furnishing


Monday, April 29th, 2013

Well-Known North Carolina High-End retailer, Baker Furniture Co. entrusts PFP with their last and biggest sale event!

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Baker Furniture in Cramerton (standing L-R) owners Jim and Sandra VanPelt and (sitting L-R) their children who help run the business Greg VanPelt and Holly Hite

As covered by the Gaston Gazette, April 2013   (Cramerton is a close suburb of Charlotte, NC)

A 60-year-old Gaston County tradition is coming to an end.

Baker Furniture Co. in Cramerton plans to close by the end of July, having furnished local homes for three generations.

Owners Jim and Sandra Van Pelt say the time is right to stop working 12-hour days and start spending that time with their four grandchildren.

Customers have come to expect the VIP treatment from the business. Sandra Van Pelt often travels to customers’ homes to measure spaces before placing orders.

Baker’s has built a reputation of carrying high-end brands.

It’s come a long way since Sandra Van Pelt’s father, Floyd “Red” Baker, opened the store in 1949 in his garage.

He sold discount furniture to people still recovering from the Great Depression.

Sandra Van Pelt recounts how the business was born. Her parents drove to Hickory to buy a mahogany bedroom suite from a manufacturer. Baker, hunting a bargain, asked if he could get a good deal.

The salesman agreed, but on the condition that Baker buy six bedroom suites instead of one.

The couple made the deal. They put one set of furniture in their home and the other five on the lawn for sale. Customers soon arrived, and “Red” Baker watched the business continuously expand until his death in 1985.

That’s when Jim and Sandra Van Pelt became owners. Their grown children, Greg Van Pelt and Holly Hite, also work at the store.

Less attention to quality

For the last five years, annual sales at the furniture store have totaled $5 million, said Jim Van Pelt. He and his wife take pride in serving discerning clients from Charleston, S.C., to Atlanta.

But the Charlotte region provides loyal customers who, Sandra Van Pelt says, wouldn’t go anywhere else to buy furniture.

“In a small business like this, your customers become your family,” Jim Van Pelt said. “So that’s the bittersweet part.”

Styles and customer habits have changed dramatically over the decades.

Two decades ago, clients wanted everything in a living room to match. From the draperies to the armchairs to the sofa, the “matchy-matchy” style was the rage.

But these days, eclectic styles are in fashion and anything goes.

The Van Pelts have filled fewer custom furniture orders in recent years. Some customers lost interest in picking out solid wood frames, flipping through sample books and selecting ornate fabrics.

They want to walk in a furniture showroom, scout out items they think will look good and leave with the purchases in tow, Sandra Van Pelt said.

Many customers are also paying less attention to quality and are more focused on the price tag.

“Most people have become a lot more conscious of price because of the economy,” she said. “Even people that have money, they’re not throwing it away. They’re still careful with how they spend it.”

‘Personalized attention’

Beverly Cole of Gastonia has moved several times over the past five decades. And the staff at Baker Furniture Co. has been there to help her redecorate each home.

“They wanted to please you so much. I really do think that’s the thing that Gastonia is going to miss so much,” she said. “You knew when you went over there, if you couldn’t find it, they were going to order it for you. That personalized attention is going to be hard to come by now.”

She can’t recall exactly how many furniture pieces she’s bought from the Van Pelts. Since 1960, they’ve helped her select beds, living room furnishings, dining room tables and framed pictures.

After recently moving into an apartment, she found herself once again calling on the services of the Van Pelts. They helped find a headboard for a bed that matches her night stand.

Then Sandra Van Pelt arrived to help her place furniture in different rooms.

“I’m going to miss them terribly,” Cole said. “It’s been a wonderful relationship with needing furniture and having some wonderful people to buy it from.”

Closing out

The store is still fully stocked. The Van Pelts replenish the showroom with items from an on-site warehouse. They hope to have all furniture and rugs liquidated by the end of July.

Jim Van Pelt said the property and 40,000-square-foot brick building are for sale.

The business has always been on Market Street. Additions and renovations have been made over the years to accommodate more showroom space.

Sandra Van Pelt said longtime customers hear about the store closing and stop by to greet her. Then they cry together and remember the friendships made.

It’s emotional because she’s been involved in the business all her life.

“We have always strived to sell people good furniture and give them choices,” she said.

As covered by the Gaston Gazette, April 2013

Saturday, September 15th, 2012

PFP Handling Casey’s Furniture store closing

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Louis Casey has navigated a number of economic and market shifts during his 43 years at the family furniture store in downtown Temple.

However, the final chapter in the more than 75-year history of Casey’s Furniture will be written by him.

Casey’s, launched sometime in the mid-1930s, will close its historic 33,000-square-foot showroom and warehouse on South Second Street by January 2013. A going-out-of-business sale starts Thursday.

Its Belton location has been closed for several years.

“We’ve enjoyed every minute of it, but there’s a time and place for everything and it’s time for us to do something else,” said Casey, whose grandfather founded the business originally known as Household Furniture Company. “We’ve had success and enjoyed the loyalty of thousands of customers, but it’s time for us to move on to the next phase of our lives.”

His wife, Charlynn, will continue to work as a licensed interior designer. She hasn’t chosen where to base her business after the store closes.

“In the retail business, it’s six days a week,” Casey said. “I will be able to do things I have not taken the time to do. Spend more time with family, grandchildren, travel, do a little fishing.”

“And some unknowns,” Charlynn Casey interjected. “And some unknowns,” he agreed.

The building — and several hundred thousand dollars’ worth of merchandise — is for sale. The massive liquidation is not overly emotional for the owner of the business, but parting with eight employees and thousands of customers is another story, Casey said.

“That’s the most disappointing thing about closing the store is they’ve been longtime, loyal employees and that’s the hardest part of the decision,” said Casey, who has two employees with more than 20 years each at the store. “They are great, capable people and they will find other places to work.”

For Elaine Caughlin, the salesperson who customers typically request by first name or as “the brown-haired lady,” losing the store means losing a social connection. It’s also like losing her home, she said.

“I’ve said, ‘I gotta go home,’ before, and then realized that I was talking about going to work,” said Caughlin, a Casey’s employee for 27 years. “I look forward to getting up and going to work every day. It’s like a family.”

While Casey is a third-generation owner, he said his two grown sons are not interested in becoming fourth-generation heirs. That’s probably for the best, he said, citing changes in consumer attitudes and price deflation, largely due to offshore wood furniture manufacturing.

“This business model served us extremely well, but I’m not sure this model can make another generation,” Casey said. “It would be challenging for them to be successful going forward.

“The consumer is changing,” he added. “The emphasis is not so much on lifetime purchases. They are more inclined to purchase disposable products.”

The economy has presented pitfalls of its own, Casey said.

“Home furnishings is tied to the housing market, and when the housing market is weak, it affects our business,” he said. “The economic challenges of today are severe, but it’s not something we haven’t seen previously.”

Casey keeps a reminder of that fact in his furniture store office.

Years ago, he found a note handwritten by his great-grandfather and tucked away at his old harness and tire store in the site of the former Molly’s Deli, now Texas Tavern. The letter penned in 1918 politely informed a customer of a 14-month overdue bill.

“Some things never change,” Casey said, laughing.

Saturday, September 15th, 2012

Former retailer Angela Edwards appointed to Planned Furniture Promotions (PFP) team.

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Former furniture retailer Angela Edwards has joined liquidation and furniture sales event specialist Planned Furniture Promotions, Inc. (PFP) as Sr. Account Consultant.

Edwards joins PFP from Wahlquist Management Corp., where she was vice president of sales and marketing. Previously, Edwards owned and operated two furniture stores in Warner Robins and Macon, Ga. for nearly 17 years. She also has served as a marketing consultant with U.S. Broadcasting and stockbroker with Wachovia Securities, now known as Wells Fargo Securities.

In her new role with PFP, Edwards will work closely with retailers to “determine their promotional needs and develop the most effective, profitable, high-impact solutions,” said Tom Liddell, senior vice president of sales and marketing. “Angela comes to us with a wealth of retail and promotional experience. She’s well known and respected within the industry and has a high level of personal integrity and a creative, problem-solving approach. She will fit in well with our company, since those are qualities that PFP values highly and is known for as well.”

Angela Edwards

Edwards, who will report to the partners of the company, is the first woman to serve as an account executive on the Planned Furniture Promotions team.

Edwards opened the first of two Aunt Zelda’s stores in 1995. Over the years, Aunt Zelda’s was featured in national industry publications for its unique and eclectic product mix. The company received awards from Norwalk Furniture for ranking among its Top 5 stores in the nation and received Norwalk’s prestigious Cornerstone Award in 2008 for supporting and reflecting the ideals and principles of the company.

An active contributor to the industry, Edwards has served on the board of directors for the Georgia Home Furnishings Assn. for the past 15 years. In 2008, she served as president — only the second female president of the organization since its inception in 1954.

Edwards also is active in her community, serving as an executive board member of the Greater Macon Chamber of Commerce, executive board member and chairperson of the Better Business Bureau, board member of the Macon Downtown Rotary Club and Paul Harris Fellow in Rotary.

Edwards earned a bachelor’s degree from Georgia College and State University.

About Planned Furniture Promotions: Planned Furniture Promotions, Inc. (PFP), an affiliate of Gene Rosenberg Associates, LLC, is a foremost furniture industry specialist in conducting high impact promotional sales. Since 1962, PFP has specialized in creatively planning and successfully implementing thousands of sale promotions for national, regional and local retailers of all sizes that are interested in quitting business, retiring, raising cash, and achieving other urgent goals. PFP applies its unparalleled expertise and offers a broad range of services to help retailers maximize value including purchasing inventory using its substantial buying power, management, sales staffing, advertising, financing, and other critical areas. To learn more about PFP, visit www.pfpromotions.com.

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

PFP Handles Successful Event at Drogen’s Home Furnishings

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

From WKTV, Channel 2, Utica, NY

After more than 60 years, Drogen’s Home Furnishings in Oneonta closing

By Lexie O’Connor

Drogen's Closing after 60 Years

ONEONTA, N.Y. (WKTV) – Drogen’s Home Furnishings on Route 23 in Oneonta will close in July, after more than 60 years of furnishing homes across Central New York.

The close comes with the retirement of second generation owner Arnie Drogen, choosing to retire from the furniture business and focus his attention on the family electrical supply company.

“We saw a tremendous opportunity and very substantial growth in the electric supply industry and then the opportunity came and a local merchant said he was very interested, so we said this is a great opportunity,” said Drogen.

Drogen started working in what was then his parents store when he was just a young boy. Although the business has changed with competition from larger retail stores and online shopping, he feels there’s still a place for local retail.

“For me, it’s very clear there is definitely a place in this world for locally-owned, independent business who offer, service, competitive pricing and the personal touch,” says Drogen. “And what I have observed over the years, even though there’s been lots of competition to those kinds of sorts, I think the local businesses will endure a long time.”

Once closed, the property will remain a local furniture store, turning into Scholet Furniture.

Drogen anticipates the store to close sometime in July. He said it’s just a matter of when all the furniture is sold.