going out of business


Wednesday, February 20th, 2013

Greenbaum’s event being handled by PFP

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

As Reported at Northjersey.com:

A high-end, heirloom-quality furniture manufacturer and seller that has called Paterson home for more than 60 years — whose clients include actors, kings and billionaires — is closing its massive showroom in the city’s downtown to open one closer to customers in Bergen County.

Jimmy Greenbaum and daughter Susan Greenbaum Gross, owners of Greenbaum Interiors. A 30,000-square-foot factory will remain in Paterson after the family closes its showroom.

VIOREL FLORESCU / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Jimmy Greenbaum and daughter Susan Greenbaum Gross, owners of Greenbaum Interiors. A 30,000-square-foot factory will remain in Paterson after the family closes its showroom.

The decision by Greenbaum Interiors to shutter its 100,000-square-foot showroom, while leaving a company-owned, 30,000-square-foot factory in Paterson, is the latest blow to the state’s third-most populous city, dramatically diminishing the presence of a high-profile business that draws customers from North Jersey and New York State.

Greenbaum Interiors notified customers of its plans by mail last week and email this week, touting a sale that will slash prices by up to 65 percent to reduce its inventory enough to fit into a smaller showroom in Bergen County.

“If people won’t come here, there is nothing I can say or do to make them come,” said Susan Greenbaum Gross, president of Greenbaum Interiors. “We have to be close to our customers.”

No Bergen property has yet been identified. But the company, which has 55 employees, is looking for a 10,000-square-foot to 14,000-square-foot space at the northern end of Route 17 to house a showroom expected to open in the fall with 15 employees.

That would leave 35 workers and a 5,000-square-foot showroom in the Paterson factory, which will sell furniture. Greenbaum Interiors also has a 7,500-square-foot showroom with five employees in Morristown.

The company’s wealthy clients have included actor Eddie Murphy, who bought for his homes in Englewood and California; King Hussein of Jordan; and a Russian billionaire, whom the company declined to identify and who bought an entire houseful of furniture that was shipped to Russia.

Mayor Jeffery Jones said the Greenbaum family briefed him two weeks ago on its plan to close the Paterson showroom, but did not mention moving to Bergen County.

“It’s a big loss,” Jones said, though he noted that the company will retain a significant presence in the city.

“The clientele doesn’t come from Paterson, but the workers do,” he said. “The labor, the work, the storage, the repair — all that stays in our city.”

See the balance of the article, CLICK HERE

Wednesday, February 13th, 2013

PFP to handle historic store closing at Henco Furniture

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

As covered by Memphis Channel 3

“CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO”

As covered by the Memphis Commercial Appeal

West Tennessee’s Henco Furniture announces closing

Entrepreneur and longtime retailer Tom Hendrix wants customers to know that his homespun television commercials promising that “It’s worth the drive” to visit Henco Furniture in Selmer, Tenn., are still true, but now there’s an expiration date attached.

The expansive furniture store, located about 80 miles east of Memphis at 205 Henco Drive in the Selmer Industrial Park, is closing after 17 years in business. Hendrix, who turns 81 in April, made the announcement on Tuesday and said he plans to devote the next chapter in his life to penning his autobiography. A going-out-of-business sale is now under way, but the official closing date depends on how long it takes to move the remaining merchandise.

“When I turned 80 last year I told my wife Sherry Lynne that I thought 80 to 90 would be my best years,” Hendrix said. “I’ve always wanted to write a book, but it takes time to do it, so that’s what I’m going to focus on now. That and spending more time with my family.”

Hendrix said that although he’s enjoyed running the family-owned business, it just wasn’t feasible for his daughters — Leigh Anne McWhorter of Nashville and Susan O’Connell of Corinth, Miss. — to uproot their lives and move their young children back to Selmer to take over day-to-day operations.

And economic factors played a significant role in the decision, Hendrix said.

From a high of around 100 employees, the staff has fallen to around 40 workers after the fallout from the recession. And while the store used to post sales of more than $1 million a month, that figure has been cut at least in half since 2008 and the effort to maintain operations was becoming exhausting.

“It’s sort of like owning a dairy farm because you’ve got to get up early and milk the cows every day. You’ve got to love it and live it,” Hendrix said. “They’ve got their lives elsewhere and this was not the right career for them.”

It certainly didn’t seem like an obvious career for Hendrix, either, at least not at the start.

After decades as an entrepreneur and working in a variety of venues, Hendrix came out of retirement in 1996 to open his furniture showroom. With no prior experience in furniture sales, he focused on building personal connections with customers and creating a family-friendly environment that served as shopping emporium and tourist destination.

“My wife and I were motor-homing it across the country and I told her that at I had a lot of productive years in me and needed to do something else,” Hendrix recalled. “I decided to open up a furniture place near where I grew up and make it a place where the parents would love to visit and the kids would cry when they had to leave.”

To do that, Hendrix fashioned his facility as a destination spot, transforming more than 200,000 square feet of showroom and warehouse space into a homey village that included a restaurant, soda fountain and offered cookies at the front of the store and popcorn in the back. Henco featured a Main Street theme with various storefronts that led to different merchandise areas.

“I was working at a bank at the time when Mr. Hendrix came in and wanted a loan to recreate this small town, furniture store kind of place within an industrial park and I thought he was crazy at first,” said Ted Moore, executive director of the McNairy County Economic Development Commission. “But we made the loan and he made the business successful and Henco has had a great impact on our community.”

Spread out over 40 acres, the site drew customers from six states and was the second-highest tax generator in the county, said Russell Ingle, director of Chamber programs for the McNairy Regional Alliance. The Chamber of Commerce promoted the facility as both a shopping outlet and a tourist destination.

“Lots of groups like the Rotary Club met there and it was a hub for social networking activities,” Ingle said. “It was a great attraction for our community and we’re going to miss it.”

Hendrix’s daughter Susan O’Connell said she’d also miss the store, but that she knew her parents were looking forward to spending lots of time with their seven grandchildren.

“We’re sad about leaving all the customers and employees because they’ve been like family to us, but we want to look at this as a celebration of my father’s career and what he’s meant to so many people,” O’Connell said. “He’s not closing the book, he’s just turning the page to start the next chapter in his story.”

Henco Furniture will continue to discount its merchandise and remain open until the stock is depleted, Hendrix said, but there’s no way of knowing how long that will take. In the meantime, the property is being listed with a real estate agency in the hope of transforming the space into something else once the final sale has been rung up.

“It’s still worth the drive, but you need to get on the road and make the trip today,” Hendrix said. “We’ll be waiting for you.”

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2013

PFP handling sales at two Savvy Spaces stores

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Clint Engel — Furniture Today, January 2, 2013

A going-out-of-business sale has begun at this Savvy Spaces furniture store in Pineville, N.C., and a sister store in Charlotte, N.C.A going-out-of-business sale has begun at this Savvy Spaces furniture store in Pineville, N.C., and a sister store in Charlotte, N.C.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Broad River Furniture is closing its two area Savvy Spaces multi-line stores, choosing to focus on its Ashley Furniture HomeStores business.

The Top 100 company has commenced going-out-of-business sales at its 20,000-square-foot store near Northlake Mall in Charlotte – which opened this past summer -and at its 36,000-square-foot Savvy Spaces in the Charlotte suburb of Pineville, which opened about a year and a half ago.

In a release, the company said Savvy Spaces “quickly developed a loyal base of customers by creating an exciting and fun shopping experience in addition to featuring stylish, high-quality furnishings.” Despite this, owner operators Charlie Malouf and Jonathan Ishee “decided to close the stores to focus on” their HomeStores in the Carolinas and Georgia, noting that their 15th HomeStore, a 36,000-square-foot showroom, is opening in Raleigh, N.C., this month.

“These are amazing stores that customers love to visit,” Malouf said of Savvy Spaces. “We’ve enjoyed wonderful growth in sales at Savvy Spaces, but in the end, we had to choose between our two brands. As owners, we simply don’t have the time to oversee and properly manage both companies.”

The retailer didn’t say how long the GOB sales are expected to run, but said everything will be sold before closing.

Suppliers include Aspenhome, Bernhardt, Hooker, Jaipur, Howard Miller, USA Premium Leather, Klaussner, Serta, Southern Motion and Flexsteel.

Saturday, December 29th, 2012

Planned Furniture Promotions chosen to assist Lurye’s after 114 years

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Lurye’s Furniture closes after 114 years

After more than 100 years of serving the Twin Ports area, Lurye’s Furniture in Superior is shutting its doors. The family-owned furniture store at 1208 Tower Ave., known as “your home fashion center,” began its going out of business sale Wednesday. The store employs eight.

Owners Harold and Anne Grossman are retiring, according to store manager Scott Davis.

“Harold has been in the business pretty much since he was a toddler,” he said.

The economy isn’t the reason for the decision, Grossman said.

“I’ve enjoyed being on Tower Avenue; it’s been a positive experience,” he said. “There are many things I’m going to miss.” But it’s time to close this chapter in his life, move forward and enjoy his family.

Lurye’s Furniture was founded as H. Lurye & Sons, Harry Lurye and sons Maurice and Edward, in 1898. At the start, the company focused on stove repairs along with selling a few stove parts and secondhand furniture in a tiny, 20 by 40-foot space. Over time, the family expanded to several different locations on Tower Avenue in Superior, building their business into a successful and long-lived furniture dynasty. The store has been passed down through the family for five generations and rose from the ashes of a 1919 fire that destroyed the first store building. Lurye’s Furniture moved to its present location in 1937. The Grossmans currently run the store with their daughter Ashley Carlson.

In 2009, Harry Lurye was inducted into the Superior Business Hall of Fame alongside Capt. Alexander McDougall, William D. Vinje and Albert J. Amatuzio.

The shuttering of Lurye’s Furniture will leave a gap in the Superior landscape.

“They have been an icon in Superior for more than 100 years,” said Kaye Tenerelli, executive director of the Superior Business Improvement District, and everybody in Superior had a chance to meet the family, who she described as “good people.”

“We lost the last mom and pop furniture store, where you come in as a friend, not a number,” Davis said.

Everything in the store will be sold before it closes, and Davis said the building itself is for sale.

“The final sale truly is a celebration of the five generations of my family who have been privileged to have the patronage of so many in the Superior-Duluth area and nearby over so many years,” Grossman said in a news release. “We look forward to seeing many old friends as we prepare to close for good.”

Saturday, September 15th, 2012

Planned Furniture Promotions hired to handle Bob’s Furniture Gallery’s Liquidation event

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Bob’s Furniture Gallery Announces Going-Out-Of-Business Sale

Fourth-generation retailer grew with Joplin since shortly after WWII

JOPLIN, MO—Bob’s Furniture Gallery, which has grown with Joplin to fill over half a city block, is closing its downtown store at 1736 South Main Street with a going-out-of-business sale to liquidate inventory.

Bob's Furniture Gallery, Joplin, MO

Bob’s Furniture Gallery was originally opened in 1947 as Church Furniture Company by Raymond Church, the current owner’s great-grandfather. When Raymond Church retired in 1958, the business was purchased by his son, Floyd, and daughter, Mildred Vobbe. Bob Parrish acquired the store in 1962 and then decided to change the store’s name to Bob’s Discount in 1969.

Family members point out that Bob’s Discount was always a bit of a misleading name, because, with the name change, Bob Parrish began adding more and more high-quality furniture—which gave the store a reputation as the place in Joplin where customers could get better quality for less. That tradition has continued since Mark Parrish, the store’s current owner, joined the operation in 1981 and took over with his father’s unexpected death in 2009.

“The final sale truly is a celebration of the four generations of my family who have been privileged to have the patronage of so many in the Joplin area over so many years, as Bob’s Furniture Gallery grew into the largest furniture store in Southwest Missouri,” said Parrish, who has worked in the store since 1981. “We look forward to seeing many old friends during the sale.”

Everything in the historic 10-building store that has been growing in the same location since 1947 will be sold prior to the closing. Bob’s prominently features furniture products from well-known furniture brands such as Thomasville and Flexsteel, and from other recognized names like Lexington, Pulaski and Howard Miller, as well as Sealy and Tempur-Pedic mattresses.

“Over the years, Bob’s Furniture Gallery has thrived by offering quality furniture at a discount price,” Mark Parrish said. “What we’re celebrating are the customers who’ve made us successful by embracing us and our desire to serve all of our customers with honesty, integrity, and dependability, because that’s always been our motto.”

Friday, July 27th, 2012

PFP Running Gardberg’s Furniture GOB

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

“After 63 years of furnishing the finest homes in our region, we’re reaching out to all of the customers we’ve worked with in our wonderful store, and through our in-home design work, with this liquidation sale,” said President and second-generation family member David Gardberg .

The store was founded by David Gardberg’s father, Abraham Gardberg in 1949, making it the oldest continuously operating furniture and design business in the Mobile area. In addition to carrying the best selection of hand-made rugs from around the world, Gardberg’s has been hand-cleaning clients’ rugs for more than 35 years.

“Any business closing is going to involve difficult decisions, including ours, but the PFP team is helping to make the process go as smoothly and effectively as possible,” adds Gardberg.

“Planned Furniture Promotions is proud that the Gardberg family chose PFP to assist them in this milestone event and share in the great history of David Gardberg and his family business in Mobile,” said Roy Hester, senior vice president, Planned Furniture Promotions.

The inventory liquidation includes well-known fine furniture brands such as Hancock & Moore, Harden, Maitland Smith, Hekman, as well as Stearns & Foster mattresses.

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

Colony House President Joins Planned Furniture Promotions

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Planned Furniture Promotions, Inc. (PFP) announced the addition of retail furniture veteran JR Diffee, the long-time President of Colony House Furniture, an upscale furniture showroom in Arlington, Virginia. JR joins PFP as its High End Event Consultant and will advise upscale retailers on how to use high-impact events to rejuvenate or reinvent their retail sales strategies.

Under JR’s stewardship, Colony House was widely recognized as one of the finest design-oriented retailers on the East Coast, as well as a company that consistently ranked among the top dealers of lines like Baker, Henredon and Hickory Chair. With an education and vast work experience in sales, marketing and insurance, JR joined his family’s business in 1985 and was appointed its president in 1991. JR successfully led the company in that role until last year when an offer was made on the company’s real estate. JR selected PFP—the leading specialist in high-impact, promotional furniture sales events—to conduct Colony Houses’ highly successful store closing sale.

After working with JR at the store closing sale, PFP’s team was highly impressed with his management and sales experience as well as his business and strategic acumen, and immediately asked him to join its team. “The high-end retailers have been some of the hardest hit by the economic downturn and many are in need of financial assistance,” said Tom Liddell, senior vice president, PFP. “We’ve successfully assisted many of the nation’s most well-known high-end retailers. JR has an intimate knowledge of their concerns and needs and will certainly be a huge asset in working with these clients”, Liddell added

JR is currently on the Board of Directors for the Arlington County Chamber of Commerce and is involved in the Leadership Arlington organization. He enjoys hiking, cycling and playing golf, and is a member of Congressional Country Club. JR is married and has four children.

PFP is a leading specialist in conducting high impact, promotional furniture retail sales. The company is responsible for developing and executing record-breaking premium store events for independent retailers including; Sussan’s in the Houston area, Bruno’s in Oklahoma City, Kornmeyers in Baton Rouge, Liberty in Jacksonville, Mastercraft Interiors in MD & VA, Homestead House in CA, Hitchcock Chair in CT along with others, such as Porter’s in Racine and Gabbert’s events in Texas. They’ve also handled many of the major-chain furniture liquidation sales in the U.S., including those for Wickes, Huffman Koos, Rhodes, Rosa’s and recently with RoomStore’s Texas outlets.

To learn more about Planned Furniture Promotions, please visit www.pfpromotions.com

Saturday, November 19th, 2011

Former PFP clients… Rosa’s Bounce Back After Bankruptcy (excerpt from “The Buffalo News”)

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

The three sons of the founder of the defunct Rosa’s Home Stores chain have opened stores selling furniture and bedding in two former Rosa’s locations in the Town of Tonawanda and Cheektowaga.
The sons, with the support of their father, opened Home Furniture Gallery outlets late last month on Sheridan Drive and this month on Union Road. The sons all held positions with Rosa’s Home Stores, which left more than 1,000 creditors when it filed for bankruptcy last December, but the Rosas say Home Furniture Gallery is an entirely separate enterprise. “It’s a brand-new business — it’s brand new,” said Paul F. Rosa, the founder of Rosa’s Home Stores who serves as chairman of Home Furniture Gallery.
The new stores promote a 30-day, money-back guarantee and offer customers the transparent choice of different levels of quality at a range of prices.
One main distinction between the old and new stores is Home Furniture Gallery isn’t selling electronics or appliances.
“There’s unprecedented pressure on profit margins for both appliances as well as consumer electronics,” said Burt P. Flickinger III, a Buffalo native and managing director of Strategic Resource Group, the retail consulting firm. Sons Paul M., David and Anthony Rosa say they are confident they can take on the local and national chains in what is a highly competitive furniture and bedding market.
They have opted not to use the Rosa’s name on the company, or in its advertising, but analysts believe their experience and reputation only can help them.
“They have a proven track record as a retailer,” said Michael C. Clark, CB Richard Ellis’ director of retail tenant services. The Home Furniture Gallery stores opened in former Rosa’s locations at 2880 Sheridan Drive, at Eggert Road, and at 3770 Union Road, near the Walden Galleria. David Rosa said the brothers oversaw modest renovations to the two stores, including knocking down some walls, putting on a fresh coat of paint and cleaning the carpets. The brothers all are vice presidents, with David serving as chief financial officer, Paul M. responsible for operations and Anthony overseeing sales.
Once they fill a few remaining open positions, the company will employ 50 workers, including a number who worked for Rosa’s Home Stores.
Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

After 63 years, Larry’s chooses Planned Furniture Promotions!

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

WINDER — Larry and Dot Jones have experienced a lot of ups and downs in their 63 years of business in downtown Winder, but they’ve made it through them all and managed to come out the other side with a more devoted clientele than ever before.

Those devoted customers were left reeling when the couple announced last month that the sprawling, five-building furniture store, Larry’s Furniture, would close its doors at the end of the summer.

“We’ve been thinking about it for years; we’re both way past the age (when we could have retired),” said Larry Jones, now 88. “So this year we finally decided that we should stop.”

Their ages, along with the slow economy, helped them make the decision to close the store.

Now they’re using a months-long retirement sale to liquidate some of the merchandise — and more importantly, to give old friends and customers another chance to stop in and visit at the store that anchored downtown Winder and helped turn their houses into homes.

“It breaks my heart that they’re not able to keep on,” said JoAnn Morgan, a longtime customer who has never bought furniture from any other store. “Winder won’t be the same without this store. … I don’t know what Winder is going to do without them.”

Larry's occupies an entire city block with 5 buildings

Jones has been a part of the downtown business landscape since the late 1940s when he started a job managing the Easy Pay Tire Store after coming home from World War II. He was able to buy that store in 1948, two years after marrying Dot.

The couple renamed the store Larry’s Easy Pay Tire Store, and they soon expanded from affordable tires to home goods and appliances and, for a time, even sold Honda motorcycles. They opened Larry’s Furniture

in 1965 on North Broad Street.

Dot, always a fashion plate, loved furniture. When they started looking for a new venture, she began bringing pieces from Atlanta and dressing some of the store windows with furniture displays, Larry Jones said.

Her initiative helped the business grow into a five-building juggernaut that went head-to-head with big-box stores for years without flinching, he said.

Their secret to growing their business was that they loved working together, stayed involved in every aspect of the business and provided excellent service, Jones said.

“Our customer relations have always been excellent,” he said. “We’ve always tried to do the right thing for the right reasons.”

That slogan meant helping customers find what they needed at a price they could afford and generally treating everyone well, said Tommy Jennings, president of the Barrow County Chamber of Commerce and a longtime friend of the Joneses.

Jones even treated his competitors well, helping other furniture and home-goods merchants set up shop.

“They have just been the anchor of downtown Winder for so many years,” Jennings said. “He’s just a part of the fabric of the community who should never be forgotten.”

That won’t happen, said Morgan, the longtime customer. Almost every house in Barrow County has a couch or a dining room table that carries memories of the store with it, she said.

“It’s been an exciting journey for us,” Jones said. “We’re now doing business with the children and the grandchildren of our oldest customers. The older ones are gone, but the family still comes by when they need a piece of furniture or just to say hello.”

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Protected: Press Release Detail

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below: