RetailerNOW—June 2012

52
www.retailerNOWmag.com JUNE | 2012 FC1 RetailerNOW Vol. 1 Issue 2 “THE SHIFT” June Issue JUNE 2012 JUNE 2012 INSIGHTS FOR TODAY’S HOME FURNISHINGS PROFESSIONAL The Shift SCAN & SCRAM GOING SOLO MADE IN USA—WHO CARES? www.RetailerNOWmag.com STOP iGNORING THE OBVIOUS National Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings Association WHFA NHFA

description

The shift in technology and the industry.

Transcript of RetailerNOW—June 2012

Page 1: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 FC1

RetailerN

OW

Vol. 1 Issue 2

“THE SH

IFT” June Issue JU

NE 2012

JUNE 2012

INSIGHTS FOR TODAY’S HOME FURNISHINGS PROFESSIONAL

The Shift

SCAN & SCRAMGOING SOLOMADE IN USA—WHO CARES?

www.RetailerNOWmag.com

STOP iGNORING THE OBVIOUS

National Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings AssociationWHFANHFA

Page 2: RetailerNOW—June 2012

FC2 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 1

www.surya.com

SERVICES • INVENTORY • MERCHANDISING • PRODUCT • TECHNOLOGY • COMMUNITY

To become a Surya dealer, please call

1.877.275.7847or email us at [email protected]

32,550 FANS AND RISING!WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/SURYASOCIAL

ATLANTAAMERICASMART

6-A-76-A-7JULY 11 - 18, 2012

LAS VEGASWMC

B-370B-370JULY 30 - AUGUST 3, 2012

FRESHEN UP!FRESHEN UP!FRESHEN UP!VISIT OUR SHOWROOM TO SEE HOW

Page 3: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 1

12. Stop the Madness17. Scan & Scram—New Consumer Habit

20. Social Shopping—Huh?

34. Made in America37. Buying in the USA Does anyone really care?

39. Remade in America Learning from Lincolnton Furniture

45. The Solo Economy—MoneyMatters

on the coverStop the MadnessOn board or OOB12

count onIT

yourVOICE

featuresNOW

09. Roving Reporter09. Inspired Reading10. Retailer2Retailer23. HFIC—Wrap Up

28. High Point Highlights30. Community Today33. What’s Selling NOW

I N S I D E

04. Now We’re Talking A Message from the NHFA President

06. Editor’s Letter08. TechNOW—Inbox40. Membership Marketplace 42. Product Focus—Casual / Outdoor

44. Quick Fire Marketing46. Industry Scoop47. Calendar48. The Now List

manufacturing shift

technology shift

Snapshots—On the Red Carpet at HFIC 2012

26

consumer shift

Page 4: RetailerNOW—June 2012

2 M a y | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

Editorial Collaborators:Andrew Tepperman, Tepperman’s Carol Bell, Contents Interiors Donny Hinton, Colortyme Marty Cramer, Cramer’s Home Furnishings Rick Howard, Sklar Furnishings Travis Garrish, Forma Furniture

2012 National Home Furnishings Association OfficersMarc Shewel, President, Schewel Furniture, VADianne Ray, Chairman, Garden City Furniture, SCCherie Rose, President Elect, The Rose Collection, CARick Howard, Sr. Vice President & Treasurer, FLJohn Wells III, Sr. Vice President, Wells Home Furnishings, WV

2012 Western Home Furnishings Association OfficersChris Sanders, President, Everton Mattress Factory, IDValerie Watters, President Elect, Valerie’s Furniture & Accents, AZLael Thompson, Broyhill Home Collections, COChuck Kill, Treasurer, Bedmart, AZTom Slater, Slater’s Home Furnishings, CA

Southern Home Furnishings Association President: Robert Dossenbach, Dossenbach’s Finer Furniture, NC Southeastern Home Furnishings Association President: Mark Godwin, Hainjes Inc., AL

For a complete Board of Director listing, visit retailerNOWmag.com

NHFA StaffSteve DeHaan, NHFA Executive Vice President • (800) 888-9590 x6124Karin Mayfield, Sr. Director of Membership • (800) 888-9590 x6154Jordan Boyst, Member Services Rep • (800) 888-9590 x6132Dianne Therry, Member Services Rep • (800) 888-9590 x6167

WHFA StaffSharron Bradley, WHFA Executive Director • (916) 960-0345Karpice Crawford, Membership Director • (916) 960-0346Mike Hill, Member Services Rep • (916) 960-0263

National Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings AssociationSEHFA SHFAWHFANHFA

South Eastern Home Furnishings Association Southern Home Furnishings Association

Contact Information:Mailing – Editorial:

500 Giuseppe Ct., Suite 6

Roseville CA 95678

Mailing – Advertising

3910 Tinsley Drive #101

High Point NC 27265

Online: retailerNOWmag.comPhone: Editorial: (800) 422-3778 Advertising: (800) 888-9590Social: facebook.com/retailerNOW Twitter.com/retailerNOW Pinterest.com/retailerNOW

RetailerNOWthePlayers

Melissa [email protected]

Lisa TilleyArt [email protected]

Larry CarrollAccount [email protected]

Tim TimmonsAssociate [email protected]

Cindi WilliamsBusiness [email protected]

Subscription: $70/year

Retailer Now, ISSN# 2166-5249 is published monthly (except March and December) by the Western Home Furnishings Association, 500 Giuseppe Court, Ste 6, Roseville, CA 95678. Application to Mail at the Periodicals Postage Prices is Pending at Roseville, CA and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: please address changes to: RetailerNOW, The Western Home Furnishings Association, 500 Giuseppe Court, Ste 6, Roseville CA 95678.

If you would like to stop receiving RetailerNOW, please send an email to [email protected].

If you would like to only receive an electronic version of RetailerNOW, please send an email to [email protected]. © 2012 National and Western Home Furnishings Associations. Published by the National Home Furnishings Association and Western Home Furnishings Association. Material herein may not be reproduced, copied or reprinted without prior written consent of the publisher. Acceptance of advertising or indication of sponsorship does not imply endorsement of publisher or National and Western Home Furnishings Associations. The views expressed in this publication may not reflect those of the publisher, editor or National Home Furniture Association, Western Home Furnishings Association and Western Retail Services Corp. Content herein is for general information only; readers are encouraged to consult their own attorney, accountant, tax expert and other professionals for specific advice before taking any action.

What we are so passionate about. . .

To have the courage to pursue purposeful dialogues that challenge conventional thinking, to engage and entertain our readers by delivering content that creates a fervent following ready to change the landscape of our industry.

RetailerNOW is the magazine for today’s home furnishings professional. Developed for a specialized community, RetailerNOW brings a unique editorial focus on progressive and relevant issues concerning the home furnishings industry in the retailer’s voice, with a focus on issues impacting retailers NOW.

Q: What is your favorite summer cocktail?

Berry Mojitos

Manhattan is my “year round” favorite but in summer I do a lemon twist instead of the traditional cherry. Much more refreshing! Hah!

New England Chapter

THERE aRE somE THingsTEcHnology

can'T impRovE

Space B-1350 | World Market Center | July 30-Aug 2 | Las Vegas Contact your Emerald Home sales representative or call 253-922-1400

furnishing life's greatest connectionssince 1962

THE oRiginal social nETwoRk

Fresh squeezed (by my hubby) Ruby Red Grapefruit, splash of soda & Ketel Vodka—served poolside.

Page 5: RetailerNOW—June 2012

thePlayers THERE aRE somE THingsTEcHnology

can'T impRovE

Space B-1350 | World Market Center | July 30-Aug 2 | Las Vegas Contact your Emerald Home sales representative or call 253-922-1400

furnishing life's greatest connectionssince 1962

THE oRiginal social nETwoRk

Page 6: RetailerNOW—June 2012

4 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

A few weeks ago I found myself standing before 20 juniors and seniors in a business class at Ferrum College in Ferrum, Va. As Executive in Residence (for one day), I had been invited to visit this classroom and then deliver a keynote address to as many of the campus community who might appreciate a local furniture storeowner’s words of wisdom (less than one hundred, it turned out).

Entitled Still Here, that speech—which consisted of a brief history of Schewel Furniture Company and some reflections on the persistence of this family-owned enterprise over 115 years—can be found on my blog website, myoccasionalpieces.blogspot.com.

The students in the class, however, were more interested in practical matters, namely, what qualities Schewel Furniture Company would be looking for in a prospective employee. Schewel’s operates stores in small towns and cities in Virginia and North Carolina—some of which may employ as few as 10 individuals. The success and profitability of any store is dependent on the skill level of its manager, who must build an effective team, motivate his staff to maximize sales, and maintain a high standard of customer service.The sobering news for these students is that probably only 10 percent of our store managers are college graduates. The most important attributes for advancement in the company are experience (on the sales floor, in our credit department, in inventory control, even in our warehouse), a willingness to work hard, and an appetite for learning.One of the most gratifying aspects of this business is the fermentation process—watching

persons of limited education and modest, even disadvantaged backgrounds, emerge from obscurity, mature over time, and blossom into superstars. We call them “diamonds in the rough”.For example, a warehouse worker replaced an alcoholic and ran a store for 30 years. A single mother of three, formerly on welfare, was named “Credit Manager of the Year”. A part-time collector became a resident expert in data processing and now oversees our Distribution Center.In a small town in Southside Virginia, we tolerated a revolving door of disinterested, incompetent managers until one day, in desperation, we implored a young, female office clerk to the job. I don’t know if she had ever graduated from high school, but I do know she was common-sense smart, sales-oriented (every year she won a mattress contest for non-selling personnel), and extremely averse to failure.She was reluctant to accept. “I don’t know anything about running a store,” she said. “Trust us,” we said. “You’ll learn.”And she did—quickly. She immediately turned over half the employees; having worked with them for a number of years, she instinctively knew which ones would help her succeed and which ones would impede her. She understood that the place she needed to be was out on the floor—meeting customers and closing sales—as opposed to her predecessors, who were content to find paperwork to keep them occupied. Her profit-and-loss statement was impenetrable, but intuitively she comprehended that she could make more money by eliminating unnecessary costs.Within three years, sales had increased 50 percent and profits by an even greater amount.I am sure all of you can boast of similar success stories in your own organizations. Collectively, they are just another reason why—in spite of frustrations, inconsistencies, and daunting challenges—our passion for furniture proprietorship remains all-consuming.

—A Message from your NHFA President

President’s Message

DIAMONDS IN THE ROUGH

[email protected]

Marc SchewelSchewel FurnitureNHFA President

Page 7: RetailerNOW—June 2012

The West’s premier home furnishings marketplace

brings it together for you—on-trend product

introductions, exclusive suppliers and unique

resources—all in one effi cient and exciting

buying experience. Connect with it all here.

... where all your best connections are made.

To learn more and register today please visit www.LasVegasMarket.com

Las Vegas MarketJuly 30 — August 3, 2012

A PROPERTY OF:

©2012 World Market Center Las Vegas LLC. All rights reserved.

AIS112_LVMS12_RETAILNOW.indd 1 5/16/12 2:11 PM

Page 8: RetailerNOW—June 2012

Let’s face it—the world of retailing isn’t the same as it was 10 years ago, five years ago, two months ago, or even yesterday! Shift happens, things change and life goes on. Those that can adapt will be successful. Those that don’t will close.

So how do you keep up? One, you need to be aware of what is happening in other industries. Take a lead from industries that are once again making consumers excited about buying their products. Read magazines outside of our industry—get out of the

bubble. Attend a show like Consumer Electronics Show (CES) or South by Southwest (SXSW) and see what makes these industries HOT. Find ways to incorporate new technologies and experiences into your showroom (and online). This issue looks into three areas of retail that are greatly shifting today: technology, consumer lifestyles and manufacturing. Online, eCommerce, social shopping—insert new buzzword here—the World Wide Web and the technology to have it anywhere and everywhere is changing how your customer shops. When women shop today, they

often take their new BFF, the smartphone (which sometimes talks back to you—thanks Siri). The emergence of technology has greatly changed the landscape of retail, and it is going to continue to change. The next generation of shoppers is being taught to shop online instead of malls—that is their norm. Will you be ready?

Not only is your customer using technology, but there is a good chance she is on her iPad in her very own apartment. Yes, she lives alone. A new trend of living solo has hit the nation. Gone are the days of feeling like you must live with someone and people are choosing to live alone. How will you capitalize on this new market?

The world of manufacturing is also shifting, with some manufacturers deciding to move production back to America—both in furniture and other industries. Reshoring (another buzzword) could be great news for Americans, with an influx of jobs expected, especially in the Southern states. It is still a little too early to see how it all pans out, but there are promising signs in the forecast—but will Americans care?

(916) [email protected]@retailerNOW

Melissa DresslerEditor, RetailerNOW

from the editor

What I’m Loving…After crafting wallpaper and fabric for the last 126 years, Thibaut launched their first line of upholstered furniture at the April High Point Market—it’s to die for. One of my favs from their collection is the Stirling Chair in olive. Its clean design makes it perfect for a formal dining room, while the fun color is great for a breakfast nook.

Follow other products I love on my blog and on Pinterest.

Blog: www.retailerNOWmag.com www.pinterest.com/retailerNOW

Editor’s Message

Page 9: RetailerNOW—June 2012
Page 10: RetailerNOW—June 2012

8 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 9

Del Sol Furniture in Phoenix, AZ recently added Social Login to their website to make it easier for their customer to leave comments and share news on their pages. “We made it possible for people to connect to our page by using their Facebook login, so now they can easily leave comments throughout the site,” Alex Macias shared.

Top Tweets:@HFIC2012: You will never get dumber by making someone else in this world smart #hfic2012 @sanderssays@RetailerNOW: 1 out of every 8 minutes online is spent on Facebook via @KevinJDoran #HFIC2012

Follow us @RetailerNOW

Our Readers Email

I just received my copy of the RetailerNOW magazine. Wow! Very impressive. This is a real magazine with real content from members. I think you guys did a great job on it. This is a major step forward in building a real alliance.Keep up the good work.

Mark Navarra, Jerome’sSan Diego, CA

Put it to Use

Hot Tech

Cool Apps

Do your salespeople complete

transactions w/an iPad. Let us know

800.422.3778

Connect with us @ retailerNOWmag.com

Square Register Salespeople running around your store with tablets? Now give them a tool to instantly swipe a customer’s credit card and complete the sale. The Square card reader and register allows you to accept credit card payments on your Android, iPhone or iPad (it’s free, you just pay the processing fee). Editor Note: While it has been around for some time, I witnessed Square firsthand while wine tasting recently—it was an awesome user experience (and my signature looked great on the iPad screen!). – MD https://squareup.com

Social Login

Ever created a username and password for a website and then almost immediately forget it? Or, do you use the same password over and over? Your customer certainly has, and if you have eCommerce available on your site, you should look into offering Social Login.Social Login lets customers sign in with their Facebook, or another social media account, eliminating the need for yet another password. There are numerous benefits for retailers to utilizeSocial Login, such as:• Customers spend more time on

websites and purchase more than traditional users

• Allowing users to “social share” items from your site, which can greatly increase your word-of-mouth referrals

• Gives you access to demographic and psychographic information about your customer, often including his/her location, interests, hobbies, etc.

Privacy concerns are a hot topic with the rise of social media, but a recent Facebook survey said that 70% of those polled were comfortable sharing personal data on the network. Millions of customers are using Social Login—whether it is right for your business or not is for you to decide.

Good to Know

Tech

Inbox

we love to hear from you!melissa@

retailerNOWmag.com

TechNOW

Penultimate: Gives you the fast, tactile gratification of writing on paper, with digital power and flexibility. Take notes, keep sketches, or share

your next breakthrough idea—in the office, on the go, or at home on the sofa. (iPad only) Great tool for markets!

Facebook Pages Manager: Pages Manager helps admins connect with their audience and keep up with activity on multiple Pages, all in one place.

Members call us. We have an

App for that 800.422.3778

Page 11: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 9

Roving Reporter

Inspired Reading

We talk a lot about the things we want.

I want more money.

I want a better relationship with my spouse.

I want good responsible kids.

I want a promotion.

I want to be healthy.

I want to be smarter.

I want to retire.

I want, I want, I want…

Send your reading recommendation to [email protected].

Your Voice

Follow our Roving Reporters’ journeys and check out photos online at www.retailerNOWmag.com.

| RICK HOWARD, Sklar Furniture, Boca Raton, FL

Milan is the world’s center for design! So it is no coincidence that I Saloni is the world’s finest furniture design show and it draws people from every corner of

the world. It is extremely well attended with a few hundred thousand attendees! What an interesting strain it puts on the transportation systems in the morning and early evening. But everyone enjoys it nonetheless.Because the showrooms are constructed annually, specific for the week of the show, the manufacturers go all out to make sure their stand properly

reflects their brand. The result is some incredibly creative presentations. With this much visual stimulation it is hard to stay focused on the companies that you have on your list. But focus you must, as there are millions of square feet you would have to wade through otherwise. We all used the ISaloni app that let us navigate to those we needed to see. But even with

I Saloni, Milan

a sharp focus and determination, we were always pulled to something new. There was so much to tempt the buyer.Upholstery colors again this year were quiet and comfortable, soft browns, taupes, light grey, and mid tone beiges were popular with stronger accent colors on the pillows. Woods tended to follow suit with warm walnut tones, tobacco and soft matte lacquer colors. Many showed their vignettes on worn recycled carpets, thread bare in spots and together with large tables grouped on top. The effect was very warm and comfortable.The new innovative designs were practical and, for the most part, price sensitive. It is apparent that most of Europe is feeling the pinch of an economic slowdown; much like it was here a few years ago. Having said that, it was a very upbeat show being visited by so many thousands of people, you could not help but catch the enthusiasm for the whole scene. Milan, and the I Saloni in particular, is a place that I return to annually to be inspired and create ideas that help us shape the immediate future of our business. They are the trendsetters!

But do you know what people really want? They want what they’ve got. It’s a simple formula: You have what you

want because your actions produced your results. Not your words and certainly not your wants.Do you have a plan for success? Why not? It’s time to cut out the endless chatter about the things you want, the things you wish you had. It’s time to stop wasting your time with excuses and explanations for why you aren’t quite where you need to be. This book is the swift kick you need to cut out the bad habits that are keeping you from your goals. Figure out what you really want, not what you say you want, and get started on your action plan for success.

People Are Idoits and I Can Prove It! The 10 Ways you are saboTaging yourself and hoW you can overcome Them By Larry Winget

AS SEEN @ HFIC 2012!

Page 12: RetailerNOW—June 2012

10 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

Todd Bye La Crosse Clock La Crosse, WI

Alex Macias Muebleria Del Sol Phoenix, AZ

Jim Fee Stoney Creek Furniture Stoney Creek, ON, Canada

Q What changes have you made in your business to remain relevant to today’s consumer?

Retailer2RetailerYour Voice

We have really invested in our websites, and we now have an employee dedicated to social media. Part of investing in our website was to make it fully bilingual. Even though we cater to a mostly Spanish-speaking consumer, we felt that it was important to have everything available in both English and Spanish.

Along with making our website bilingual, we added an area to join our mailing list, a news feed providing fresh and relevant content, a room planner and a career page that allows people to apply online. We also have made it possible for people to connect to our page by using their Facebook login, so they can easily leave comments throughout the site.

Read more of Alex’s answer at www.retailerNOWmag.com.

Clocks are what we mainly sell and are known for first. In many peoples’ minds, clocks are just something used to tell the time. Responding to customers perceptions of what we offer is always a challenge but it can be fun. We will be told things like, “I don’t need a clock. I have one on my cell phone.” But you can’t see the time when it’s in your ear, can you? For us, inspiring them to see a clock not as a utilitarian “need” but a cool decorative home accessory that can be both functional and stylish and to buy it from us is an everyday challenge, but fun at the same time.

We always consider our message, which is why we changed our slogan to, “Time isn’t the only thing on our side”. We work to get people to see the style, value and fun, not just the function, in what we offer and include that message in all of our ads. “It’s not just what you say but how you say it.”

Read more of Todd’s answer at www.retailerNOWmag.com.

We have spent a lot of time over the last six to eight months really refreshing our showroom. We have also made some personnel changes that has allowed for a newly revitalized visual team, as well as, our new custodial team that has the store looking cleaner than ever. All of this, we hope, will make the in-store shopping experience better and more relevant than ever. I still think that an engaging showroom display will always be more impactful than an online experience.

To help engage the consumer, and hopefully drive them to our store, we have been sending out a monthly newsletter informing our customer’s about what is new and going on. We are working on developing a stronger social marketing strategy and gathering mobile members to send exclusive offers, incentives and information to. Hopefully a stronger social presence, along with our well-visited website (which is also going through some enhancements) will keep us relevant to the consumers in our marketplace.

Page 13: RetailerNOW—June 2012

Serta_RNow_6.2012.pdf 1 5/15/12 12:44 PM

Page 14: RetailerNOW—June 2012

12 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 13

STOP THE MADNESS

By Johne Albanese

End the debate & open your newest location

50 Million consumers who have never known life without the Internet... you were taught to go to the mall—they learned to go online.

Page 15: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 13

It’s Time to Stop the Madness

I wonder sometimes if it is human nature to ignore the obvious. You know what I mean. It happens to all of us, often more than once. Something is staring us right in the face, something so clear and compelling that it’s like being hit in the face with

a fan blade, and yet, ignore it we do. Or perhaps it’s more a matter of hoping to avoid change or of holding on to wrong until you hope it becomes right. Whatever the case, we do it a lot.

And now, perhaps the most significant paradigm shift in consumer purchasing practices since the credit card is upon us and despite the clear and obvious implications, we don’t seem to want to act.

I can’t be sure which one of the above reasons, or others that certainly exist, can be used to explain it, but this much I do know. We must absolutely let go of whatever the reasons are, and snap out of it (my thanks to Cher in Moon Struck). It’s time to stop ignoring the obvious and start embracing eCommerce in the home furnishings industry. We need to accept the fact that despite the naysayers, consumers WANT to be able to purchase home furnishings online from the comfort of their own homes and/or offices (sorry bosses but it’s a fact). We must let go of trying to be the ones who accurately predict why it won’t work and start paying attention to those who run the show… our customers!

What are our customers saying? By using their most powerful voting tools (their money) consumers have overwhelmingly stated that they want to buy our products online. Just look at the facts. In 2002, sales of home fashions online were miniscule, nearly immeasurable. In 2011, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, consumers spent over $13 billion on home fashions purchases that were made online. Yes you read that right! It’s become a major growth engine for businesses that have NOT ignored the obvious and spread their wings into the iSales space.

Consider these examples: X At the end of 2011, Williams-Sonoma reported that in the past year, their Pottery Barn and West Elm businesses experienced nearly 20% growth in their online business versus low single digits in their brick- and-mortar. In fact, their online business is now nearly HALF of all PB and WE volume. It comes as no surprise that in 2012 the lion’s shares of their capital expenditures are going into their eCommerce efforts.

X TJMAXX/Home Goods announced that in 2006 they tried eCommerce and had horrible results so they shut it down. In 2012, they announced that eCommerce will be the primary growth engine for them for years to come and they are focusing significant resources toward eCommerce. Some change in five years.

A major home furnishings retailer has stated that after starting eCommerce five years ago that their “online store” will be their largest volume store in 2012 (out of over 100 locations!!)

X Don’t even get me started about Anthropologie, IKEA, Wayfair, Hayneedle, or the other dozens (and perhaps tens of dozens) of online retailers of home furnishings

These lists go on and on and I don’t want to bore you with statistics. Okay, I take that back. Some of these are pretty important. For instance:

X In 2011, over 100 million Americans made online purchases.

X The majority of purchasers were in the home furnishings demographic “sweet spot” of between the ages of 25-54.

X Millennial’s recently stated in a study by Furniture/TODAY that they would buy online BEFORE they would shop in a traditional furniture store. That’s over 50 million consumers who have never known life without the Internet, a laptop and a cell phone. For them, shopping online was learned the same way as we learned to shop at the mall!

X More than half of all consumers asked stated that the primary reason they want to purchase online is convenience.

X Online sales of home furnishings is by far the fastest growing segment of sales for the industry, outpacing traditional channels by as much as 400% annually in terms of percentages of growth

The Shift

Page 16: RetailerNOW—June 2012

14 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

So now we know just a few more reasons why offering our products

for sale online is important, if not critical, for our success. Further, based on real-world examples that exist (Pottery Barn, Raymours, El Dorado, etc), a HYBRID

model seems the most fitting for the consumer’s needs as well as the industry as a whole and the most likely to provide the very best volume potential. This model (brick- and-mortar with an iSales component) solves the vast majority of problems that eCommerce might present to our industry. Local-focused eCommerce combined with your existing stores is the right model. This allows for both convenience shopping as well as the right kind of consumer service and delivery for our products. It also allows bricks and mortar retailers to carry far more product than just what is in their stores. So, in short, every retailer who is willing is already more than half the way there. So let’s stop finding reasons to say no and get started. There are several things you need to be successful at locally-focused eCommerce. They include:• A great eCommerce website• A strong social media presence• An integration strategy for

your existing assets (warehouse, salespeople, customer service, etc)

• A basic understanding of Google Places, Google Adwords Express

• Search Engine Optimization• Search Engine Marketing• And a commitment to be very

very responsive to consumers. Whew! That’s a mouthful, right? Is that enough to scare you away from acting? Don’t let that happen.

Within our industry, there are a number of companies that can provide very cost-effective solutions and services that assist you in getting your new online “store” launched. You don’t need to build an entirely new staff of experts to manage this “location”. The best solution for most retailers will be to outsource this work to one or more of the various companies that exist and that are ready to help. In effect, they become your eCommerce business partner and they make sure what needs to happen, happens to ensure the success of your eCommerce presence. From there, you continue to focus on the operations of your company and simply integrate the new location into the business.There are literally dozens if not hundreds of companies in our industry who offer one piece or another of the overall web experience, and you can create your eCommerce business using an a la carte system. In addition, several companies offer complete solutions, allowing you to remain focused on your core business while allowing them to manage the development, execution and in some cases, the operation of your eCommerce location. Ultimately, there are lots of choices and many of them are very good. You just have to decide how you want to operate your new “store” and then pick your partners. Of course, if you have the wherewithal, you can also do it all yourself. With all of the open-source systems (translate: free) in the marketplace, it’s certainly a doable option. It wouldn’t be my first choice but that’s a decision you have to make based on your own internal strengths. If you found out today that a major retailer was going to open a 100,000 square foot home furnishings store next to you, it would cause the blood to run cold in your veins. I’m here to tell you that they are already there. And the reason they get your business has less to do with your pricing and your store than the fact that you are not offering your consumers the ability to buy online. Showrooming, a new term that has entered the lexicon

Retailer’s Comment

The Shift

“Showrooming is simply a new form of the same competitive challenges we’ve always faced as a retailer. At Tepperman’s we understand that our responsibility is to provide our customers with the styles, values and services that they’re looking for, the education to help them make the best decision for themselves that they can, and to package all of that together as a really positive experience. If we accomplish that then we will be able to successfully compete... period. We’re fortunate to have our stores in cities that also happen to be communities. In each of our locations we’re proudly part of those communities and so we’re able to provide a very different kind of relationship experience. Customers know that we are here for them and that they are our focus—they can’t get that from an online retailer.”

Noah Tepperman, Tepperman’s, Ontario, Canada

Learn more about combating showrooming on page 17.

Page 17: RetailerNOW—June 2012

recently, is not a matter that should be addressed with changing how you operate your business—it should be addressed by being online yourself.Of course, manufacturers also will play a prominent role in making eCommerce a priority. A great example of a company who truly gets it is Stein World. Under the direction of Jack Johnson, they have rebooted their entire corporate strategy plan by inlaying eCommerce into the mix. They believe strongly in the hybrid model and of a local eCommerce focus. Just this past market they outlined their new plans to their retailers, and I expect to see great things from them in the eCommerce space in the months to come. But all manufacturers need to rethink their position on eCommerce. They can start by getting rid of archaic Internet policies that are more detrimental than beneficial and focus their efforts on an embracing of the channel rather than treating it like some small piece of extra business. They need to create pricing models that are based on, and exist within, the legal boundaries as outlined by the Supreme Court in 2007. These models need to be designed to attract business while defending the brand value of the manufacturer. Such models actually assist retailers of all kinds and ultimately help the consumer understand the true value of their offerings. In a sense, it’s a win-win-win for the manufacturer, retailer and consumer. And ultimately, manufacturers need to come to terms with the need to offer direct home delivery of their products. More and more retailers are going to begin requiring this of manufacturers in the next two years as consumers are looking for shorter and shorter delivery cycles. By resetting their packaging, product design and shipping practices, manufacturers can create consumer-ready products. Truthfully, the first manufacturers to focus and execute on this will find themselves in an extremely attractive competitive position.I know that there are more parts to this puzzle than I’m able outline here. But the key point of this discussion is to simply understand that it’s time for you and your company to put yourself where consumers in your market want you to be. They want to see you take full advantage of the implacable advantage that every local retailer has over those from distant places and that is proximity. Take full stock of your most significant advantage and start working on your new online “location” today!

Johne Albanese has over 25 years of home furnishings experience and has served in senior business development and marketing roles in the home furnishings industry for Bassett, Natuzzi, American Drew, Lea and others. An early adopter of all things web, Albanese convinced Bassett to put an online store on CompuServe (before the web was the web) in the early 1990s. Since that time, he has continued to follow the emergence of the Internet as a primary shopping channel for home furnishings. Albanese currently serves as an iSales and iMarketing consultant to retailers and manufacturers within the home furnishings industry. [email protected]

The Shift

Retailer’s Comment

$13 billion the amount consumers spent on home fashion purchases online.

“Although El Dorado has had an online presence for over 15 years, it’s only in the last few years that we’ve begun to take full advantage of our web store. This occurred only after we decided to treat our online store as a regular store, with its own manager, merchandising, and customer service departments. Overall sales growth and the ability to offer our services and products to a much larger audience is only one of the benefits from being online. Our online store is open 24 hours, 365 days a week and a large portion of our online orders occur after regular store hours. We have found that with the proper tools in place, we have the ability to more closely and quickly monitor what products our customers are interested in. We then take this information and can immediately make adjustments to our line-up, display, and processes in our online store, as well as our brick and mortar showrooms. Surprisingly, a lot of what happens online drives what goes on in the showrooms. Services that were only available to our online customers like delivery tracking, electronic invoice delivery, and online payments have also become available to our showroom customers.”

Mariam H. Farach, Web Store Manager, El Dorado Furniture

Page 18: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 17

800-472-5242 www.PFpromotions.com#1 In High Impact Events

You can actually LISTEN TO OUR CLIENTS

on our Website. HEAR what they have to

say about PFP.

Go to www.PFpromotions.com

Business Can be a Challenge!

Credit issues

Employ

ees

Leaving

Credit R

ating

Dropped

Planned Furniture Promotions Can Help!If the financial challenges of business have become too much to handle, PFP has several choices of programs that can immediately solve your problems.

“What IF?” Program

The PFP “What IF” program is one of our many branded promotions for reinventing your business!

Advertising

Expense

Unfilled

Sold Orders

Cas

h Fl

ow

Make that first step. Call or Click today!

4Full line conversion to specialty store

4Conversion to, or away from a franchise store

4Conversion to alternative business, or building use.

Call or visit our website to get more informationabout our “What IF” program.

PFP RetailerNow Ad 0512_Layout 1 5/21/12 3:52 PM Page 1

Page 19: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 17

How this new consumer trend can affect your bottom line

By Martin Roberts

“Showrooming”, also referred to as, “Scan and Scram”, is the latest trend in consumer behavior. Consumers have always wanted to get the best deal and lowest price available on the products they purchase. However, in the past, other factors weighed in on any decision to purchase from one vendor or another. Now this balance has shifted. As a result of the proliferation of tech-savvy smartphone users, the state of the economy and a variety of new apps, showrooming has become the new challenge to brick-and-mortar retail stores. Customers view products in stores then buy from the least expensive online retailer. First appearing in the realm of retail bookstores, consumers have learned to browse around a store to select items they wish to purchase. They use this opportunity to actually see, feel and touch items. Then they use the new apps that are available on their smartphones, like Price Check by Amazon or eBay’s RedLazer, to scan the bar code or a QR code. A QR code (quick response code) is a two-dimensional bar code that can be read by a smartphone and provides a tremendous amount of information including links, text, multimedia content and more. Other apps can provide information about an item with just a photo or a name. These apps can list retailers who carry that identical item, the prices they are charging for it as well as consumer comments and reviews. Consumers locate the retailer offering the best price and purchase from them.Now this trend is evolving and invading other industries. Home furnishings retailers are definitely not immune. Brick-and-mortar retail home furnishings stores need to recognize this new trend and make a real effort to combat showrooming now.

Scenario: An enthusiastic customer comes into your store, eager to purchase a new sofa. She sits on it, tests it out, even puts her feet on the ottoman—she wants this sofa. While engaging with your salesperson, she is also engaging with her new shopping companion, the smartphone. This companion doesn’t leave her side and is her instant access to the world outside of your showroom—including a better price for that very sofa she is sitting on.

Did she only buy the clock and is looking for a better priced sofa online?

The Shift

SCAN

Page 20: RetailerNOW—June 2012

between a loyal customer and one with a wandering Web browser.” Some of the strategies used have been to design attractive and appropriate displays and signage that best showcase their products. “Staging” is a successful technique used by real estate professionals to increase the appeal of the properties they want to sell. It works in retail home furnishings stores as well. Refresh your in-store environment, keep it interesting and appealing and present your products as “rooms” that help customers visualize the end product. Package your products so it is a much better deal to buy a few pieces together from you than one piece online. Offer variety and demonstrate your understanding of their need to create a unique space that fits their lifestyle and home. Building a connection with customers will promote loyalty and keep them coming back. For a recent client in Alaska, we redesigned their showroom with separate areas for customization. For bedroom furniture, this includes options for headboard detail, finishes and hardware selections. Another space provided customization opportunities for tables and chairs that includes choices of finishes and colors, leg design and more. And, we created unique rolling carts and racks that allow the sales team to bring fabric and trim selections to the customer while they continue to admire their furniture choices. These new store designs and customer service innovations help to provide an experience for the consumer that no online retailer can ever match.Unique packages, good pricing, a variety of sales and deals, financing plans and other “one-of-a-kind” offers that can only be accessed in-store will help bring customers in. Create incentives for consumers to want to buy from your store. Become a part of your community, get to know the people who live there and participate in and support community events. Creative thinking, unique products, staging, signage, displays, accessories, lighting and investing in people who will help maximize every opportunity to “Sell More, More Often” will help combat “showrooming” and the “scan and scram” mentality that is invading the industry.

Martin Roberts is a design industry veteran with design credits recognized across the globe. Martin founded Martin Roberts Design, LLC, www.mrobertsdesign.com with offices in New York City and Stamford, CT. In addition to being a leader in retail design, visual merchandizing and branding, he is a well-known speaker and provides consulting services throughout the home furnishing industry. He can be reached by phone at (212) 365-4809 or by email at [email protected].

Unique packages, good pricing, a variety of sales and deals, financing plans and other “one-of-a-kind” offers that can only be accessed in-store will help bring customers in.

A customer will visit your store and wander around looking, touching and even photographing or measuring a product to “make sure it fits in their space”. It may seem like you’ve got an enthusiastic buyer! They may be enthusiastic buyers, but not necessarily from your store. These consumers are on a research mission. They will go home, sit at their computer, do some surfing and purchase the same item from any retailer who has the lowest price. For this new breed of consumer, price seems to be the only issue. To combat this scary, new trend, brick-and-mortar retail storeowners must figure out how to convert these browsers into buyers. For a retail furniture store, this starts by examining what you offer customers who walk in your door. Some of the big questions are:

X What can you offer customers that they can’t get from an online retailer?

X How do you make these things just as important or even more important than just price alone?

X How will you combat “showrooming” in your store?

One of the ways to fight back is to make sure the items you are selling are, in some way, unique. Unique customizing prevents copying. Focus on

service, knowledge and expertise. Make service a priority. Emphasize excellent in-store service as well as in-home service both before and after a sale. Rethink the widely used cost saving strategy of hiring fewer employees. Replace apathetic employees who stock shelves and unpack boxes but can’t sell your products. Invest in a sales team who will enthusiastically promote your brand. Spend time with customers sharing your knowledge and

helping them make educated selections considering their personal circumstances and needs. The professionalism and expertise of a well-trained sales team and competent staff who are polite, welcoming and go out of their way to take care of customers, will keep them coming back and recommending you to others. JWT Intelligence agrees that there is a “need for retailers to create unique experiences and environments… these could make a difference

The Shift

Page 21: RetailerNOW—June 2012

software | consulting | performance groups | freight savings | e-solutions

800.888.5565www.profitsystems.com

PROFITprofessional is the only industry specific software that has been designed with your profitability in mind. We focus on the things that will improve your bottom line profit. Although known as an outstanding inventory tracking and accounting system, PROFITprofessional is far more than that! It has special applications called the 5 SMART Steps that will increase your gross margins 3-5 points in the first year of use. Our 5 SMART Steps program, proven to be effective at increasing profitability for so many clients, is really quite simple. The first three steps improve inventory management, the fourth motivates your sales force to earn better margins, and the fifth motivates your customers to come back for more.

Do you feel like you are doing a balancing act trying to stay profitable?

Problem Solved.

5 Smart Steps:Spot your winners and losersMaintain your winners in stockAuto-move your losersReward high gross margin salesTarget-market existing customers

Page 22: RetailerNOW—June 2012

20 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

The Shift

SOCIAL—It isn’t just about Facebook SHOPPIng IS THe neW queen In THe SOCIAl ArenA

By Melissa Dressler

If you think the social arena is just about Facebook—then you are light-years behind your customer. Just as you get a grasp on connecting with your customer through one social media platform, she is

moving on to the next—and in this case it is more than just a conversation. She is curating, buying, and sharing her experience with her friends—all from the comfort of her home. Best of all, it is fun.

With eCommerce sites popping up all around, you can no longer rely on the excuse of: people won’t buy online because they will want to feel the fabric or see the color in person. The fact is people are buying everything from jets to sofas online, without even seeing it. Gilt Home recently said the fastest growing category of their online flash sales site was sofas!

Aiding in this process, and making it a fun, unique and a social experience for the customer is a new wave of shopping—social shopping. Consider it the “tangerine tango” of the eCommerce world. Often combining social media and eCommerce, social shopping takes in many different aspects of the social web, including likes, friends, voting, comments, etc., and focuses them on one of America’s favorite hobbies—shopping.

Social shopping has been a big hit in the fashion industry for the last two years. Sites like Polyvore, which has more

than 13 million unique visitors a month, allows users to curate product images from all over the web and build “outfits”, which they can then easily buy with the click of a mouse.

Some of these sites will link directly to your online store, while others are cashing in on the opportunity to sell directly to your customer.

Page 23: RetailerNOW—June 2012

Social Shopping Sites Changing the Retail Landscape

With thousands of sites, where do you start? We did a little bit of the legwork for you and listed some of the more popular sites to check out.

buyosphere (buyosphere.com): Where people help people shop. Instead of wasting time searching through sites and images on your own, Buyosphere asks the question to a community of peers and they offer recommendations (and links to the sites!) fancy (thefancy.com): Part store, blog, magazine and wishlist. It’s a place to discover great stuff, to curate a collection of things you love, to get updates on your favorite brands and stores and to share your discoveries.mulu (mulu.me): A social platform for sharing the things you love and making the world a better place at the same time. Users can ask questions such as: I’m looking for a poster bed that is a good balance of contemporary and modern styling?olioboard (olioboard.com): For interior designers and design enthusiasts, Olioboard is an easy and intuitive application for creating digital mood boards. Pinterest (pinterest.com): If you don’t know what this is yet, we have A LOT more work to do.Polyvore (polyvore.com): The web’s largest fashion community site, where users are empowered to discover their style and set trends around the world. Also includes interior design and furniture.Pure home (purehome.com): Pure Home is a community for anyone seeking inspiration to explore new color palettes, discover decor trends and products for their home, and connect or share with like minds.stylmee (stylmee.com): Allows users in the fashion and interior design communities to create virtual 3D boutiques.svpply (svpply.com): Site members can keep track of the things they want to buy, and to browse a personal feed of products from across the web, curated and filtered by the people and stores they find interesting.

While social shopping sites take on many forms, such as flash sale sites like Gilt, Fab.com and One Kings Lane, the area that is really seeing growth are sites that allow users to be social curators and create ‘boards’ or ‘lists’ such as Pinterest,

Polyvore and Olioboard. Most of these sites have an eCommerce tool that will allow a user to buy directly from the retailer’s website. There are literally thousands of sites out there that are now offering your customer a social shopping experience—and the number of sites grows daily.if there are so many, where should i focus?

It’s overwhelming—I should know—I was distracted for hours just researching (and joining) sites for this article (thank you social login)! There is no right or wrong place to focus your efforts and find ways to partner with these sites. The best place to start is to ask your customer what sites she visits. Also ask the specific site about their audience and reach. Lastly, you could look into some of the industry specific sites, such as Olioboard, Pure

Home and Houzz. No matter where you end up, know that social shopping is the first step in a shopping revolution. If you aren’t ready to dive in, at least visit a few of these sites—it will give you tremendous insight into the mind of the female consumer!

Learn more about the social shopping players and the next generation of shopping in our July issue!

Retailer’s CommentSocial shopping helps deliver quality content.The number one challenge with “online” production is delivering quality content.The better the content, the easier sales become. The closer we can get to actually putting the merchandise in someone’s home without actually putting it in their home, the easier the sales become. Frankly this type of shopping is the answer to the question “why would someone buy something that they can’t actually sit in”? Kevin Aiken, Colleen’s Classic Consignment, Las Vegas, NV

The Shift

Page 24: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 23

www.FurnitureWizard.com619-869-7200

Providing software solutions to the Home Furnishing Industry

since 1996

WIZARD

iPad Point of SaleEmpower your Sales Team with a Super Catalog

Instantly displays what’s in stock, on order & images

Check Ashley Furniture Availability from iPad

Works with optional Bluetooth Scanner

Brand NEW Delivery System

Point Of Sale

Opportunity Tracker / To-Do List

Optional Gorgeous Websites

New Enhanced Barcode Tools

QuickBooks Compatible

Multiple Store/Locations

Custom Price Tags

PO Upload, Availability, Adds, Drops, Changes & Photos

Integrated

Page 25: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 23

Gaining the Edge @2012 Home Furnishings Industry Conference

“Industry changing?

You bet! No one wants

to deal with change. Most are scared of change. Shut up, deal with

it and get a life.”

—Larry Winget

The 2012 Home Furnishings Industry Conference this past May in Palm Springs, CA kicked off with a no nonsense approach to business and life. Opening session speaker, Larry Winget, offered a hilarious wake up call to the industry in his “Truth be Told” session. Larry shared business principles that work for anyone, while offering simple truths attacking traditional

business wisdom.“Larry’s talk was a great slap to the forehead... it’s all about hard work and excellence—common sense stuff that we all know and forget to put into practice. Great job to the HFIC staff for bringing him to chat with us. It was really refreshing to laugh and learn,” said Giff Gates, Gates Furniture.Focused on Gaining the Edge in business, the two and a half day event helped the 370 retailers, vendors and manufacturers take a deeper look at their businesses and find new ways to be successful. Winget’s comments were often repeated throughout the event, reminding everyone why they were there, and why they were in business. The opening night continued to be a riot with “Minute to Win It” games played after the Welcome Dinner and Reception. The competitive spirit was alive as teams competed at events such as “junk in the trunk” and “hoops”. In the end, the Pink team was victorious, having the fastest times and highest scores. The night wasn’t over though, as attendees went into the Late Night Lounge for Serta’s “Date with Destiny”. The party went on late

EVENTS

Susan & Heather Hanley

Nick Gates, Giff Gates, Jan Shuel, Kellen Harkness, Grant Laidlaw, Janet Rhea

Wogie Badcock, Joe Cory

One of the “can’t be missed” general sessions

Page 26: RetailerNOW—June 2012

24 J U N E | 2 0 1 2

EVENTS

square foot Showcase featured 56 exhibitors showing everything from new software systems to the latest in children’s bedroom products. The “Let’s Make a Deal” Product Bonanza later that evening featured amazing, show only pricing for one hour. Attendees came, bought and enjoyed a round of cocktails before hitting the desert for a night on the town. The RetailerNOW Launch Party saw attendees partying into the wee hours of the morning, while RetailerNOW delivered up a “scoop” or two at an ice cream bar.“I’d like to compliment the team on a very well run conference,” said Doug Wolf, Alleghany Consignment. “It was as nicely done as any I’ve been to, including the “good ole days”! You did an especially good job of getting, and keeping, people in the exhibit hall. We were very pleased with the traffic, and efforts to keep the exhibit hall active fun and full! Making it the center of the show and bringing great value to exhibitors.”Tuesday morning had everyone

gathering again for another Gaining the Edge session

“Another GREAT

job done by the

HFIC staff. The

sports contest

Sunday night

reminded me of

my camp days

as a kid—great

memories! Met

some great people

and continued to

learn. Can’t we

do these twice a

year?” —Ron Cooper, Profit Management

Promotions

into the night, with many taking a turn to karaoke, dance and play a game of Wii bowling.The next morning started off with Gaining the Edge sessions featuring Satya Tiwari, Surya Rugs, and Pedro Capo, El Dorado Furniture. Satya shared the story of his father, Surya, and how Surya Rugs got its start in India in 1976. He also shared his company’s seven pillars of success which are: Be Passionate, Be Bold, Be Transparent, Be Entrepreneurial, Be Young, Make an Impact and Have Fun. Pedro followed with his own inspiring family story, sharing how his family came from Cuba and started a prosperous furniture business. Pedro started off his presentation like he does every meeting with his staff—asking people to get up on their feet, and shake it! Pedro shared insight into how El Dorado Furniture continues to keep their stores fresh, such as removing product off the floor if it doesn’t sell in two weeks.A Product Showcase allowed attendees to shop for new products and services at “event-only” pricing. The 15,000

Michael Allen, Vicky & Scott Selden Pedro & Ana Maria Capo, Martin Ploy, Suen Capo, Chuck Reilly

Peggy Burns, Travis Garrish, Carol Bell, Tamara Scott-Anderson Davene & Terry Adams, Jeff Weinstein

Chris Cooley, Bryan Edwards

Page 27: RetailerNOW—June 2012

featuring Bruce Cochrane, Lincolnton Furniture. Bruce shared his family story of moving manufacturing from the U.S. to China, and then back again (read more of Bruce’s Remade in America story on page 39).After another two rounds of breakout sessions, attendees filed in to hear the last presentation by former Yahoo! CSO, Tim Sanders. Tim shared his success of using confidence that catapulted him from a sales executive at Mark Cuban’s broadcast.com to Chief Solutions Officer at Yahoo! in less than four years.The two and a half day event full of fun, education and networking ended with a memorable Living the Dream Gala event, sponsored by Serta. Attendees donned their best formal

attire and walked the red carpet. Paparazzi snapped away and caught the “stars” of the evening as they made their way into the ballroom. Big band music had people “swinging” throughout the night and a flipbook photo booth station had attendees laughing and having fun. Everyone was a star.“It is always fun for me to attend our industry conferences. I leave each time having learned something new,” said Wogie Badcock, W S Badcock Corp., Mulberry, FLThe next Home Furnishings Industry Conference will be in New Orleans, LA, June 2-4, 2013. For more fun, photos and information about the 2012 event, visit homefurnishingsconference.com.

“A highlight of the conference for me was having Pedro Capo

pull back the curtain of El Dorado to get a better understanding

of how they continue to be successful,” said David Gunn, Knight

Furniture. “The family and their story is so inspiring, but the

real take-away for me was the attention to detail. Pedro’s ‘ Do It

Today ’ philosophy was one of the first things we implemented

after the conference.”

EVENTS

RetailerNOW Launch

RetailerNOW the new, bold publication by the NHFA and WHFA was launched during the 2012 Conference and received rave reviews! Everyone questioned who was our actual cover model (we will never tell!) and joked about which retailer it was. What we heard:I love the ‘no nonsense’ approach—it dovetails so well with the conference!! —Jody Seivert, One by One Companies

Great! Keep up the good work. —Angel Lopez, Dearden’s

It’s a home run. I want to read it. The color and layout makes it exciting! —Cherie Rose, The Rose Collection

It’s an incredible first issue. Our industry NEEDS this type of energy now more than ever, and it is exciting to see it happening. We will all be better and more prosperous because of these projects. Thank you for believing and making a difference! —David Gunn, Knight Furniture

Marty Melcher, Bob Aita, Wogie Badcock, Bobby Papazian

David Masin, Shane Spiller, Wogie Badcock

Sherry Clark, Lori Green, Sherry Sheely

: Cyndi Harkness, Jan Shuel, Chris Gates

Lara & David Anthony walking the red carpet The crowd got on their feet during Pedro Capo’s Gaining the Edge session

Page 28: RetailerNOW—June 2012

26 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

EVENTS

The Cold, Hard Truthif you thought you have heard it all from me, you haven’t.

The cold, hard truth about success: You don’t think your way to success, happy your way to success or positive attitude your way to success; you WORK your way to success. Success comes from HARD WORK and EXCELLENCE. And it takes both. You can’t get there with just hard work. I know people who work really hard at their job but they aren’t any good at their job. So in the end, it doesn’t really matter how hard they work. And excellence alone isn’t enough either, as I know people who are

signature sponsor: Serta • Premier sponsors: Aspenhome, Furniture Today, Home Furnishings Business, leggett & Platt, International Market Centers, MicroD • Titanium sponsors: AICO/Amini, Ashley, Coaster, Emerald Home Furnishings, FurnitureDealer.net, ge Capital, High Point Market, Myriad Software, nourison, Surya, Tempur-Pedic • Platinum sponsors: Best Buy for Business, Diakon Logistics, Furniture Wizard, Innovative Delivery Solutions, Med-lift, Sleep-ezz, Kidz World, Phoenix A.M.D, r&A Marketing, Simmons, Zenith global logistics • gold sponsors: American leather, Aramark uniforms, Fairmont Designs, guardian Products, Inc., Hooker Furniture, Pacific Furniture Dealers, Steve Silver Co., STOrIS Management Systems • silver sponsors: Diamond Mattress, DSI Companies, guardsman Furniture Protection, lane Home Furnishings, PrOFITsystems, Sandberg Furniture • bronze sponsors: Aireloom Mattress, AVB, Century Lighting, CFMA, TwinStar/Classic Flame, Credit Source, elite leather, Flexsteel Industries, Furniture of America, great America Furniture Services, Kincaid, Klaussner, lea, Mail America, netsertive, Oriental Weavers, Profit Management Promotions, Standard Furniture, Trendwood, Inc., Truckskin, Tyler Net, Vanguard Furniture Co.

In Closing (until 2013 New Orleans!)A note from Larry & thank you to our generous sponsors

A bIG THANK yOU TO OUR 2012 HOME FURNISHINGS INDUSTRy CONFERENCE SPONSORS:

excellent at their job but don’t work hard enough for their little bit of effort to make a difference. It is always the combination of hard work and excellence that creates long-term, sustainable success. And remember this: work doesn’t care whether you like it, love it, or are having fun doing it. Work doesn’t care whether it is your passion or whether it is your purpose. Work only cares whether it gets done and would appreciate getting done in the most excellent way possible.

Larry Winget is a five-times New York Times/Wall Street Journal bestselling author translated into 20 languages. Find out more at www.larrywinget.com.

—Larry Winget

Ron Page, Randy Coconis, Mike Root, Chad Coconis, Bo Coconis

Jason Harrow, Marty Cramer, Fred Nader, George Nader, Gary Absalonson

Joey Gunn, Knight Furniture, Amy Schmidt, April Johnson Marc Schewel, Marty Melcher, Chris Sanders

Page 29: RetailerNOW—June 2012

a guaranteed gross margin regardless of selling price.

That get your attention? It should. If you own a home furnishings business, and you’ve been looking for a way to grow your store’s cash flow, without investing a penny in additional rent, remodeling or inventory, Allegheny Furniture Consignment (AFC), a complete, turn-key integrated consignment website and operating software package with proven policy and procedure manuals may be just what you’re looking for. Here are just a few of the reasons to consider consignment:

• A competitive advantage for your existing store.• Source of profit without executive distraction or risk. • Guaranteed gross margin regardless of selling price. • Repurpose underperforming real estate or space.• NO inventory investment.• New source of traffic for your business.• Low overhead.• No leasehold improvement dollars required.• Huge demographic range of consumers.• Flexible merchandise philosophy.• Exclusive geographic markets available.

“The combination of a consignment store and a full line home furnishings

business is perhaps the most exciting retail idea

in the last 25 years.”*

*Jerry Epperson, Managing Director Mann, Armistead & Epperson, Ltd.,

speaking at the 2012 Nationwide Marketing Conference.

If you’re intrigued by AFC’s potential, please call Doug Wolf at 814-742-4380 ext. 1127, or email [email protected]

Consignment is the fastest growing retail channel in the last decade.

Page 30: RetailerNOW—June 2012

28 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 29

April Market Dazzles High Point

This past April, thousands in the home furnishings industry took off for High Point, nC, for another unforgettable Market experience. New showrooms were opening, buyers were shopping and overall, there was a sense of excitement in the air. All were curious of what 2012 will bring to the industry.Here is a look at some of the highlights of the April High Point Market.

Retailers of the yearThe national Home Furnishings Association honored and awarded two of its members with the prestigious Retailer of the Year award in April. Belfort Furniture in Dulles, Virginia, led by Mike Huber, and lawrance Furniture in San Diego, California, led by Howard Haimsohn, were awarded the 2012 retailer of the Year and enjoyed a gala filled with family, friends and industry supporters.Belfort Furniture was named Retailer of the Year in the over $10 million in sales category. Mike and Kristi Huber opened Belfort Furniture, as it is known today, in 1987 with one employee. By 1992, the 35,000 sq. ft. Belfort galleries opened. Belfort Basics opened in 2003, followed by Belfort Mattress & Kids in 2004, Belfort Interiors in 2005, and in 2006 Huber created a new state-of-the-art 83,000 sq. ft. warehouse.Lawrance Furniture was named Retailer of the Year in the under $10 million in sales category. It was originally founded as Modern Furniture Company in 1937 by Herman Haimsohn and a friend. In the mid-1950’s Howard’s father ed took over the family business and changed the merchandising strategy from a general furniture store to a modern specialty retailer. The third generation of the family entered in 1976 when Howard joined the ranks. Today Howard and his wife Julie operate the leading retailer of modern and contemporary home furnishings in San Diego County.The International Home Furnishings representatives Association (IHFrA) also awarded John Bassett III, of Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co, with the Pillar of the Industry Award and richard gillispie, IHFrA Past President with the Distinguished Service Award. Congratulations to the 2012 Retailers of the Year, Belfort Furniture and Lawrance Furniture!

EVENTS

A: Retailer of the Year, Belfort Furniture: Rick Zullo, Lauren Huber, George Huber, Peggy Huber, Mike Huber, Kristi Huber, Lacey Huber, Matt Huber

B: Retailer of the Year, Lawrance Contemporary: Howard & Julie Haimsohn

C: Pillar of the Industry: Jerry Epperson presented John Bassett III, Vaughan-Bassett Furniture, with the award

D: IHFRA Past President & Distinguished Service Award: Richard Gillispie with his wife Patricia

a.

b.

c. d.

Page 31: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 29

Style Spotters @ High Pointevery corner you turned during High Point Market, there was a new trend and style to be seen. Clean lines, dark, dramatic colors and contemporary looks were abound. The Style Spotters—who are bloggers and/or interior designers—posted and curated their favorite looks on Pinterest and attendees were asked to vote for their favs.This Market’s Style Spotter winner was Traci Zeller, owner of Traci Zeller Designs, who received 958 likes and 1308 repins on her boards. “I have a clean, classic aesthetic and, during this market, I was particularly drawn to strong lines and great color,” she said. “The products I chose are stylish, sophisticated and versatile with superb attention to detail. Everyone wants a current look that does not appear overly trendy, and the way to do that is to reinvent the classics for today.”See some of her popular pins on right and view all of the Style Spotters pins at http://pinterest.com/StyleSpotSpr12/.

Next Generation-NOW Chatters Over CocktailsAn intimate group of the next generation of the industry met for “Chatter Over Cocktails” during the April Market. Hosted in Café Blossom in the Fairmont Designs showroom, the group saw many new faces, including a group of furniture design students from the Appalachian State University in Boone, NC. “The Chatter Over Cocktails event is a great way to get the Next Generation of our industry together to network and share stories. This group is the future of our industry,” said Kevin Doran, r&A Marketing.

City of Hope Raises $1.5 MillionThe annual Spirit of Life Gala raised $1.5 million for City of Hope at Market. The event was held at the Grandover resort to honor Jeff Seaman of rooms To Go and Bob Sherman of Serta, who received this year’s Spirit of Life Awards. A total of $2.5 million was raised this year by the home furnishings industry.

The next high Point market is october 13-18, 2012. for more information, visit www.highpointmarket.org.

Isn’t this C.R. Laine Whittier Swivel Chair fantastic? The green ikat polka dot is right on trend (so fun!), and a swivel is so functional in today’s multi-purpose spaces. C.r. laine (H/W 310 n. Hamilton, 2nd floor) #hPmkt

40 likes 2 comments 51 repins

uploaded by user

melissa berard harrison, great color combo...

Plum, purple, violet, lavender - whatever you want to call it - is hot, hot, hot ... in every shade and hue! HgTV has a new line of home furnishings, HgTV Home, and I predict a huge hit. The Alaine Leather Wing Chair, shown here in Grandeur Plum, has fantastic nailhead detailing and is available with a matching ottoman. Stylish and very comfortable, it’s the perfect “living room appropriate” alternative to a recliner! HgTV Home (IHFC C1003) #hpmkt

35 likes 46 repins

tracizeller.com

EVENTS

Clarendon Ottoman, Thibaut

Silk Collection, Huppe

Tippett Occasional Chair, Martha Stewart Fine Furniture

Coplin Loveseat Henredon’s Upholstered Furniture collection

Charleston Mirror, Oomph

Product Launches @ High Point

Page 32: RetailerNOW—June 2012

30 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 31

RetailerNOW sat down with Adam Young, RC Willey, and Nick Gates, Gates Home Furnishings, to discuss the ins and outs of social media. While the size of their operations greatly differ (one store compared to 13), their social media experiences were very similar. See what they have to say is happening in social media, today.

adam: We use social media for many different reasons. One of them is to bring potential customers to our social media sites and show them what we offer—whether it is a promotional offer, giveaway, special offers that they can either use in store or online and show that we have a variety of different products in all of the categories we sell, appliances, mattresses, furniture, electronics and flooring.

nicK: We decided that we would tackle one social media outlet and then move onto another one from there. When we tell customers to follow us on Facebook, we tell them that our Facebook page is the inside scoop to everything going on in our store. We cover everything from employee birthdays, promotion (including Facebook only promotions) and new products in the store.

Your Voice

NICK GATES Gates Home Furnishings

Grants Pass, OROne locationwww.facebook.com/gatesfurniture2,024 Facebook Fanspinterest.com/gatesfurniture

ADAM YOUNG RC Willey

Utah, Nevada, Ca, Idaho13 locationswww.facebook.com/rcwilley74,139 Facebook Fanswww.twitter.com/rcwilleypinterest.com/rcwilley

retailernoW: How do you use social media for your business?

retailernoW: So, both of you are using it as a tool to create awareness and generate sales?

nicK: The generating sales part is a sticky question [both laugh]. I just got done having a conversation with my dad about this. He loves the idea of social media and the interactions we are creating, but he hasn’t seen any real sales dollars attached to what we are doing on Facebook and social media in general. It is tough. We don’t have a way of showing on the bottom line how many dollars were generated directly from Facebook. I think it is a pretty big moving target. And Adam laughs too because I am sure he is having similar issues.

adam: It is always going to be an issue—and yes, I have that issue too. We are always trying to showcase what it does for the bottom line overall, but at the same time, it can’t just be about sales. This is social media. If you just focus on sales, people won’t stay there, they won’t communicate back and forth, and they won’t want to follow your pages—they will bail on you as fast as they can. You have to make it more enticing for them to come to the pages, see what’s new and what you have that will be important for them to follow.

Page 33: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 31

Call 1-877-536-4786 to sign-upVisit www.Web4Retail.com for more info

for Furniture Retailersand Manufacturers

E-Commerce Websites

Feature Online ShoppingOn Your WebsiteFeature Online ShoppingOn Your Website

$399per month

packagesstarting at

Nick Gates, General Manager, gates Home Furnishings

Adam Young, Community/Online Reputation Manager, RC Willey

retailernoW: How do you show the ROI of social media since social media is about building relationships as well as sales?

nicK: We have taken an approach that we need to combine our traditional forms of media with our social media campaigns. Any piece of traditional media that we are sending out, we are promoting that if you go online then there is supplemental material that you can only get online. It enhances the whole process. We may never be able to attribute a certain amount of sales to a social media outlet but we can use this to enhance and see if a promotion does well or not. It is hard to do a social media only promotion at this point so we are trying to get into the mindset now that it is a collaborative effort between our traditional and social media channels.

Read more about Adam and Nick’s social media experiences and their advice for others in the industry at www.retailerNOWmag.com.

adam: It is a truly sticky subject. We actually did try a social media promotion just two weeks ago. We only promoted it on Facebook and nothing else. We were successful on that. It really just depends on the offer, the variables, and how much extra you put into it, and in time, it will show that there is success in it. We had good numbers overall for just a one week promotion. We offered fans $50 off a $399 purchase of furniture, mattresses and flooring.

Page 34: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 33

THINK MOBILE

1-800-676-4243 • s [email protected]

Being portable for sales, inventory or business analyticsis key for any Home Furnishingsretailer. Using a PC, tablet orsmart phone to work inside oroutside of your store is critical inthis day and age of technology.

Your designer meets in the customer’s home to create the shopping cart and check inventory availability for delivery.The warehouse staff needs toquickly receive an item to loadit on the delivery truck. Theowner or manager is travelingand wants to get a quick glanceof their daily or monthly businessanalytics. All of this can be donewith a tablet or smartphone.Myriad Software understandshow important it is to be mobile.

Whether it’s to close a sale or review the important aspects of your business, a tablet orsmartphone will provide accessto your business managementsystem in or outside of yourdaily operation.

So if you’re looking for a businesssystem that allows you to workwhen you’re in your operationand on the go, think Eclicktic™and Eclicktic™ BE Mobile.

Contact a Myriad Software sales representative @[email protected]

Please stop by and see us at theLas Vegas Market

WFHA Resource CenterBuilding C: 4th Floor July 30th–August 3rd

MS-330 RetaiNow_WHFA full pg ad_FT full pageLV ad 5/18/12 2:32 PM Page 1

Page 35: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 33

What’s Selling

Submitted By: Travis GarrishStore Name: Forma Furniture Location: Fort Collins, COIs the product:Made In America—No, Canada Warehouse ready—NoContainer Product—NoManufacturer: AP IndustriesProduct Name: Element series, Capri queen bed

Would you like to know what products are selling in stores like yours around the country? Every month, What’s Selling Now will feature best sellers from across the country—in different styles, categories and price points. Here’s what’s selling now…

Look for these symbols to let you know more about the products:

Made in America Warehouse Ready Container Product

What’s Selling

THINK MOBILE

1-800-676-4243 • s [email protected]

Being portable for sales, inventory or business analyticsis key for any Home Furnishingsretailer. Using a PC, tablet orsmart phone to work inside oroutside of your store is critical inthis day and age of technology.

Your designer meets in the customer’s home to create the shopping cart and check inventory availability for delivery.The warehouse staff needs toquickly receive an item to loadit on the delivery truck. Theowner or manager is travelingand wants to get a quick glanceof their daily or monthly businessanalytics. All of this can be donewith a tablet or smartphone.Myriad Software understandshow important it is to be mobile.

Whether it’s to close a sale or review the important aspects of your business, a tablet orsmartphone will provide accessto your business managementsystem in or outside of yourdaily operation.

So if you’re looking for a businesssystem that allows you to workwhen you’re in your operationand on the go, think Eclicktic™and Eclicktic™ BE Mobile.

Contact a Myriad Software sales representative @[email protected]

Please stop by and see us at theLas Vegas Market

WFHA Resource CenterBuilding C: 4th Floor July 30th–August 3rd

MS-330 RetaiNow_WHFA full pg ad_FT full pageLV ad 5/18/12 2:32 PM Page 1

Cost: queen bed—$649Retail Price: $1,399

Product level: Bed upper endWhy do you think it is a successful seller: Clean lines, simple, timeless contemporary design. The Anthricite finish is selling best overall. How available is the product from the manufacturer: 6-8 weeks lead timesAdditional information about the product: Birch veneers and solids

Page 36: RetailerNOW—June 2012

34 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 35

Made in America

MADE IN AMERICA

WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL?Manufacturing is coming back to

America—Does it matter?

So what! I just SELL furniture—I don’t build it!So what does this mean for you, the furniture storeowner? After all, you just sell furniture, you don’t build it. You may not even live in an area where manufacturing is expected to boom. But it still will matter. First, and foremost, it shows a positive outlook of a growing economy in the future. Manufacturers will need to start hiring, and as more Americans become employed again, they will have more disposable income. This trickles down to your store, because the more income your customer has, the more they are willing to spend in your store. In the end, bringing manufacturing back to the U.S. isn’t just about the manufacturers or retailers—it is about their communities. Many communities became ghost towns when manufacturers packed up their facilities in the 1990s and headed to China. With this slow resurgence of business coming home, it gives these once devastated communities a glimmer of hope.

Re-shoring, in-sourcing, or on-sourcing, whatever you want to call it, has been a hot topic the last few months, from The White House

to the last High Point Market. After decades of outsourcing our jobs and manufacturing to the cheapest labor (usually to China), there are now signs pointing to manufacturing returning to the United States. What does that mean for the furniture industry, and at this point, does it matter?

By Melissa Dressler

Page 37: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 35

Proudly Handcrafted in the USA since 1946

rowefurniture.com claytonmarcus.com robinbruce.com

Casegoods made in the U.S. will never be affordable For more than a decade, China was always a top (and cheap) resource for manufacturing. They had a seemingly limitless supply of low-cost labor, a rapidly developing domestic market, and low currency and incentives to attract foreign investments.As time has progressed, the economy has greatly shifted in China—rising wages, a low unemployment rate, productivity issues and limits to automation has made China less appealing for companies. According to the study, Made in America, Again, by The Boston Consulting Group, China’s cost advantages of an exporter for North America are rapidly eroding, and thanks to years of unemployment and very little wage increases, the U.S. is once again becoming a more attractive place to manufacturer goods. “There’s a pendulum that swings all the time,” said Harold Sirkin, co-author of Made in America, Again. “And now it’s swinging back.”From 2000 to 2009, exports from China for furniture soared from 7.5 percent to 25.9 percent, and the U.S. lost some 6 million manufacturing jobs (across all industries). Most thought it was the end to all U.S. manufacturing. Somehow, U.S. manufacturing was able to hold on and remains a robust industry, increasing productivity levels while decreasing employment. According to The Boston Consulting Group’s report, “The conditions are coalescing for another U.S. resurgence. Rising wages, shipping costs, and land prices—combined with the strengthening renminbi—are rapidly eroding China’s cost advantages. The U.S., meanwhile, is becoming a lower-cost country. Wages have declined or are rising only moderately. The dollar is weakening. The workforce is becoming increasingly flexible. Productivity growth continues.”

The Boston Consulting Group predicts that by 2015, the cost of production in China’s coastal cities will only be about 10 to 15 percent less than the U.S. When you factor in shipping, inventory costs and other considerations, the cost gap between making a product in China versus the U.S. will be minimal—meaning casegoods built in the U.S. may one day be comparable in price.

But wait, not everything is Made in China!As furniture retailers and manufacturers know, not everything is made in China. In fact, years ago many furniture manufacturers started moving facilities into Vietnam, Indonesia, and even Mexico, to keep costs down. While manufacturing will likely continue to shift to these low-cost nations, the Made in America,

Made in America

By Melissa Dressler

Page 38: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 37

Need to Increase Store Traffic and Dollars per Transaction?Create excitement in your market using CMC!

Proven success with hundreds of retailers across the U.S. - Increasing foot traffic and

creating thousands of new customers...

• Discounts and savings to you

• Branding Impact

• Online redemption

• Add Customers to Your Database for Remarketing

• Complete turn-key process for you

• Customized URL and so much more...

One Stop Shopping for ALL of Your Incentive and Promotional Needs

Receive a$50 Pick your

Plastic Gift Cardfor only a 15 minute overview of our products via a Web Ex meeting with

no obligation to buy, email us at [email protected] call Grant Riley at 804-556-0531

or Tom Coffeen at 727-290-2402

other nations have an even lower productivity level then China, the cost savings aren’t that much.Mexico is one country that may benefit from this shift in manufacturing. With its close proximity to the U.S., low wages and duty-free trade agreements, Mexico might be a new source for some North American manufacturing.

Even with this shift, not everything will be Made in America. The furniture industry will always be a global marketplace, and there will always be a want and need for imported goods.Exporting Furniture Instead of Jobs As we see more companies come back to America, a new trend of exporting is starting to occur—where we are exporting goods, instead of jobs, to China. The U.S.-China Business Council said that the Chinese spent $104 billion in U.S. exports last year, which is up 542 percent from 10 years ago. China is now the third largest buyer of U.S. exports, just behind Canada and Mexico.Fox 8 News in Greensboro, N.C., ran a three-part series last month on this new trend, and how it is impacting the furniture industry. Made in NC, Selling Fast in China, by Nicole Ferguson, tells a story of how a growing middle class of Chinese citizens love, and want, American-made furniture. During her story, she visits a home of a wealthy Chinese family that was recently outfitted with half a million dollars of American-made furniture, from manufacturers like Lexington and Baker. While prices weren’t disclosed, it was mentioned that the Chinese consumer is willing to spend up to 15 percent more than what it costs in the U.S., and they are willing to wait up to six months to receive their furniture.This new trend of outsourcing products, instead of jobs, might be just what is needed to bring manufacturing jobs back to America, and North Carolina.

What do you think about “re-shoring” and manufacturing back to America? Continue the conversation online at www.retailerNOWmag.com, and see a list of Made in America manufacturers.

To read the full Made in America, Again report, visit www.bcg.com.

Watch Fox 8 New’s three-part series at http://tinyurl.com/furniturefox8

Again study states that these nations won’t be able to absorb all of the export manufacturing

that is expected to leave China—mainly

because they don’t have the workforce. When you

add in the fact that these

Made in America

Page 39: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 37

Many people express their desire to “buy American,” but when it comes to actually paying for it, do they?

Made in America

Does the customer care? By Britt Beemer

Here is the data based upon furniture shoppers over the last two years: There are 26 percent of Americans who say they will make every effort to buy American, but only 80 percent of those

really make that effort to pay more than they planned to buy American.The sad thing about these findings is the 42 percent of families who formally “bought American” were either WWII veterans or immediate family members of WWII veterans.Not only is that generation nearly gone, but many children of those WWII veterans are also an aging population.In the end, 20.8 percent actually bought American-made furniture.But the future does not look bright because those “true-blue” American buyers are virtually all over 60 and predominately from blue-collar households. Many don’t expect to buy any more new furniture for many years.Additionally, those under 35 have little interest in buying American unless American-made means they pay less money.

The problem today is American-made is typically more expensive and in some cases like leather, “Italian-made leather” is premium quality over American leather.One of the determining factors behind “buying American” has been the U.S. auto industry which was muddled in fever by the bailout of GM and Chrysler causing some “American-only” buyers to give up since they were politically conservative and totally against the bailout.Mix a little politics with business and business always suffers!American furniture manufacturers need to re-connect with those 40 year olds who have more money and will pay more if they are given a reason, but buying American for America’s sake is not a winning marketing strategy today.

America’s Research Group (ARG) is a consumer research-focused business development firm that provides clients the insight, strategy and tactics to increase market share. Founded in 1979 by C. Britt Beemer, Chairman, ARG’s expertise in consumer behavior has made it a key resource and its principal a trusted advisor to the nation’s leading brands and top retailers for over 30 years. For more information, visit www.argconsumer.com or email [email protected].

Page 40: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 39

National Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings AssociationSEHFA SHFAWHFANHFA

South Eastern Home Furnishings Association Southern Home Furnishings Association

New England Chapter

Acuity A. Mutual Insurance CompanyAdvertising Concepts of AmericaAffordable FurnitureAICO/Amini Innovation Corp.Aireloom BedingAmerican ExpressAmerican LeatherAshley Furniture Industries, Inc.AspenhomeAssociated Volume BuyersBanner MarketingBecker Designed, Inc.Bernards, Inc.Best Home FurnishingsBraxton Culler, Inc.California Furniture Manufacturers Assoc.Capital Marketing ConceptsCargo Consolidation ServicesCelerant TechnologyCentury FurnitureCentury LightingCoaster Company of AmericaColor AdCory Home Delivery ServiceCraftmaster Furniture, Inc.Cramco, Inc.Davis DirectDécor-Rest Furniture Ltd.Delivery SolutionsDiakon LogisticsDiamond Mattress Co.Dom GranatDSI CompaniesEkornesElements InternationalElite LeatherEmerald Home FurnishingsFairmont Design

FlexsteelFurniture of AmericaFurniture OptionsFurniture WizardFurnitureDealer.netGE CapitalGreat American Furniture ServicesGuardian ProductsGuardsman/The Valspar Corp.Hancock & Moore/Jessica CharlesHarden Furniture CompanyHigh Point Market AuthorityHolland HouseHomelegance USA Home Furnishings Business MagazineHookerHorich Parks Lebow AdvertisingImpact Consulting Services, Inc.Innovative Delivery SystemsJames Parker Insurance AssociatesJofran Sales, Inc.Julius M. Feinblum Real Estate, Inc.KincaidKing Hickory Furniture CoKlaussner Home FurnishingsLane Home FurnishingsLazar IndustriesLeaLeggett & Platt, Inc.Liberty FurnitureLifestyle EnterprisesLinon Home Décor ProductsLynch Sales CompanyMagnussen HomeMail AmericaMassood LogisticsMed-Lift Mobility

MicroD, Inc.Mohawk Finishing Products, Inc.Myriad SoftwareNatuzzi Americas, Inc.NetSertiveNourison IndustriesPacific Furniture DealersPhoenix A.M.D. International, Inc.Profit Management PromotionsPROFITsystemsProtect-A-BedRestonic Mattress Corp.Riztex USA, Inc.SAP RetailSerta Mattress CompaniesSimmonsSleep-EzzSource International, Inc./4 Sales FinanceSourthern MotionSphinx by Oriental WeaversStandard FurnitureSteve Silver Co.STORIS Management SystemsSuryaTempur-PedicThe Uttermost CompanyTropic Survival Advertising & MarketingTruckSkin, LLCTwin Star/Classic FlameTyler Net, Inc.Valassis, Inc.Vaughan Furniture Co.Versatile SystemsWahlquist Management CorporationWorld Market CenterZenith Global

Our Associations gratefully recognize all of our supporters whose dedication and committment has strengthened our industry.

To become an industry partner contact:National Home Furnishings Association | 800.888.9590Western Home Furnishings Association | 800.422.3778

38

Page 41: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 39

Made in America

Remade in AmericaRestoring a Nation’s Confidence

Made in America means a better America,” said Bruce Cochrane, owner of Lincolnton

Furniture. Bruce has become a household name to many, especially in Lincolnton, N.C. A fifth-generation furniture manufacturer, Bruce sold Cochrane Furniture in 1997 to another manufacturer, and in 2008 the U.S. factory shut its doors and all production headed to China. Bruce headed to China as well and worked as a consultant to furniture importers. After years of witnessing arising issues first-hand, Bruce decided to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. with Lincolnton Furniture. “I felt like the technology and the productivity of the American worker would be the real game changer. It would allow us to compete,” he said. In January of 2011, Bruce assembled a team that began working on a plan to bring manufacturing back to America. “We started working on this concept, bringing in what we did in the past,” Bruce said. “The plan included different elements, including securing financing and equity—private equity. We had great success with securing financing with our local community bank but we had no luck with the big banks. The president of the local bank, who used to work at Cochrane Furniture when he was a kid, was willing to give us financing. He knew everyone, he believed in the furniture, and he knew we could do what we said we could do. We got started, bought equipment and decided we were going to manufacturer solid wood furniture with traditional cabinet joinery, that was Made in America and guaranteed for life.”

While Lincolnton Furniture’s story focuses heavily on bringing manufacturing back to America, the core to its success is the people that made it happen. “It is what we have done, it isn’t what I have done. It is all about the people—the people that work at Lincolnton Furniture have done this,” Bruce stressed. “I haven’t done it. I helped the process along.”It’s the people that are the heart and strength of Lincolnton Furniture. When Bruce started hiring, he brought in a core team of people that had previously worked for his family at Cochrane Furniture. Many had been unemployed for years, and

most felt unsure of their current abilities. “Our Purchasing Manager, Pat Hendrick, told me, ‘I have been praying about this. I can’t believe you called me, but I just don’t think I can do it again. I don’t think I can do it any more.’ And I said, ‘Pat you did it for 25 years, you can do it again.’” Bruce heard similar stories from many of his past employees—people had lost their confidence in their ability. They were in despair—thinking something was wrong with them rather than the circumstances. Bringing jobs back restored their confidence in themselves, and the world around them. It has started to revive a town once full of shuttered factories.His people and their stories have become an inspiration to Bruce. He knows that he is doing something risky, and that some still believe that furniture manufacturing will never return to the U.S., but he is confident that this is a smart business move. “This was not an emotional decision,

this was a business decision,” he said. “I told everyone up front that this has to do with making money and being a profitable business. The time is right to do this, and we are going to work together to be profitable and very successful.”The Lincolnton Furniture team knows they will face challenges, but they have confidence in their product and their team. Bruce encourages more manufacturers to bring business back to America, because it is good for the company, the industry and the people. “There are so many people that have taken their factories, and moved all of their efforts to Asia,” he said. “I

am talking about great companies, with great manufacturing history, yet they are all really slaves to the offshore imports. That is all they are. Just take the initiative to do what we have done at Lincolnton Furniture—it is not very hard. Yes, it is time consuming but there are so many people that are willing to step up and help. I had 18 people that worked for seven months, and they worked for nothing. No pay—they just wanted to be a part of it, and believe in what they were doing. There are so many people in these furniture communities that are willing to step up and do it. Not just willing, but eager and enthusiastic about it. The managers of these factories need to start their own domestic initiatives. And if they want to come in and look at what we have done, which is a great template for the future of furniture manufacturing—not only in the United States, but in the entire world—we welcome and encourage people to visit.”After all, Made in America means a better America…

By Melissa Dressler

yet they are all really slaves to the offshore imports...

Page 42: RetailerNOW—June 2012

40 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

Member MarketplaceEXCLUSIVE DEALS FOR ASSOCIATION MEMBERS

CALL yOUR MEMbERSHIP REPRESENTATIVE TODAy AND GET STARTED!

Retailers East of the Rocky Mountains, call

(800) 888-9590 www.nhfa.org

retailers in the 12 Western states, call (800) 422-3778 www.whfa.org

Member Marketplace

National Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings AssociationSEHFA SHFAWHFANHFA

South Eastern Home Furnishings Association Southern Home Furnishings AssociationNational Home Furnishings Association Western Home Furnishings Association

SEHFA SHFAWHFANHFASouth Eastern Home Furnishings Association Southern Home Furnishings Association

Office SuppliesYou can never have enough Post-It notes in your office and now your company is eligible to participate in the largest and most tenured office supply discount program simply because of your membership with the Association!You will receive:

h A 15-30% discount off the top 100 items businesses purchase the most

h guaranteed at least 5% off the lowest retail/sale price on almost all products

h Online portals and store purchasing cards allow you to show in store or at your leaisure

h Free next-day delivery of in-stock items for over $50

h no contract or sign-on fees

Sherwin-Williams PaintNothing freshens up the look and feel of a store like a fresh coat of paint. You can now paint for less with our partnership with Sherwin-Williams!

h 20% discount off of national pricing on paints, coatings, finishes, touch-up and repair products, and applicators and supplies

h Color tools designed specifically for in-house designers

h Color trends information h Color Training & Education h nHFA member-only exclusive program

Workplace Apparel through AramarkIf you are looking to create the perfect image, while promoting teamwork and establishing professional identity (okay, really, you want your employees to look snazzy!), then look no further. Our partnership with ArAMArK provides you with employee clothing and apparel that supports various functions within your business at special member pricing. From designing and manufacturing to cleaning and delivering, ArAMArK works specifically with your organization to customize a uniform program that promotes teamwork and professionalism in your business.Choose from two discounted programs:

h Purchase: up to 40 percent of the 60 top selling items, plus a 17 percent discount off the entire ArAMArK Catalog.

h rental: The ArAMArK rental Program ensures that you get a cost-effective, hassle-free uniform program delivered right to your door

Rhoda Santamaria & Shane Curry Casa Bella Galleria, Sacramento CA Proud Members since 2004

And best of all, it is FREE with your membership!

NEW PROGRAM

WITH DEEPER

DISCOUNTS

Page 43: RetailerNOW—June 2012
Page 44: RetailerNOW—June 2012

42 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

At Zenith Global Logistics, even the smallest order receives laser-focused, meticulous product handling as it moves efficiently through our

terminals and onto our company-owned trucks. Universal bar coding and exacting handling procedures are just the beginning of why our

damage rate is less than 0.3% and our shipping accuracy stands at 99.99%. As for service, it’s always immediate — like a live person on

the phone when you call and quick answers when you need information. And we’re fully CSA compliant. So when it’s your move, call on

Zenith Global Logistics. We make sure Every Move Counts.

your move. make it count.

PO Box 969 • Conover, NC 28613 • 800.937.3876 • ZenithCompanies.com

Domestic LTL Freight // Domestic Warehousing // Domestic Home Delivery // International Home Delivery // Ocean Transportation // International Warehousing & Consolidation

Product Focus Casual/Outdoor

Trends In Outdoor StyleDiscovering an individual style for outdoor spaces has become one of today’s top trends in home decorating. The following are a few of the latest tips and trends in the casual furnishings category that could prove handy when assisting consumers in creating their personal outdoor décor.

With the excitement, innovation and growing interest in outdoor décor, the trends and opportunities to be found within this segment are anything but casual.

Laurie Rudd is a veteran of the casual/outdoor living industry and an expert in the promotion of leisure and outdoor products and a free-lance writer on the topic of outdoor living. Laurie is the owner of Laurie Rudd Public Relations (laurieruddpr.com), Winterville, NC.

By Laurie Rudd

Cannes Deep Seating—Pride Family Brands

Designer Marcia Blake incorporates accessories into a Pride Family Brands outdoor setting

Patio Living Concepts

Casual Style—Luxury Design Trends.Design options being introduced for spring 2013 span over-the-top sculptural wicker to intricate cast aluminum. Whatever the motif, one trend that has grown in 2012 is luxury; in style and in construction. “We are seeing a trend toward the higher end products,” said Rory Rehmert, vice president of sales and marketing, Pride Family Brands, cast aluminum casual furniture manufacturer, Hollywood, Fl. “Among our 10 top selling collections this season, two are from our premium lines and carry some of our highest price points. We see this as an indication of consumers returning to investing in their outdoor spaces.”

Durable Décor—Indoor-Outdoor Trends. The investment in outdoor furnishings is possible due to the category’s ongoing innovation focused on durability and lasting qualities. Ease of care along with fade, stain and overall weather resistant capabilities are now being seen as a growing trend for interiors as well. Hospitality venues are leading this movement with efforts to incorporate furnishings built for the out-of-doors into interior designs. greater emphasis is also being placed on a flow-through style trend with a coordination of indoor furnishings spilling forth seamlessly to the outdoors.

Fashion Forward—Fabric Trends.Fashion today is an integral part of outdoor décor with the advances in outdoor textiles. No longer, however, is fabric coloration alone in determining al fresco fashion statements. The latest fabric trends include extreme textural weaves to the soft beauty of outdoor leathers. Additionally, the fabric selection process and the use of design consultants by outdoor furnishing manufacturers is a fast growing trend. “Manufacturers are realizing the potential fabrics provide in not only completing looks but in presenting a company’s overall fashion image and design philosophy,” said Marcia Blake, president and creative director, Outdoor Interiors, a full service design firm, laguna niguel, CA.

Pulling it Together—Accessory Trends. A trend that does not see any signs of slowing down is the addition of unique accessories entering the outdoor marketplace with each season. Today, outdoor durability extends to lighting, art, rugs, sound systems and more. “Table or floor lamps are a popular outdoor accessory with weather resistant components and a diversity of designs from traditional to contemporary,” said Douglas Orians, vice president sales and marketing, Patio Living Concepts, Linn, MO. “Energy efficient leD lighting options also are being introduced with remote control color-changing capabilities to highlight outdoor entertainment and overall ambiance.”

Page 45: RetailerNOW—June 2012

At Zenith Global Logistics, even the smallest order receives laser-focused, meticulous product handling as it moves efficiently through our

terminals and onto our company-owned trucks. Universal bar coding and exacting handling procedures are just the beginning of why our

damage rate is less than 0.3% and our shipping accuracy stands at 99.99%. As for service, it’s always immediate — like a live person on

the phone when you call and quick answers when you need information. And we’re fully CSA compliant. So when it’s your move, call on

Zenith Global Logistics. We make sure Every Move Counts.

your move. make it count.

PO Box 969 • Conover, NC 28613 • 800.937.3876 • ZenithCompanies.com

Domestic LTL Freight // Domestic Warehousing // Domestic Home Delivery // International Home Delivery // Ocean Transportation // International Warehousing & Consolidation

Page 46: RetailerNOW—June 2012

44 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 45

Quick-Fire Marketing is brought to you by R&A Marketing. Armed with more than 25 years of furniture retail marketing experience as a full-service traditional and digital marketing company, R&A is the industry’s premier agency for retailers in the home furnishings and appliances/electronics industries. Visit us on the web www.ramarketing.com or email us at [email protected].

It’s Time to Pass the Baton to the coming generations of customers

Ignite your marketing

righT noW, Three unique generaTions are buying or seeing your adverTising message every day:

baby boomers Born between 1945 and 1964, this generation is 76 million strong. They control nearly 80 percent of financial assets and about 50 percent of all discretionary

spending power. Their focus has switched from acquisition to preservation. There are still sales to be made, though not nearly as many.

Generation X Born between 1961 to 1981, this generation is much smaller than the Baby Boomer

generation (46 million vs. 76 million. X’ers have not fared as well financially as baby boomers:

• Expect some up and down years and manage your business accordingly.• These generations, along with remaining Baby Boomers, are spending.• Focus on making it through the next five years or so, when the much larger

Generation Y begins to form households.

Generation y…the “Millennial” Born between about 1982 and 1998, this generation is 75 million strong:

• Those numbers compare to the Boomers• Gen Y shows an inclination to marry and have children later to make sure they get it “right”.

This is the first generation to be raised with technology at an early age:• To them, if it’s not on the Internet it doesn’t exist. If they can’t reach you through Facebook,

Twitter or text, you won’t reach them at all. It’s vital to understand what this means to marketing and communicating with this group: This will allow you to take advantage of the same kind of growth observed when the Boomers

came of age.

X Don’t fight change. Instead, eMBrACe it. You will be better positioned to succeed if you don’t have to scramble to catch up.

Y When you create your five year plan (you have one, don’t you?), if it looks like your previous plan, ask yourself if your business will be better or worse off if you just maintain the status quo. Be honest with your answer.

Z Do what’s necessary to implement a technology-based approach to your specific situation. It may mean investing in people or creating new strategic partnerships. Invest with confidence that doing it right will give you a competitive advantage when opportunity knocks.

Coming up next month find out more about transitioning to the next generation in RetailerNOW!

Quick Fire

hoW do you succeed in This brave neW World? here are Three simPle suggesTions:

PrePare To Pass The baTon noW. every Winner does iT flaWlessly.

Page 47: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 45

The Solo EconomyTHE SHIFT IN HOW AMERICANS LIVE

POP QUIZ: Two customers come into your store. One is a happy couple looking for a new bedroom set and the other is a single, 30-something female looking for a new sofa. Which is more likely to buy from you that day (and spend more money?)? If you guess the happy couple, then you most likely guessed wrong.

A new trend has hit the nation—living alone. A new book, Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living Alone, by eric Klinenberg, talks about the biggest demographic shift since the Baby Boom—people are learning to live alone—and it could be a great thing for your business.Today, more than 50 percent of Americans are single, and 31 million live alone. That means roughly one out of every seven adults lives AlOne! About 17 million women now live solo, and about 14 million men made the same decision to be solo dwellers. And while you think it might just be the next generation that needs their space, the majority of solo dwellers (more than 15 million) are middle-age adults between the ages of 36 and 64—the prime target age range of any home furnishings store. Of course, the younger generation is also choosing to live solo, with about 5 million (and quickly growing) between the ages of 18 and 34.The good news for you—not only do solo dwellers outspend their married counterparts, there are more homes (apartments, lofts, townhouses, condos—you get the point) to fill with beautiful furniture. Single people don’t have to worry about spending money on others—they get to spend it on themselves. In fact, they usually will spend about $6,500 more a year than a married couple without kids, and $11,000 more than a couple with kids (2010 Consumer expenditure Survey). The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that consumption by U.S. singles contributes $1.9 trillion to the economy annually—the power of the single person is definitely rising. Will you be there to have them spend money with you?

As evidence continues to emerge about the solo dweller’s buying power, companies are shifting products and strategies to target this market. Here are some more signs:nestle’s research shows that 90% of its lean Cuisine meals are eaten alone; Ikea has reported a rise in their “small space” living products, which is where single people are more likely to reside; Norwegian Cruise Line has started offering “studio staterooms” for the single traveler.

How can you cash in on the single trend?

First, be sure you are marketing properly to this group—they don’t want to see a happy family

buying furniture. That isn’t their lifestyle, so they won’t identify with the message. Next, offer products t h a t c a n f i t i n t o s m a l l e r s p a c e s . Solo dwellers live in everything from small apartments to large m a n s i o n s — k n o w your demographic and your area. Find different opportunities to connect with this marke t and o f fe r products that appeal to them. Lastly, never a s s u m e t h a t i f a woman is shopping by herself that her husband is sitting at home—she easi ly could be living alone and proud of it.

Want to learn more about this shift in American? Read Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living

Alone by Eric Klinenberg for more information.

ARE YOU PAYING ATTENTION?

By Melissa Dressler

The Shift

PrePare To Pass The baTon noW. every Winner does iT flaWlessly.

Page 48: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 47

the scoopdel sol furniture to open flagship retail location

Del Sol Furniture opened its largest location in Phoenix, AZ, totaling 25,000 square feet, nearly double the size of their next largest store and represents a significant investment in an area previously underserved by home furnishing retail options. The company is taking advantage of the larger location to offer more product selection and is looking to establish the location as a flagship for the furniture brand. Additionally, the family-owned operation is committed to the revitalization of the surrounding West Phoenix neighborhood and contributing to a healthier local economy. The store has already created 10 new sales, support and management positions within the company with the potential for more growth in the future.

gary Woodham honored with Willis award of merit

Gary Woodham of Colfax Furniture & Mattress in greensboro, nC, was awarded the 2011 Willis Award of Merit during the Southern Home Furnishings Association’s annual convention at Pawley Plantation, SC. The Willis Award of Merit was created in 1954 by the Willis Family of Virginia Beach, VA, as a memorial to John Willis, Jr., and his son, Benjamin J. Willis, Sr. The intent of this distinguished award is to encourage and promote cooperation, understanding, and the exchange of ideas, and to lend dignity and purpose to the Southern Home Furnishings Association. It honors an outstanding home furnishings retailer in the SHFA area, who, in the opinion of the Willis Award Committee contributes most unselfishly to the community, industry, and the lord.

sleep country usa honored as

corporate champion

On the heels of a record-breaking year for its philanthropic Foster Kids Program, Sleep Country uSA in the Pacific northwest, has been named a Puget Sound Business Journal Healthy Corporate Champion in the Basic Needs category. One of eight Puget Sound companies honored, Sleep Country created its Foster Kids Program in 2005 to support the nearly 20,000 foster children in the Pacific northwest through donations of important material items, like clothing, shoes, coats, school supplies, pajamas, and gifts during the holidays to area nonprofit foster organizations who serve them.

in memoriam

Former nHFA President and longtime industry veteran, Stuart Shevin, passed away in April after a battle with lung cancer. The president of Standard Furniture in Birmingham, Al, was 63. He was both well known and loved within his community and the furniture industry. In 2000, Stuart was named the president of the National Home Furnishings Association and was credited with many ideas that helped move our industry forward. “Stuart, almost single-handedly brought about some great things for the retail industry,” said Steve DeHaan, national Home Furnishings Association executive vice president. “Stuart fought for bankruptcy reform and got all kinds of industries involved and made it happen. He saved consumers hundreds of dollars and retailers thousands of dollars with that one action. He was as personable as they come. He was always asking other retailers how they did this and that in their businesses and he always shared how he was doing things.”Stuart’s contributions to the industry will never be forgotten.

The Scoop

46 M a y | 2 0 1 2

Gary Woodham, winner of the 2011 Willis Award with his wife Judy.

Congratulations Gary and the Colfax Furniture Team!

Page 49: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 47

CalendarMARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR THESE INDUSTRY EVENTS

Pictured Above: Sonoma Headboard, Thilbaut Fine Furniture

ADVERTISER PHONE WEBSITE FACEBOOK TWITTER PAGE#

Allegheny Consignment (814) 742-4380 alleghenyconsignment.com http://tinyurl.com/alleghenyFB 27

Capitol Marketing Concepts (804) 556-0531 capitolmarketing.com www.facebook.com/capitolmarketing 36

Emerald Home Furnishings (800) 685-6646 emeraldhome.com www.facebook.com/EmeraldHome 03

Furniture Wizard (619) 869-7200 furniturewizard.com www.facebook.com/furniturewizard 22

High Point Market (336) 869-1000 highpointmarket.org www.highpointmarket.org/facebook @hpmarketnews 07

Las Vegas Market (888) 962-7469 lasvegasmarket.com www.facebook.com/wmclv @worldmarketctr 05

MicroD (800) 964-3876 microdinc.com www.facebook.com/microdinc @microdinc Back Cover

Myriad (800) 676-4243 myriadsoftware.com http://tinyurl.com/myriadFB 32

Nourison (201) 368-6900 nourison.com www.facebook.com/nourison @nourison Inside Back

Planned Furniture Promotions (800) 472-5242 PFpromotions.com 16

PROFITsystems (716) 894-1414 Profitsystems.com www.facebook.com/profitsystems @PROFITsystems 19

R&A Marketing (888) 225-0776 RAmarketing.com www.facebook.com/RAMarketing @RAMarketing 44

Rowe (703) 847-8670 rowefurniture.com www.facebook.com/rowefurniture @rowefurniture 35

Serta (888) 557-3782 serta.com www.facebook.com/sertamattress @sertamattresses 11

Surya (877) 275-7847 surya.com www.facebook.com/SuryaSocial Inside Cover

Web4Retail (877) 536-4786 web4retail.com www.facebook.com/Web4Retail @web4retail 31

Zenith Global (800) 937-3876 zenithcompanies.com www.facebook.com/ZenithGlobalLogistics 43

NHFA / WHFA Sponsors (800) 888-9590 retailerNOWmag.com www.facebook.com/retailernow @retailerNow 38

more industry dates online at retailerNOWmag.com

Dallas Total Home & Gift MarketJune 20-26, 2012

Dallas, TX www.dallasmarketcenter.com

Dwell on DesignJune 22-24, 2012

Los Angeles, CA www.dwellondesign.com/nHFA

Las Vegas MarketJuly 30-august 3, 2012

Las Vegas, NV www.lasvegasmarket.com

61st Edison Furniture & Accessory Marketaugust 19-21, 2012

edison, nH www.kemexpo.com

High Point Pre-Marketseptember 13-14, 2012

High Point, nC www.highpointmarket.org

Calendar

Page 50: RetailerNOW—June 2012

48 J U N E | 2 0 1 2 www.retailerNOWmag.com

70.1 million Dads across the nation—Happy Father’s Day!

The Now ListA quick dose of fun facts, random trivia and useful

(or useless) bits of info

In 2011, street food vendors (including food trucks) accounted for a total of $1.4 billion in revenue.

Burning the midnight oil? Staying up all night will burn an additional 161 calories. That’s not much… it’s better to choose sleep!

If you are right handed, you will tend to chew your food on your right side. If you are left handed, you will tend to chew your food on your left side.

Laughing lowers levels of stress hormones and strengthens the immune system. Six-year-olds laugh an average of 300 times a day. Adults only laugh 15 to 100 times a day.

More money is spent on gardening than on any other hobby!

Almost eight in 10 consumers said they follow a retailer’s facebook, Twitter or blog. (Shop.org 2011 Social Commerce Study)

1 in 5 consumers look for competitive prices on comparison-shopping engines like PriceGrabber and Shopping.com. (Shop.org)

When hippos are upset, their sweat turns red. Beware of hippos that look slightly red!

Nourison, Siam Rug

Online sales of home furnishings is by far the fastest growing segment of sales for the industry, outpacing traditional channels by as much as 400% annually in terms of percentages of growth

Page 51: RetailerNOW—June 2012

Rug Boutique

Visit

us at th

e Las Vegas Market

C112SHOWROOM

WORLD MARKET CENTER

Page 52: RetailerNOW—June 2012

www.retailerNOWmag.com J U N E | 2 0 1 2 2

For more than 20 years, MicroD has led the way with innovative furniture merchandising solutions. That’s why more than 85% of the Top 100 furniture brands and retailers rely on MicroD.

We deliver the expertise, technology, and services to transform your online presence and drive customers to your stores.

• Visually Stunning Product Presentations• Engaging, Interactive User Experience• Powerful Room Planning & Personalization Tools• Integrated Promotions, Incentives & Hooks• Improved Search Results and Rankings• Latest Mobile Tagging Technology• Comprehensive Content Management Services • Mobile Friendly Website

Las Vegas MarketJuly 30 - August 3

WMC Building C-496

Premier Websites for the Furniture Industry

[email protected]

800.964.3876 ext. 2

Are You In The Driver’s Seat? Directing Traffic to Your Furniture Retail

Site with Search Engine Marketing

Upcoming Market Seminar