
42    Arhaus Furniture    37    Prince, Raleigh, Texas
43    Homemakers    37    Carnival, Shopping, Moms
44    American Furniture Warehouse    36    Ikea, Facebook, Furniture
45    Jennifer Convertibles    36    Customer Service, Furniture
46    One Way Furniture    36    Furniture, Sales, Hurricans
47    Gallery Furniture    35    Moms, Money, Furniture
48    Weekends Only Furniture Outlet    33    St. Louis
49    Mor Furniture for Less    33    Customer Service, Sales, Furniture
50    Kimbrell€™s    31

The Top 50: "The Popular Vote":

Your input matters! Here€™s where your vote came into play with our 2012 Power 50 retail ranking. We posted the ballot online, solicited your input, which you shared in astounding numbers. Participation was outstanding; thank you to each of you who took the time. Here, the results.

 1     Ed Teplitz    Thomasville Home Furnishings Stores    33%
 2    Art Van Elslander    Art Van Furniture    19%
 3    Lee Aaronson    Lacks Valley Stores    17%
 4    Mike Huber    Belfort Furniture    11%
 5    The Blumkin Family    Nebraska Furniture Mart    10%
 6     The Capo Family    El Dorado Furniture    7%
 7    Keith Koenig    City Furniture    7%
 8    Peggy Burns    Circle Furniture    6%
 9    Jeff Child    R.C. Willey Home Furnishings    6%
10    Ron and Todd Wanek    Ashley Furniture HomeStores    6%
11    The Tatelman Family    Jordan€™s Furniture    6%
12    Farooq Kathwari    Ethan Allen    6%
13    Clarence Smith    Havertys    5%
14    Gordon Segal    Crate & Barrel    5%
15    Jake Jabs    American Furniture Warehouse    5%
16    Jeff Seaman    Rooms To Go    5%
17    The Johansen Family    HOM Furniture    5%
18    Jim McIngvale    Gallery Furniture    4%
19    Neil Goldberg    Raymour & Flanigan    4%
20    The Baer Family    Baer€™s    4%
21    The Wo Family    C.S. Wo & Sons    4%
22    The Harris Family    Furnitureland South    4%
23    Bill Mathis    Mathis Brothers    4%
24    The Miskelly Family    Miskelly Furniture    4%
25    Doug Wolf    Wolf Furniture    4%
26    Larry Klaben    Morris Furniture    4%
27    Gary Steinhafel    Steinhafels    4%
28    The Smithe Family    Walter E. Smithe Furniture    4%
29    Jay Schottenstein    American Signature    3%
30    Bill Kimbrell    Star Furniture    3%
31    Aminy Audi    Stickley, Audi & Co.     3%
32    The Navarra Family    Jerome€™s    3%
      and Lee Goodman
33    Laura Alber    Williams-Sonoma    3%
34    Rob Spilman    Bassett Home Furnishings    3%
35    Ron Werner, Jim Hering    HW Home    3%
36    Steve Freeman    Room & Board    3%
37    Eric Easter    Kittle€™s    3%
38    Kurt Darrow    La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries    3%
39    Chris Pelcher    Levin Furniture    3%
40    Mike Albert    Pilgrim Furniture City    3%
41    The Rubin Family    Bernie & Phyl€™s Furniture    3%
42    Mike Forwood    Louis Shanks of Texas    3%
43    Kenny Larson    Slumberland    3%
44    Steve and Marty Darvin    Darvin Furniture    3%
45    Joe and Mike Zeiden    Z Gallerie    3%
46    Paulette Cole    ABC Carpet & Home    3%
47    Ted English    Bob€™s Discount Furniture    3%
48    George Cartledge III    Grand Home Furnishings    3%
49    Mikael Ohlsson    Ikea    3%
50    Niraj Shah    Wayfair Furniture    3%

High Point Reflections

By Home Furnishings Business in on December 2012

Samson Marketing CEO Kevin O€™Connor€™s tenure as chairman of the High Point Market Authority was a time that saw plenty of changes at the key venues where furniture retailers do their own shopping.

O€™Connor, Samson Marketing CEO, who just passed the Market Authority chairmanship to Doug Bassett of Vaughan-Bassett, took time to talk with Home Furnishings Business about how he sees High Point in particular and the furniture market landscape in general these days.

Looking back on his time as chairman of the High Point Market Authority, O€™Connor gave a lot of credit to former HPMA President Brian Casey for bringing the furniture industry together around the show and securing city and state funding for the event; and improving buildings and services.

€œWe needed someone from outside the industry €¦ who brought the constituents of market together, and Brian did that,€ O€™Connor said.

PREMARKET€™S COMEBACK O€™Connor also was a driving force behind the resurgence of Premarket. A critical point came in 2009, when the Las Vegas Market held its second show of the year in September.

€œThere were a number of us who felt like because of the economic climate and the changes in manufacturing, especially on the case goods side, the whole premarket (concept) had fallen apart,€ he said. €œPeople weren€™t sure they could get ready for premarket, and the retailers really reacted, saying it wasn€™t worth their time.

€œI thing the organization of getting what started with 15 key manufacturers €¦ when (Las Vegas) threw their market on top of us, we made a decision to introduce product only at High Point Market. That was a turning point in retailers deciding where they needed to go. ... We put a stake in the ground, and to me that was one of the key elements in bringing back High Point Premarket.€
He added that while the Market Authority plays a huge role, the vendors recognized at that point that it€™s their market.
€œThe key vendors taking ownership and putting their money where their mouth is, that was the turning point,€ O€™Connor said. €œThe fact that 150-plus important retailers show up for this event proves this is a meaningful event. The (vendors) who sponsor this promise to one another and their customers to make it market-ready.€

A STRONG TEAM Moving forward, O€™Connor said that Tom Conley, who took over from Brian Casey in August last year as Market Authority president and CEO, brought a different set of skills to the table.
€œHe€™s a professional trade show analyst who collaborates and will take the market to its next level,€ O€™Connor said, adding praise for other Authority staff. €œOne of the great things I saw occur during Brian and Tom€™s transition is the contribution of Tammy Nagem (HPMA COO) and Cheminne Taylor-Smith, who handles PR and marketing, really stepped up. These women stepped up to the plate, were there every moment, and are the backbone of the organization.
€œWe€™ve created a nice, successful plan for the executive committee. Doug (Bassett) is a vibrant, young, very bright guy who works well with people. With his D.C. experience, he€™s uniquely politically oriented to understand and deal with our relationship with Raleigh. We have a nice mix on the executive committee now: John Bray (of Vanguard) is back; Mike Huber (Belfort Furniture), one of the leading D.C.-area retailers; John Gunter (Jordan€™s Furniture). We€™ve brought on the design part of the business, which is probably the fastest-growing part of the high-end market.€

COMMON GROUND International Market Centers€™ big ownership stake in Las Vegas and High Point, O€™Connor believes, will be good for both markets and good for the industry.
€œIt eliminates some of the €˜us and them€™ mentality, and I think that€™s a good thing. You also have a financially viable owner in High Point,€ he said. €œI think Tom Mitchell, in particular, has done an outstanding job in making (Vegas and High Point) not an either/or proposition; Bob Maricich is well-respected in our industry. It€™s no longer an argument.€
In trying to make its real estate investment in both cities more viable, IMC could make both markets better.
€œThe point I€™m making is that the buildings aren€™t in conflict, and the (High Point) Market is not owned by the real estate interests,€ O€™Connor said. €œThe city€™s done a marvelous job in not only providing funding, but also services. The Market is the equivalent of multiple Super Bowls in terms of economic impact on the state.
€œYou can€™t go to a convention center and and set up with poles and drapery and have the furniture look like it does in the home. At Market, we can create an environment that shows what the retail presentation should look like. With the size of the showrooms, you can afford to inspire retailers on how to stimulate their customers.€

Pioneering

By Home Furnishings Business in on December 2012

Furniture retailers who expect 2013 to be a growth year had best look to their own devices. Slow economic improvement and still-touchy consumers make for a business environment that€™s strange new territory for a lot of store owners.

Things are looking up overall, but as with 2012, any opportunities furniture retailers have for the coming year are mostly the ones they seize themselves. The overall economy has improved since we gave our last outlook a year ago, but it remains an environment where fancying up one€™s personal space is far from first on most consumers€™ list of priorities.

While the €œmacro€ numbers home furnishings retailers look to as indicators for their business prospects are up as 2012 winds down, the coming 12 months remain iffy for the sector as a whole.

Late last month, the Consumer Confidence Index hit 73.7, up slightly from October and the CCI€™s highest reading since February 2008.

Gross domestic product increased at an annual rate of 2.7 percent in the third quarter over the prior three months, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

In the second quarter, real GDP had increased 1.3 percent.

Despite Hurricane Sandy€™s putting the Northeast at a standstill, the National Association of Realtors reported that October existing-home sales rose a seasonally adjusted 2.1 percent from September; and were 10.9 percent ahead of October 2011. New home sales in October rose 17.2 percent from the prior-year month.

And according to the U.S. Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development, privately-owned housing starts in October were 3.6 percent above the revised September estimate; and 41.9 percent ahead of October.

More good news for furniture retailers, especially in electoral battleground states, is that another presidential election is in the books, and they can start advertising more on television whether or not they were pleased by the actual results.

That all sounds good, and certainly brighter than this time a year ago, but economic growth hovering around the 2 percent annual mark won€™t be making a big dent in continued high unemployment, which still hovered in October near 8 percent.

It won€™t take another big negative headline or two for consumers to lose their slowly burgeoning confidence.

ANOTHER SLOG?
If economic growth remains sluggish, home furnishings overall won€™t see a big increase in 2013.

Global ratings agency Fitch Ratings, which has headquarters in New York and London, expects retail sales overall to grow between 3 and 4 percent next year, driven mainly by 2 to 3 percent same-store sales increases and a modest square-footage expansion.

That€™s not a big piece of growth pie for home furnishings to bite into. (For Fitch€™s complete 2013 retail sales outlook report, visit FitchRatings.com)

There are other areas of concern to retailers, not just next year, but down the road according to Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo, Charlotte, N.C.

Vitner shared his take on how 2013 will shape up during a presentation last month at the annual meeting of the American Home Furnishings Alliance in Miami.

He€™s concerned about the coming year, and his biggest concerns include credit availability and finance reform; and regulatory uncertainty.

He also worries that the current €œfiscal cliff€ negotiations between the White House and Congress will just put off the problem until later.

€œThe fiscal cliff, they€™ll finagle their way around this,€ he said, adding that he anticipates a compromise on extending Bush-era tax cuts. €œInstead of (eliminating) tax cuts for everyone who makes over $250,000, it will be everyone but those who make more than $1 million. They€™ll let the tax cuts expire Dec. 31, then re-instate them for those making less than $1 million.€

Vitner doesn€™t think a fiscal cliff compromise will lead to a recession, but he does think it will mean continued sluggish economic growth.

He also noted that the upper-income segment that has benefited most from rising stock and home prices, and refinancing at lower interest rates represents consumers who€™ll sock that money away, which won€™t help stimulate consumer spending.

€œThe ones who are saving most on refi€™s are those most likely to save their money, so it won€™t help growth that much,€ Vitner said. €œThe economy will grow at 2 percent as far as the eye can see.

€œThe Fed is keeping interest rates low, but the election result we got (in November) is not friendly to risk taking.€

Here is Vitner€™s worst-case scenario down the road doesn€™t bode well.
He believes that if the slow economic growth since the recession€™s end in May 2009 continues, the economy won€™t be in good enough shape to withstand another possible downturn.

€œIn June 2015 the current expansion will be 73-months-old,€ he said. €œOnly two economic expansions since the Civil War lasted longer. What happens if we go into another recession€ with the current level of economic growth?

TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS
It€™s nice to think the economy will improve and the industry will enjoy its fruits, but the coming year will be a hard one for retailers who wait for that to happen.
Fitch Ratings likes the chances better for retailers who take a multi-channel approach. That means looking outside a simple bricks-and-mortar strategy and maybe, adding an e-commerce Web site to the mix. Or, possible a mail-order catalog to help boost sales.

€œIn view of the strong growth in online sales and other alternative formats, traditional retailers that are willing and capable of investing in a multi-channel strategy will continue to drive market share gains at the expense of retailers that struggle to maintain relevance in a mature but dynamic sector,€ according to its 2013 retail outlook summary.
Does your company take proactive steps, or does it wait for an economic boon that shows no signs of coming?
Two companies with considerable retail footprints nationwide€”Thomasville and Ethan Allen€”aren€™t waiting around.
Home Furnishings Business asked Thomasville President Edward Teplitz and Ethan Allen Chairman and CEO Farooq Kathwari to share their thoughts on the keys in 2013 to growth, both as in terms of the overall economy and also in terms of what retailers can do to position themselves in order to grab consumers€™ business.
€œWe are cautiously optimistic, and the reason is that slowly and steadily, with ups and downs, the economy has improved,€ Kathwari said, adding that there€™s a lot of uncertainty out of any single business€™ control. €œWe don€™t know what will happen with the €˜fiscal cliff.€™ The concept is not very complicated€”if you€™re an enterprise you work to increase revenue and reduce your costs. The costs of entitlements have to be weighed.€
He noted that includes subsidies to business, agriculture and defense as well as those things pundits usually speak of as €œentitlements,€ such as Medicare and Social Security.
€œResolving that will help us from a consumer-confidence perspective moving forward,€ Kathwari said.
Teplitz looks at the coming year in €œmacro€ terms related to the economy and €œmicro€ terms€”specifically what Thomasville can do as a company to impact its future.
€œBusiness over the last few months has been stronger, housing starts, housing sales continue to grow, but there€™s regionality there. Nobody€™s saying how great it is,€ he said. €œIt will be great if we have better housing numbers, better consumer confidence, but that€™s not what we€™re counting on for our own growth.
€œFirst, we€™ll continue to improve the retail experience in our store with better display, more tools, retail technology. We€™ll keep introducing product that€™s more updated traditional and contemporary.€
Kathwari noted that in 2009 and 2010, Ethan Allen€™s operating earnings went from $130 million to $100 million.
€œIn the last two years, our sales are up 34 percent,€ he said. €œLast year we made up half of what we lost.€
Part of that was because Ethan Allen took some harsh bottom line moves that cost in the short run but left the retailer in a position to pick up business when the economy kicked in€”things like putting design associates on salary so they could make a living in the stores while times were tight, which kept design skills in place to serve customers as they started coming back.
€œIn 2013 we see a more positive consumer attitude, and we€™ve positioned ourselves for growth,€ Kathwari said.
Looking at where Thomasville is today versus a year ago, Teplitz noted that while the economy€™s not great, everything seems to be getting a little better.
€œIf we do everything we need to do right, as far as 2013 goes, it will get better for Thomasville,€ he said. €œHome furnishings certainly remain a discretionary item. As much as we€™d like otherwise, that hasn€™t changed much year over year.
€œThe key is that once you get them into your store through stronger promotions or advertising, give them a better retail experience,€ he said. €œWe€™re putting more technology into our stores, better display. We don€™t want it to be just about closing the sale at a great price today; and playing to the aspirational aspect is important at our price points.€

CHANGING EXPECTATIONS
Thomasville also looks to change consumer expectations of its product offerings, providing traditional based design, but mixing in wood and metal and leathers to make it more relevant to the way consumers live today. Collections are shorter, too, and that has a lot to do with the company€™s evolution.
€œIf you look back to the €˜90s when we had a domestic (manufacturing) model, we had the ability to manufacture a lot more SKUs,€ Teplitz said. €œWe€™ve changed to adapt to an import model and our service positions. We€™ve changed from a manufacturing to a retail point of view. One reason we€™d brought out all those SKUs (in the past) was to keep our plants full.
€œWe don€™t need those large collections anymore to keep the consumer interested. We€™ll still do whole-home collections, but we can drive volume out of fewer SKUs now. Today€™s consumer is spending more money on upholstery and occasional pieces.€
On the vendor side, Samson Marketing CEO Kevin O€™Connor is very cautious about next year.
€œThe reality is if you wipe away the (election) fight that took place, we€™re still in the same place we were, regarding the Senate, White House and House of Representatives,€ he said. €œI hope leadership and bipartisan compromise is possible. If not, we could be in for a very tough year.
€œIf we plunge ourselves back into recession we would dowse the hope that appears with the surge in housing that€™s taking place,€ he said.

CREATING OPPORTUNITY
The successful retailers O€™Connor sees have staked a claim in bedding.
€œThey€™re finding a way to market that to the general public in a way that makes people feel they need a better mattress,€ he said. €œThe motion part of the upholstery business is a part of the business that€™s replaceable. Dining is something used every day, and with kitchens being remodeled and lifestyles changing, that€™s an opportunity. The case goods segment of our industry is the most sluggish at the present time.
€œThe challenge is to create excitement along the lines of what the bedding business has done. How do we make ourselves better? I think it€™s clear most (companies) haven€™t recovered from 2007 to 2009. It€™s depleted the balance sheets of a lot of companies.€
Kathwari pointed out that the United States is in €œa different era of economic activity.€
Cautious consumerism might just be the new normal, and retailers have to take charge of their own destiny.
€œOur focus is to have most of our growth come from within,€ Kathwari said. €œWe have 2,000 interior design professionals, 800 of whom we acquired in the last three years, and almost all of whom owned their own interior design firm. We€™ve invested in technology. You look at all the macro factors. Independent enterprises have to take the opportunity to do it themselves.
€œToday we€™re competing in a different world,€ he said. €œIn our sector, we€™ve grown more sophisticated and have more technology. €¦ All this also is an opportunity to improve infrastructure and technology in adapting to a new environment. Customization gave us an opportunity to provide services, and technology gave us the opportunity to provide services we couldn€™t before.€
Thomasville is positioning itself to make the most of the coming year€™s business environment.
€œWe€™re looking to expand our footprint not only with stores, but also with multiple-vendor dealers where a (stand-alone) store doesn€™t make sense,€ Teplitz said. €œHopefully we€™ll get some tailwind from the economy, but that€™s not where we€™re focusing for our own growth.€
The bottom line for furniture retailers in 2013 is to find a creative way to make their own magic and to run a smart, tight ship. Next year is upon us, and none of the brightest prognosticators are calling for record-setting sales. A modest gain seems to be in the cards, which means scrappy business sense is needed. HFB

Pure LatexBliss Partners With Bio-Rubber Producer

By Home Furnishings Business in Mattresses on November 30, 2012

Luxury mattress brand Pure LatexBliss has signed an exclusive partnership with Yulex Corp., a manufacturer of bio-rubber latex derived from the guayule plant.

Guayule is a desert shrub grown in commercial farms throughout southern Arizona. Offering an additional option to the company€™s other latex products derived from Hevea rubber trees, Pure LatexBliss will be the first manufacturer in the sleep products industry to create latex mattresses and pillows with Yulex latex technology.

The new bio-Latex is desirable for its eco-friendly properties. Plant-based, Yulex sets a new standard for creating sustainable, renewable, and low carbon sleep products. It has a natural elasticity, durability and softness, which make it an ideal component for bedding. Those same qualities make Yulex appropriate for a range of goods, and the company has strategic partnerships in other consumer categories, including with Patagonia sportswear and Ansell Medical. 

€œThis is a €˜new to the world€™ latex technology that has never been used before in our category,€ said Atlanta-based Pure LatexBliss President Kurt Ling. "When we discovered Yulex, we were convinced that this was an innovation we needed to bring to our product collections. Not only does Yulex produce a high-performance latex, we were excited to learn that guayule is grown and Yulex is made in the United States."

Guayule is a new industrial crop and the only species other than Hevea that has been used for rubber production on a commercial scale, according to Pure LatexBliss. Guayule is a non-food plant that requires very little water, is grown domestically, uses no pesticides and has a clean manufacturing process. Rubber is found primarily in the bark of this desert shrub. To extract the rubber, the branches are ground, releasing intact rubber particles and an aqueous suspension. The materials are separated in a centrifuge, and the rubber mixture is culled of the top and purified.

Pure LatexBliss plans to unveil its Yulex collection of mattresses, toppers and pillows at the Jan. 28-Feb. 1 Las Vegas Furniture Market.

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