sale


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.”

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.

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

BANNON REJOINS PLANNED FURNITURE PROMOTIONS

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Will Resume Role with Executive Team

ENFIELD, CTPlanned Furniture Promotions, Inc. (PFP) welcomes back Mark Bannon as Sr. Vice President of Sales.

Bannon rejoins PFP’s executive team, which includes industry veterans Roy Hester, Sr. Vice President, Sales; Burt Homonoff, Sr. Vice President, Merchandising & Operations; and Tom Liddell, Sr. Vice President Sales and Marketing. Resuming his role as Sr. Vice President, Sales, Bannon will work with the executive team as well as Regional Managers Andrew Winans and Eric Rowles to coordinate details for client events.

With over 35 years of experience in the sale promotion and retail furniture business nationwide, Bannon’s responsibility includes interfacing with PFP clients and formulating marketing plans for retail client promotional events.

“Mark’s substantial experience and long history of producing successful results is widely recognized in the industry and is why he is regarded as such a valuable member of our team,” says Gene Rosenberg, co-owner, Planned Furniture Promotions. “We can count on Mark to deliver his essential expertise, energy and passion to every project and retail event which will prove highly beneficial to our clients.”

 PFP is a leading specialist in conducting high impact, promotional furniture retail sales, having partnered with clients on major furniture liquidation sales in the U.S., including those for Levitz, Wickes, Huffman Koos and Rhodes. The company is also responsible for developing and executing record breaking events for independent retailers Oskar Huber in Pa. and N.J.; Michael’s, Boise; Direct Furniture, Clarksville; along with premium stores such as Kornmeyers, Baton Rouge; Porter’s, Racine and Gabbert’s events in TX.

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

What if your furniture business was a stock investment?

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Why do you buy?  Why (and when) do you sell?

When you invest in a stock, you look for indicators that your investment will increase in value.  Once you make your purchase, what if that stock tumbles and shows no real signs for recovery, what would you do?  Or better, what if it goes up and looks like it will continue to increase in value?  The answers to these questions are simple.  If the stock has looks solid, you keep it.  If it has no promise of increasing its value, you would sell it, probably without a second thought.   Then you would look for a better investment.

It’s really not that simple when evaluating the value of your business.  There are many other considerations, right?  After all, it’s your career, not to mention, the income you provide for the families of your employees.  You probably have years, possibly decades, invested in building your business.  A lot of planning, sweat and tears and possibly prior family generations started the business, so you have a history to protect too, correct?   You have to make it work!

The problem with the prior statements is this… this personal connection is what can end up costing you your entire lifetime investment.  We see it almost every day.  Business owners see declines in their sales and profits.  Many retailers that have been profitable for years are now losing money.   Many seek help in the form of bank loans.  Unfortunately, in most cases this is like putting air in a tire – without fixing the leak.  In other words, they continue to lose money, but now it’s the banks money and the hole they’re in just keeps getting deeper.

One possible solution

Reinvent your business, with a Planned Furniture Promotions “What If” event!  We can help you get a completely fresh start.  We frequently ask retailers;  “What if you could start over, what would you do?”   We’re talking about a completely fresh start.  Bills paid, new investment money and a clean slate to develop a hot new business plan!  For many retailers, this is possible and many have already accomplished this exact goal.

If you’re interested in finding out how a “What if” promotion can help you, contact a PFP consultant today.

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Christopher Michael’s Furniture

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Take the money and run? Not these people. They promised a broom-cleaned store and that’s what they delivered. They stayed until all inventory was gone, and even helped remove all business records. Even now they are open to questions, solving customer inquiries, and assisting with anything that arises.

I cannot end my comments without mention of the auction conducted after the sale under the supervision of PFP by Kurt Earlywine and his associates. What a well-tuned machine they bring to the table. I watched in amazement as Kurt worked and entertained the crowd. Everyone had fun. Clients were happy with their purchases, and, incredibly, we had made money.

Christopher Michael’s Furniture
Dublin, GA
Jack Cammack, President

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Hitchcock Fine Home Furnishings

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

It was an extremely difficult decision to close the Hitchcock stores. At nearly 200 years, Hitchcock is one of the oldest brands in the industry. As you know, because we intend to sell the brand after the sale of the furniture it was very important for us to protect our Intellectual Property and not damage the integrity of the brand during this event.

We did extensive due diligence in evaluating the firms that could represent Hitchcock during the most important sale of our company. I am glad that we selected PFP, and I am proud of the way PFP treated our employees, our customers and our brand. Hitchcock has employees with over 40 years of service and customers whose parents and grandparents own our products. Everyone, employees, customers and owners were happy with the results.

Hitchcock Fine Home Furnishings
New Hartford, CT
Ronald Coleman, President

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Haynes Brothers Furniture

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

I would highly recommend your services and would be willing to discuss with your potential clients the outstanding service you have provided to Haynes Brothers Furniture.

Please extend a sincere message of thanks and gratitude to your staff on behalf of the efforts put forth during the Haynes Brothers sale. It has been a pleasure working with you. I wish to extend my best wishes for the continued success of your organization.

Haynes Brothers Furniture
Daytona Beach, FL
Arlington Haynes, President

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

E.N. Miller Furniture Company

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

Being a family owned and operated store for 87 years with a good reputation and living in the area, it was important to me to leave with the same good reputation.

When you came to talk with us, I was impressed with all the things you told us you would do like keeping our good reputation, respect for me, my son and son-in-law, work with honesty, do weekly reports, etc., and try to make our sale a success.

You did all those things and much more.

E.N. Miller Furniture Company
Verona, PA
Helen K. Miller, Owner

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Kline’s Furniture

Author: Planned Furniture Promotions

I, Leonard Baer, President of Kline’s Furniture, would fully recommend them. In the four months of this closing sale there were never any misunderstandings. They are a professional group of people and would be a great asset to any business. They were truly like having more family members in our family owned business.

Kline’s Furniture
Portsmouth, NH
Leonard Baer, President