Posts Tagged ‘denver home decorating center’

Options popular in upholstered furniture

Monday, January 4th, 2010

At least a half-dozen upholstery suppliers are rolling out DIY (design it yourself) upholstery programs this week that allow consumers to insert their own personalities and style into sofas and chairs. And Bassett is offering a second generation of customization, having introduced its first DIY collection several years ago.

  The B212 Multiples sofa from Broyhill can be given a completely different look with the substitution of backs, arms, legs, cushions and other options.

If the choice of hundreds of fabrics wasn’t enough, manufacturers are now allowing consumers to select everything from arm, leg and back styles to cushion construction, length (from
Texas long to apartment short) and details like fringes and welting.

Dixon Bartlett, a principal with Carolyn Hipple in HB2 Resources, a consulting firm working for Norwalk Custom Furniture, indicated the reason for the DIY proliferation is to give consumers many reasons not to say no.

“The consumer loves (to) make it her own,” he said.

Besides 850 fabrics, Norwalk’s Variations collection provides six basic frames and every configuration one can think of – including even a wood base and various shapes of legs.

“Why the concepts works for dealers is that it provides them with the most productive square footage,” Bartlett said. Dealers can place one frame on the floor and sell a variety of configurations, he said.

Broyhill’s DIY collection, called Multiples, includes a variety of leg, arm, and back choices along with various lengths and 275 pillow fabrics.

“Consumers want to personalize their living rooms across many income levels,” said Paul Peters, vice president of upholstery. “Multiples allows them to create the perfect piece to fit their space at affordable price points, and gives them the confidence that they’ve made the right choice with their investment.

“Since it is a custom story, it also allows for a retail footprint with a minimal inventory commitment,” he added.

Peters said Broyhill is launching the line to offer consumers choice, and also confidence.

“Offering a focused custom story from a trusted brand removes anxiety in the consumer’s decision process. It also benefits our dealers by offering further applications of the special fabric choices they already offer,” he said.

While DIY groups require less inventory, keeping up with a ton of SKUs required to support the program has kept some vendors from similar introductions. That hasn’t frightened Rowe, which is introducing a Suit Yourself customization program this market in its Clayton Marcus division.
Options include 11 wood finishes and 750 fabrics, or use of the customer’s own material.

Saverio Mancina, Rowe’s director of communications, said a computerized manufacturing system that once provided the company with a nightmare of inventory foul-ups is now running smoothly.

“It’s working brilliantly to our advantage,” said Mancina. “We feel Suit Yourself reduces the obstacle to buying.”

Source: www.highpointmarket.org

www.HowardsFurnitureandDecoratratingCenter.com

Broyhill Launches WOW Sales Strategy

Monday, January 4th, 2010

LENOIR, N.C. — Case goods and upholstery resource Broyhill is set to launch a sales strategy it calls “WOW,” which is aimed at improving relationships with retail customers through a variety of merchandising, promotion and pricing initiatives.

The WOW strategy eventually will be rolled out by all brands owned by Broyhill’s parent Furniture Brands International, according to company officials.

“Broyhill is the perfect place to launch this strategy at the brand level,” said Ralph Scozzafava, FBI’s chairman and CEO. “Broyhill’s customer base ranges from single location independent dealers to national accounts. The consultative, fact-based sales approach that is the foundation of the WOW strategy works with customers at every level, and we maximize the upside leverage of this proven sales strategy by starting with Broyhill.”

The strategy consists of three core elements, which the company describes as Win at the Store, Own the Customer, and Work Together.

Mark Stephens, formerly vice president of national accounts at Furniture Brands, will shift to Broyhill to lead the sales team there.

“Mark has been the point person for rolling out the WOW strategy to Furniture Brands’ five national account teams, and their early success has been impressive,” said Broyhill President Jeff Cook. “It just made great sense to leverage his knowledge and experience to lead the Broyhill sales team in implementing the WOW strategy.”

Stephens is replacing Don Webb, who is leaving Broyhill to return to the West Coast to pursue other business interests in the furniture industry.

In addition to Broyhill, FBI’s key brands include Lane, Drexel Heritage, Henredon, Maitland-Smith and Thomasville.

 

Source: www.highpointmarket.org

www.HowardsFurnitureandDecoratratingCenter.com

High Point premarket set for Sept. 13-14

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Spring edition runs March 15-16

HIGH POINT — Sponsors of High Point’s premarket have set the fall event’s dates for Sept. 13-14. As previously announced, the spring edition will run March 15-16.

Held about a month before each High Point Market, premarket aims to give retailers a chance to preview major product collections, secure distribution, and strengthen relationships with key vendors and company principals, according to market officials.

Twenty-four High Point Market exhibitors and three of the city’s showroom building operators are sponsors of premarket this year. They met last week to set the dates and the premarket agenda.

As it did this fall, the September 2010 premarket will coincide with the opening two days of the Las Vegas Market, which is set for Sept. 13-16. The March premarket will occur about six weeks after the winter Vegas market, which runs Feb. 1-5.

Kevin O’Connor, CEO of Samson Marketing, parent company of premarket sponsors Legacy Classic and Universal Furniture, said the High Point event “affords manufacturers and retailers quality time to really connect. It’s a relaxed environment that encourages interaction between top-level executives that is quite unlike the frenetic, time-pressed interchanges of market.”

Brian Casey, CEO of the High Point Market Authority, added: “The emphasis on the ability to review ‘market-ready’ product in advance of market one month later is one of the critical elements making the premarket events so successful.”

Source: www.furnituretoday.com

www.HowardsFurnitureandDecoratingCenter.com