2003 - Chain Store Age
Transcription
2003 - Chain Store Age
❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ In Recognition of Retail Vision E ntrepreneurs remain the resilient resource be- foster the entrepreneurial spirit or helped entrepreneurs hind the growth of the U.S. and world econo- become successful is eligible for the Supporter of Enmy—creating jobs, as well as innovative prod- trepreneurship Award. ucts and services. In 1986, Ernst & Young perEntrepreneurs are the backbone of the world economy. ceived the need to recognize the accomplishments of this While large corporations have been downsizing and leavrelatively obscure group and founded the Entrepreneur of ing millions of Americans jobless, these emerging and the Year (EOY) program. Now, thousands of entrepre- fast-growing companies have created jobs. neurs vie for this prestigious honor each year. The detailed year-long process commences in January The idea of the EOY program was conceived by Ernst when nominations are solicited nationwide. Finalists & Young’s Emerging Growth Market, which is dediare interviewed to discuss their nomination cated to accelerating the success of the world’s information. Then a local, independent best entrepreneurs. judging panel of business and civThe program started in Milwaukee, but ic leaders selects categories and has evolved into an international event award recipients. honoring excellence and outstanding Throughout the month of June, success by dynamic owners of entreregional award banquets are held preneurial companies. In 2003, the to announce and honor the Enprogram was held in more than 100 trepreneur of the Year winners. In locations and in more than 25 nations 2003, more than 25,000 people ataround the world. tended these banquets in 42 cities. Chain Store Age became the exIn November, past and present clusive sponsor of the retail award Entrepreneur of the Year award category in 1990. winners from around the world The award criteria include fiare invited to attend the Ernst nancial growth, firm history, cur& Young Entrepreneur of the rent stage of development, future Chain Store Age Year Awards where currentprospects, business leadership, team sponsors the retail year winners are inducted into category of the Ernst & Young the Entrepreneur of the Year management and community involveEntrepreneur of the Year Awards. Hall of Fame. The program also ment. However, a retailer does not have to be the fastest- provides an intellectual forum for discussion and debate of growing, most profitable or largest to qualify for an current issues facing entrepreneurs nationally and globally. award. The judges take into account an entrepreneur’s This year, national award recipients in nine categories vision and motivation, as well as other nonquantifiable were selected by an independent national judging panel but critical factors. and announced at the November Awards Gala in Palm A nominee must be an owner/manager primarily re- Springs, Calif. sponsible for the recent performance of a privately held To nominate yourself or someone else for the 18th company which is at least 2 years old. Founders of public annual Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award, companies are eligible, provided the founder is still active call (800) 755-AWARD or visit the Entrepreneur of the in top management. Year Web site at www.ey.com/us/eoy. Deadline for nomiAnyone who has made an outstanding contribution to nations is April 4, 2004. ❖ CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 www.chainstoreage.com 57 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ A Domain of Her Own Making Judy George realized her dream of reinventing furniture retailing T hinking about running a business and raising a family? Well, if you’re a woman, be prepared to pay a price: your personal life. So cautions Judy George, the founder and CEO of Domain Home Fashions. “There is no such thing as a superwoman,” says George. “The reality for most women is that something has to give if you want to have a career and a family, and that something is your personal life. I had no hobbies, quiet time or social life. I spent my weekends in the kitchen, cooking.” Hobbies weren’t the only thing that the 62-year-old George, who has been married for 41 years and has four grown children, gave up along the way. “I had to cut out anyone who wasn’t supportive of me,” she adds. “I lost some friends.” George credits strong family support, especially from her mother and motherin-law, with helping her get by when her children were younger. “It was their support that enabled me not to feel guilty about wanting to be so successful,” she says. “Guilt is the biggest struggle working women face.” Like many entrepreneurs, George is confident and determined, motivated less by financial motives than she is by a deep passion for her business. Her husband, now retired, was a successful businessman. She could have had an easier life. She still could. What drives her? “I’m very tenacious and persevering,” she says. “I had a dream for a different way of selling furniture. It was some- 58 thing I was passionate about. Once I set my sights on it, I never looked back.” The dream was Domain Home Fashions, which George founded in 1985. With its upscale store environments and exclusive, European-styled furniture and accessories (the company has an in-house design team), Domain has amassed a devoted following among affluent, style-conscious consumers. It is considered a taste maker in the furniture industry and enjoys a high retail profile given its relatively small size. Domain’s success has been very sweet, indeed, for George. “The first people I brought my idea www.chainstoreage.com Judy George started Domain in 1986, with one store in Chestnut Hill, Mass. to were my employers,” she says. “I thought they would help fund it. Instead, they fired me.” That happened in 1985, when George was president of the 86-store Scandinavian Design chain. The company wasn’t happy that their star executive was getting itchy. They didn’t like that she had a vision different from their own. Not very long ago, George ran into her old employer. He told her she owed him, that getting fired was the best thing that could have ever happened to her. She agreed. CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 “It was a good thing in that it shocked me into reality,” George explains. “I had started believing my own press clippings. I thought I was so valuable that no one would ever get rid of me. I learned an important lesson, but it was a humbling and painful experience.” As upset as she was, George was far from defeated. Self-pity is not in her DNA. “I’m a survivor at heart,” George says. Less than a year after getting booted from Scandinavian Design, George opened the first Domain, in Chestnut Hill, Mass. It was, she says, everything that most other furniture stores were not: stylish, inviting and shopper-friendly. “Domain was borne out of much research,” George says. “I spent years talking to customers. I knew the furniture industry was missing the boat. People, especially women, loved their homes but they dreaded buying furniture.” Part of the problem, according to George, were the stores themselves. Consumers were turned off by the endless rows of furniture and the slick, hardselling salespeople. They were afraid of making wrong choices. Domain was based on a different model. The environment was relaxed, with furniture and accessories presented in fully merchandised vignettes. Instead of salespeople, George hired “design consultants.” The majority of the merchandise was in stock and ready for delivery. There was no hard sell. “When you walked in, it was as if you were being welcomed into a home,” George says. “And there were experts to consult with so you could feel more secure about making a purchase.” George raised venture capital money to launch Domain. A video figured prominently in her business plan. In it, she played roving reporter, interviewing women (and a few men, just to be fair) as they exited furniture stores. “I asked them how they felt about their homes and how they felt about the furniture-shopping experience, from the salespeople to the purchase itself,” she CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 says. “I also asked what their ‘dream’ furniture store would look and feel like.” The tape helped George raise millions. It also served as a guide in the creation of the store. Domain was a hit with shoppers from day one. Financially, however, the concept lost money the first eight years out. There were times George could barely buy inventory. But she stuck with it. “I made the same systems and operational mistakes that a lot of other people starting out make,” George explains. “Malls came to me and I started opening locations all over. I wasn’t an astute enough businesswoman to realize that I needed to cluster stores so I could optimize controls. Plus, I had hired all the wrong people in management. Instead of finding the best, I sought out people Judy George Founder/CEO Domain Home Fashions ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Norwood, Mass. Annual sales: $67.5 million (2002) Type of business: Specialty furniture stores Number of stores: 30 Area of operation: Northeast who thought like me.” Eventually, with the help of her first backer, George began to turn things around. Scattershot openings gave way to more rational locations. The management team took on a different look. “Retail will always be about people,” George says. “If you don’t have the right people, you’re in trouble.” By 2002, Domain had grown to 25 locations in the Northeast. The brand was profitable and thriving. That same year, George sold the company to Aga Foodservice Group PLC for $25 million. A mainstay in the United Kingdom in consumer and commercial kitchenrelated products, including its topselling range brand, Aga was looking for a beachhead in the United States. The company sought out Domain. www.chainstoreage.com “I had been looking for the right strategic partner for some time,” George says. “Aga was a perfect match. We’re alike in looks, feel and customer base.” The deal allowed George to repay in full all her financial backers. It also included a long-term contract providing her with new opportunities to expand the business. Although she sold the company, George is nowhere near retirement. “I’m not even close,” she says. “One of the reasons we went with Aga was that it valued who I was and what I could bring to the table.” George opened the next chapter on Domain this past fall, with the launch of its larger-store or “Great Room” format, in Huntington, N.Y. The 8,000-sq.-ft. store combines the retailer’s signature furniture bed, living room and dining room vignettes with themed great rooms that incorporate an Aga range and custom kitchen cabinetry. “We will refit eight of our existing locations to the new Great Room concept in 2004,” George says. “It will be our format as we expand.” Reflecting on her success, George says the best advice she ever got was to stop trying to hit home runs. Focus on the small hits and the small wins, someone told her, and ultimately the team— and the business—will succeed. “It was hard because I like to hit home runs,” George says. “I like to hear the audience clapping. But eventually I learned that smaller wins do add up to big ones. Domain grew to be the company it is because of all those small wins.” Today, with her children long out of the house, George doesn’t have to do quite as much balancing. But she still doesn’t have any time to call her own. The author of two books, she is active in industry events, a frequent public speaker and a supporter of women’s business groups. She recently joined the Board of Aga Foodservice as U.S. retail director. As for her weekends, not much has changed. “I have nine grandchildren,” she says. “I spend the weekends cooking for them. It all goes back to that guilt.” ❖ 59 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ I f Ralston Purina’s management had agreed with Tim Kleptz and jumped on a business deal linked to a South Korean buyer, Purity Foods might never have seen the light of day. But it didn’t, so Kleptz went out on his own. Ten years and more than a few twists and turns later, he runs the fifth-largest manufacturer of private-label oatmeal in the country. The Purity Food story begins in 1990 when, as a plant manager for packaged-goods giant Ralston Purina in Chicagoland, Kleptz wanted to export oat flour to South Korea. Such a move required governmental approval, which Kleptz al- Tim Kleptz Founder Purity Foods ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Clayton, Ohio Annual sales: More than $20 million Type of business: Manufacturer of private-label and store-brand oatmeal and oat-related products Sales channels: One Web store Area of operation: Nationwide ready had secured. It was a venture that he describes as a simple matter of sending oats through the mail. “The brand manager’s response was: ‘Why the hell are you worried about business overseas?’” Kleptz, now 42 years old, remembers. “It didn’t even hit me until days later when I was in a tree stand while deer hunting. I’ve got a product. Somebody wants to buy it. I’ll do it myself.” Today, Purity Foods operates out of Clayton, Ohio, (near Dayton) in a 60 S Tim and Michelle Kleptz moved in with his folks to save money to build Purity Foods. 60,000-sq.-ft. facility that makes private-label and store-brand oatmeal and oat-related products. Those products have expanded through the years to encompass ready-to-eat cereals, brownie mixes and toaster tarts. The company’s exact sales are kept close to the vest, but Kleptz describes annual revenues in excess of $20 million. With the Korean deal under his belt, Kleptz left his “$30,000 a year” position with Ralston Purina and began to secure other export accounts. “I quit my job, took equity from the sale of the house to buy ingredients and found somebody to mix it for me.” After riding that business model as far as he could, he came upon another idea—why not manufacture it himself? Another key decision along the way was the effort to supply the dollar-store segment, as opposed to the supermarket channel that had deep ties with larger suppliers such as Quaker Oats and Ralston Purina. The dollar trade, in contrast, responded more enthusiastically. “They’d say, ‘Wow, you’ve got these six hot cereals. What else do you have?’” ❖ www.chainstoreage.com ure Fit was losing money when Bear Stearns, its new owner, brought in Bert Shlensky as president and COO in 1990. The textile veteran was given a virtual free hand to turn around the faltering company. Shlensky not only steered Sure Fit back to profitability, but also helped re-energize an old-fashioned industry: ready-made slipcovers. “Sure Fit was always a good company,” Shlensky, 58, says. “But it had fallen behind the times in many ways.” No one could make that claim anymore. Shlensky blew out the cobwebs at Sure Fit, infusing it with a new attitude and a new fashion sensibility. The 87-year-old company is now the leading ready-made furniture-cover company in the United States, with an estimated 85% market share. It has an open, entrepreneurial culture, innovative management structure and strong marketing focus. The product line-up is stylish and contemporary. “You have to be open to innovation if you want to grow,” Shlensky says. “There are too many ‘yes’ people in the textile industry, too many people who do things because they have always been done that way.” Shlensky is not one of these people. His strategy for bringing Sure Fit into the future included some big upsets, from hiring a staff of professional managers (prior to its acquisition by Bear Bert Shlensky President/COO Sure Fit ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Allentown, Pa. Annual sales: $180 million (2003 est.) Type of business: Manufacturer of ready-made slipcovers and accessories Sales channels: Catalog,Web and wholesale distribution Area of operation: Nationwide CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Stearns, Sure Fit was familyowned and operated) to a shift in focus. The longtime manufacturing-driven operation became customerand marketingBert Shlensky gave oriented. Today, Sure Fit a new attiit ranks as one tude and direction. of the biggest ad spenders in home textiles, with an estimated $13 million advertising budget. Shlensky expanded Sure Fit’s product line, giving it a more contemporary look. Fabrics and packaging were upgraded. Some items were discarded. Consumers responded enthusiastically to the changes. Sales grew steadily and the company’s profile—and distribution—increased. In 1998, with a sizeable investment of his own capital, as well as funds from company managers and private investors, he led a management buyout of Sure Fit. Since then, another 104 managers have become “owners” of the corporation. “We have created a real entrepreneurial environment in that everyone is president of his or her job at this company,” says Shlensky, who remains the single largest shareholder. “Everyone has a vested interest in making Sure Fit successful and profitable.” As bosses go, he is the first to admit he can be demanding. “But what’s important is that we do everything as a team,” he says. “You won’t find many companies of this size where so many people have stock options.” The executive is modest when it comes to explaining his success. “It adds up to a little bit of brains, a lot of intensity and a real love of the business,” he says. “You’ve got to have that passion for what you do to be successful.” ❖ 62 success stories with all its associates. “If Mary Jo is working in a store and Joseph H. Scarlett Jr. turns a disgruntled customer into a $50 Chairman/CEO sell, we tell everyone. When a customer Tractor Supply Co. finds what they need in our store, and ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ couldn’t find it at Wal-Mart, we’re exHeadquarters: Nashville,Tenn. cited and we tell all our stores,” continAnnual sales: $1.2 billion (2002) ues Scarlett. “Recognition is the No. 1 Type of business: Niche retailer motivator of people, so we make an serving the hobby rancher with supplies and equipment for farm and livestock effort to recognize individuals and Number of stores: 465 accomplishments.” Areas of operation: 30 states Tractor Supply has a long list of accomplishments, including its ace may not own a ranch or celeration to 465 stores in 30 states drive a pick-up truck, but and its continued increases in sales, Joseph H. Scarlett Jr. has growing from 2002 sales of $1.2 bilspent almost 25 years cul- lion to an estimated $1.4 billion this tivating a thorough appreciation for year. the lifestyle of his core customer—a “One of the things we do very well “hobby” rancher who owns acres of is hire our customers,” lauds Scarlett. land and herds of animals. “We love to hire farmers, ranchers, Working the farm is typically sec- horse owners and welders—people ondary to a white-collar profession, who have a working knowledge of the hence the reason Tracproducts we sell. At tor Supply has named least 50% of the hourits patrons “hobby” ly work force falls into ranchers. Most of the one of these categorcustomers drive pickies, which gives our ups, have incomes 15% stores a tremendous above the national avknowledge base for erage and, surprisingcustomer service. It’s ly, 50% are women. what home improveIn the 10 years since ment stores started out he assumed the role wanting to do.” of chairman and CEO, In the coming year, the 60-year-old Scar- Tractor Supply’s Joseph H. Scarlett expects to take lett has made it a point Scarlett Jr. spends quality time his company into Calito spend as much time in his stores. fornia, where he says in the stores as he does in the “store there are more horses than in any other support center,” Tractor Supply’s name state including Texas. “We’ll start with for its headquarters. two or three stores to test the market,” “The success of the company is not he says. “California is much more arid my personal success; it’s a result of than the states where we currently operthe long-term commitment to develop ate so different products will be needa culture that is efficient and value- ed; however, Western clothing and driven,” says Scarlett. “We work hard, equestrian products should be big sellhave a lot of fun and don’t take our- ers in California.” selves too seriously.” When he’s not on the road visiting Tractor Supply frequently shares Tractor Supply stores and their neigh- H www.chainstoreage.com CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ boring competitors, Scarlett and his wife enjoy traveling for pleasure. “Last weekend, we were in Houston; this weekend, we’re going to eastern Long Island; and the following week, we’re going to Massachusetts to celebrate the 100th birthday of my mother’s closest friend,” he recounts. Wherever he goes, Scarlett returns with more insights for his company. “The lady who is turning 100 is remarkable. When I visited her last year, she was still receiving and reading Sports Illustrated.” The message he took back to his company wasn’t to play sports and live longer; it was to keep focusing on tomorrow, rather than dwelling on the past. “If it ain’t broke, let’s break it and make it better,” declares Scarlett, whose personal mantra is to never be satisfied with the status quo. ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ C hris Jones’ love affair with motorcycles began with the first bike he could get his hands on: a Honda XR-75 dirt bike. At 14 years of age, it was the only kind of motorcycle he was old enough to drive legally. Obtaining the motorcycle was easier for Jones than it would have been for most adolescents—his father was a Napa Auto Parts jobber who ran a sideline business called Iron Pony Motorsports. The year he acquired his first motorcycle was also the year young Jones began working at his father’s business officially, although he was pitching in daily well before that. When his father sold the parts business, Jones talked him into letting him keep and run Iron Pony. He was still in high school at the time. Today, Jones is 37 and president of the 31-year-old Iron Pony Motorsports 64 Group, and runs the business with his wife, Tammy, 38, who serves as VP. They operate Iron Pony’s retail and direct-sales business out of Columbus, Ohio. The acceleration of Iron Pony’s business resembles that of a Suzuki Hayabusa: Jones says that Iron Pony’s sales growth has been in excess of 30% in each of the past eight years and that revenues have tripled in the last three. That heady growth impelled Iron Pony to move into its current 22,000-sq.-ft. space from a location one-quarter that size in November 2000. Walking into the Iron Pony store, one might be surprised to find a space Chris Jones President Tammy Jones VP Iron Pony Motorsports ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Columbus, Ohio Annual sales: $5 million (2003 est.) Type of business: Motorcycle parts and related lifestyle accessories Number of stores: One Area of operation: Nationwide through direct-marketing business that resembles The Sports Authority more than it does AutoZone. The shopper’s eye is bombarded by racks of brightly colored motorcycle-themed apparel throughout the floor. In the aisles, shelves are stacked with motorcycling accessories, including helmets, gloves, eyewear and protective gear. Although wearable items are a sizeable proportion of the merchandise, customers visiting Iron Pony in search of actual motorcycle parts won’t be disappointed. Iron Pony carries them, too. Soft goods have taken on greater significance for Iron Pony in the past de- www.chainstoreage.com Chris and Tammy Jones love the motorcycling lifestyle. cade because of renewed interest in the motorcycle and its place in American culture. “ This business can be as much about selling the motorcycling lifestyle as it is about selling motorcycling gear,” Jones says. “People associate motorcycling with rebellion, freedom and adventure. Lots of people want to have a piece of the lifestyle, even if they don’t actually ride.” For Iron Pony, the payoff comes in increased apparel sales. Jones estimates that apparel accounts for about half of Iron Pony’s revenues. The rest comes from motorcycling parts and maintenance equipment and supplies. With this balance, the retailer is able to broaden its appeal without abandoning the hard-core motorcycling enthusiasts upon which Iron Pony built its enterprise. Jones and Iron Pony have no plans to slow down. Jones is currently negotiating another move, into a space quadruple the size of its current location. And in the summer of 2002, the company debuted a mail-order catalog and Web store. Already, the directmarketing side accounts for more than 20% of Iron Pony’s business. ❖ CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ I f she could get past the investors and the retailers, Monica Nassif knew her products would be an instant hit with consumers. That was an enormous “if ” in December 1999, when Nassif officially incorporated her far-fetched vision for aromatherapeutic household cleaners. “A lot of people thought we were crazy and most investors just laughed at me,” recalls Nassif, who has smiled merrily all the way to the bank as sales at The Caldrea Co. doubled year over year for three consecutive years. With a background in marketing and retail, Nassif, now 47 years old, had an accomplished career launching consumer packaged goods (CPG). “I had an epiphany about five years ago while walking through a retail store that I was visiting for one of my CPG accounts,” she says. “ There were gigantic displays of cleaning Monica Nassif CEO/founder/president The Caldrea Co. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Minneapolis Annual sales: $10 million (2002 est.) Type of business: Aromatherapeutic household cleaners Sales channels: Caldrea Web site and wholesales to 2,600 retail locations Area of operation: Nationwide products; they all smelled awful and looked alike.” “Personally, I hated all the cleaning products that were available. The green brands didn’t work, and I was afraid the [chemicals in the] mass brands would kill my dogs and children.” Nassif scribbled a business plan on a scrap of paper, which she still keeps in her office. Her mission was to revamp the product category with aromatherapeutic cleaners that would give 66 C Monica Nassif used beautiful packaging for her aromatic household-cleaning products. homemakers a healthful option and a unified fragrance. She hired a chemist to create the product while she developed upscale packaging that can only be fully appreciated when seen— imagine the equivalent of Tide in a Tiffany box, with the fragrance of fresh lavender and pine. Colored in soft pastels, finished with a gauze ribbon and scented to perfection, the presentation has impressed retailers around the country. Caldrea products are sold in 1,800 stores and on the company’s Web site. A sister line, Mrs. Meyer’s, is sold in 800 stores, and private-label products are manufactured for select retailers including Williams-Sonoma and Crate & Barrel. The products are organically derived primarily from plants, with no harsh chemicals, petroleum distillates, chlorine bleach or harmful additives. Nassif’s advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is, “Walk quickly through hell, don’t stop moving when things get tough and stay passionate about your product.” In the rare moments when she isn’t working, Nassif enjoys gourmet cooking and spending time with her daughters, Calla and Aundrea, after whom the company is named. ❖ www.chainstoreage.com omplacency is not in Joseph M. Wells III’s vocabulary. With the future of The Homer Laughlin China Co. at stake last year, the 62-year-old Wells rose to the occasion and, joined by his two sisters, took control of the company that had been partially owned by his family for four generations. Built in 1871 by Homer Laughlin and purchased by the Wells and Aaron families in 1897, the company was one of the first manufacturers of whiteware china in this country. Successive generations of the two families managed the company for more than a century, Joseph M.Wells III President The Homer Laughlin China Co. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Charleston,W.Va. Annual sales: More than $50 million Type of business: Designs and manufactures foodservice and retail china products Sales channels: Internet, one company-owned outlet store and numerous retail chains including most major department stores Area of operation: Nationwide with an extended family of employees that ran four or five generations deep. “When the Aaron family decided to sell their interests, it appeared the company would be bought by venture capitalists who had no intention of or interest in maintaining the company’s heritage or traditions,” says Wells. “This would have been catastrophic for the company and for all of the families who work here. These people mean an awful lot to me, and I couldn’t let them down.” Approximately 1,000 people are employed at Homer Laughlin and, while jobs may be replaced by technology, the CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ M Joseph M. Wells III tours HL China with Hova Underwood, wife of former West Virginia Gov. Cecil Underwood. people don’t become less valuable. “One of the reasons our company has continued to succeed for generations is that we are willing to invest in technology,” says Wells. “When we eliminate nonvalue-added jobs, we become more competitive and other jobs pop up elsewhere in the company.” In 1986, about the time that Wells entered the family business in a lead role, the company reintroduced its Fiesta line of china that originally debuted in 1936. Sold in all of the major department store chains, Fiesta has proved to be a timeless product that has continued to create job opportunities and revenue. “We’ll ride this Fiesta rocket as long and far as it will go, but I know it isn’t a solution forever,” continues Wells. “Long term, we’ll invest in more equipment and continue to make our designs and products more competitive.” Over the past two years, sales continued to increase. However, this year, sales have not increased over 2002. Despite the uncertain times, Wells felt compelled to take control of the company. “At this stage of my life, I wasn’t sure I wanted to take on the responsibility. But it was the right thing to do.” ❖ CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ost men who enjoy the amber hue and full-bodied taste of a good beer are content to down a pint or two after work. John McDonald, however, is not your typical fan of beer. Rather, the 50-year-old entrepreneur is the president of the 24th-largest brewery in the country, Boulevard Brewing Co., a concern he started from scratch in 1988. The story of Boulevard Brewing begins with McDonald’s appreciation of premium beers. In the early 1980s, he developed a taste for the imports from the old countries—Belgium, Germany and England, where the small brewer was a respected local institution. But a trip to Europe in 1983 led to a crucial erica’s small breweries, but he wasn’t far behind the vanguard. “We started at a great time,” he says. “ The big brewers were all chasing a mass market, so there was a void for us to fill.” Originally, McDonald himself served as head brewer. “I wasn’t totally qualified, but that’s what I was until I could afford to hire one.” The current head brewer learned his art in Belgium and oversees the production of Boulevard varieties including Bob’s ’47 Munich Style Lager, Nutcracker Ale and the flagship Boulevard Pale Ale. One of the early key decisions was to focus on the kind of beer that the big breweries weren’t delivering. “We’ve always tried to realize that we’re a John McDonald President Boulevard Brewing Co. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Kansas City, Mo. Annual sales: $12 million Type of business: Brewery Sales channel: On-line store Areas of operation: 10 Midwestern states realization about European beer. “A lot of those breweries were just as big and only slightly better than the ones over here,” he says. It was just a matter of time before the budding brewer arranged a limited partnership among 17 friends and investors to launch the company in 1988. The first keg rolled out the next year. McDonald delivered it himself to a Mexican restaurant a couple of blocks away. The key to getting started was being “crazy” enough to try, he says. “I was at a time in my life where it seemed like the right idea and it seemed like a feasible business,” he says. In 1989, he certainly wasn’t leading the revival of Am- www.chainstoreage.com John McDonald’s love of beer helps him run the nation’s 24th-largest brewery. product-driven business,” he says. “We have to make the best beer we can make, and work as hard as we can on the marketing side.” Beer in a can? Boulevard Brewing Co. wouldn’t think of it. Lite beer? That’s not going to happen. Nonalcoholic beer? No way. You also won’t see Boulevard commercials with customary bikini-clad models. “We can’t afford to market to age demographics,” he says. “We have to stick to a single message, we’ve got quality beer at a reasonable price.” ❖ 67 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ hain Store Age caught up with Thomas Sullivan, Thomas Sullivan president of Lumber LiqPresident uidators, as he was travelLumber Liquidators ing to Brazil, where several lumber ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ mills churn out the cherry, teak and Headquarters: Colonial Heights,Va. koa that eventually finds its way to Annual sales: $100 million the floors of kitchens and living rooms Type of business: Hardwood flooring in American homes. Number of stores: 40 Areas of operation: 26 states The retail business hasn’t always been an exotic, jet-setting venture for Sullivan. In fact, he describes his first effort in retail as a “weekend sale” of Sell, Sail”), and he’s starting to play a the odds, ends and leftovers picked little bit of golf. But he still spends a up at a construction-materials storage lot of time with his dog Dora at the center. company’s 80,000-sq.-ft. manufacturBefore his retail career took off, ing and distribution facility outside of Sullivan was a contractor “building a Richmond, Va. The company moved lot of decks,” he says. With an entre- from Boston to Virginia in 1999 to take preneurial spirit that would later lead advantage of the central location. to a 40-store hardwood-flooring speThe dedication has given Sullivan cialist with revenues of about $100 and his company a story of revenue million last year, Sullivan worked out a growth. The $100 million in sales last way to bring in the lumber for his con- year was up from $68 million the year tracting work directly from the mills. before, which in turn was up from $38 He found a public warehouse special- million the year before that. izing in storage of building materials Lumber Liquidators’ banner features to serve as a kind of depot for his the phrase: “Hardwood Flooring for work. Less.” The chain’s direct-from-the-mill “In the meantime, while storing stuff business model cuts out the middleman, there, we saw a lot of leftover material,” Sullivan says. “I bought up a bunch of that stuff and had a weekend sale. It did better than the contracting work.” That was in 1993. After a couple years of similar sales and a few successful hardwood-flooring deals, Sullivan introduced the Thomas Sullivan first Lumber Liquidators in West attributes his Roxbury, Mass. Asked when his success with first store opened, he didn’t hesiLumber Liquidators to persistence. tate—“Jan. 5, 1996,” as if it was the birth date of a child. In some ways, it was. “I haven’t had too many hobbies in the last eight years,” says Sullivan. He spends some time with his boat (Christened “Sell, C 68 www.chainstoreage.com Sullivan says, and allows for prices lower than the typical home center. The company also makes its own brand of wood flooring—Bellawood, a product he describes as easy to install and protected by a 50-year warranty. The stores promise to beat any competitor’s written or advertised price. On a deeper level, Sullivan, 44, describes the key to his entrepreneurial success as persistence. His advice to others: “Keep trying,” he says. “I’ve tried a lot of things and a lot of them didn’t work, but I basically kept trying and worked at it. “I always liked hardwood flooring, and I always wanted some kind of retail business,” he says. ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ I n the age of the monolithic, Main Street department store, when ladies donned white gloves and festive hats for a trip into town, shopping was an event, not an errand. Every department would be visited in search of the best bargains on the newest, most exciting merchandise. Kathleen Mason’s favorite childhood memories recall shopping excursions with her grandmother and aunt. The time she spent learning to savor the literal event of shopping became ingrained in Mason’s approach to retailing. As president and CEO of Tuesday Morning, Inc., the 53-year-old Mason is committed to giving the customers in her stores a memorable shopping event. Tuesday Morning stores are the antithesis of the current model for lifestyle retailing. Customers visit the stores expecting to search for surprises; they may find the coveted item from Tuesday Morning’s mailer in stock or it may have sold to early-bird opportunists. The only guarantee is that the eclectic merchandise on hand will be top quality and priced 50% to CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ 80% below other retail offerings. “I get so excited about the merchanKathleen Mason dise we sell; it’s always quality goods President/CEO with real value,” enthuses Mason, Tuesday Morning, Inc. whose personal preferences are as ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ eclectic as the merchandise mix in her Headquarters: Dallas stores. She collects antiques from the Annual sales: $729 million (fiscal 2002) Type of business: Closeout retailer Far East, as well as contemporary art, of upscale, decorative home accesand is a voracious reader, enjoying sories and gifts everything from the Gothic novels Number of stores: 577 by end of 2003 written by Elizabeth George, her distant Areas of operation: 42 states cousin, to Jeffrey Satinover’s complex book, “Cracking the Bible Code.” “Our customers are very loyal— paid off handsomely. In fiscal year almost cult-like in their commitment 2002, Tuesday Morning had an earnto shop our events,” continues Mason. ings increase of 46%, on top of a 26% Tuesday Morning stores host 10 increase in earnings the preceding year. “events” each year, closing for several For the current fiscal year, Tuesday days between events to restock and Morning predicts an overall 12% refresh merchandise. increase in top-line This unique apgrowth with another proach and “treasurehealthy increase in hunt mentality” has earnings. kept customers comWith a resume that ing back throughout lists leadership roles the chain’s 30-year at Mervyn’s, The Limhistory. But when ited, Kaufmann’s DeMason was recruited partment Stores, TJX to take the helm three and Filene’s Baseyears ago, Tuesday ment, Mason says, Morning was strug“The biggest mistake gling, despite the popis to hire people beularity of its concept. cause of what they “Tuesday Morning accomplished in anKathleen Mason makes shopping had serious working- an event at Tuesday Morning. other company. People capital constraints and have to adapt previous the stock was trading in the mid-single experiences to a new company.” digits, a significant decline from where She also serves on the board of direcit had once been,” notes Mason. tors for the Dallas Chamber of ComThe challenges with constrained merce, The Men’s Wearhouse and Genworking capital were exacerbated by esco, which has expanded her perspecoperational inefficiencies. tive and introduced her to some of the “We consolidated 16 regional ware- issues unique to male shoppers. houses into one central distribution cen“Professionally speaking, I grew up ter in Dallas and we took control of our in women’s apparel,” says Mason. “At store issues, implementing procedures Tuesday Morning, 95% of our cusand policies to support more efficient tomers are female; but we’re gingerly operations,” says Mason. expanding our strategy to attract more Decisive, expedient actions have men.” ❖ 70 www.chainstoreage.com M id-life career changes typically involve interesting details, but going from Kentucky racehorses to Swedish mattresses suggests a more intriguing story. It started quite by chance, when Robert B. Trussell Jr., visiting Sweden in the fall of 1991 for his thoroughbred-racehorse business, met another horse trader who claimed his company made the world’s greatest mattress. The secret behind the successful Tempur-Pedic mattresses and pillows is a formula originally developed by NASA to relieve astronauts of the pressures from g-forces. One night of sleep on the proverbial “greatest” mattress convinced Trussell, who promptly submitted a marketing proposal that would give him exclusive distribution rights for all of North America. The deal was signed and Trussell raced to begin marketing the product in January 1992. Year one was not a promising run. “ The horse business was in a recession, and I was looking for other opportunities; but in our first year, we barely sold $300,000 worth of product,” says Trussell. A slow start belied the winning years Robert B.Trussell Jr. President/CEO Tempur World, Inc. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Lexington, Ky. Annual sales: $297 million (fiscal 2002) Type of business: Pressure-relieving mattresses and pillows Sales channels: Direct to customer via Internet, infomercials and catalogs, wholesale to approximately 3,500 retail stores and sold to patients via medical professionals Areas of operation: 50 countries CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ to come. In its second year, the company produced $2.5 million in sales. Last year, sales topped $297 million, and Trussell predicts 2003 sales will exceed $400 million. The financial outlook is bright, although 52-year-old Trussell laughingly recalls how he almost lost his first investor—literally. “When we started the business, I prevailed upon my Uncle Bill to invest in the company. Driving back to Kentucky from his home in Chicago, I stopped at a fast-food restaurant. The next morning, Uncle Bill received a call from the Burger King in Lebanon, Ind., telling him they found a $50,000 check on the floor. Fortunately, Uncle Bill decided to give m e a n other chance.” Maintaining a nimble optimism is critical Robert B. Trussell to success, says Jr., went from racing Trussell, who thoroughbreds to runencourages asning a Tempur-Pedic piring entrepreempire. neurs to continually improvise: “When one approach doesn’t work, try another.” “We learned quickly that a mattress overlay, which was being sold very successfully in Europe, had to be modified into a more standard mattress to appeal to U.S. customers,” he continues. Developing a multichannel marketing model has been another key contributor to the company’s success. The original marketing plan called for the majority of sales to be generated through medical professionals, who would prescribe the product for patients. Although the product continues to be sold through 30,000 physicians and chiropractors, more than 3,500 retail stores also carry 72 Tempur-Pedic merchandise, most notably Brookstone, Linens ’n Things and Bed Bath & Beyond. “The most amazing thing is the amount of product we sell via the Internet, infomercials and catalogs,” attests Trussell. “I went into this thinking no one would ever buy it without seeing and touching the product.” Although he still dabbles with racehorses as a hobby, Trussell has become the consummate entrepreneur. “My job is to put a winning team in place, then get out of the way,” he declares. On Jan. 1, 2000, the North American operation merged with the European company and Trussell took command of Tempur World, which sells products in 50 countries. ❖ Robert Wildrick President/CEO Jos.A. Bank Clothiers, Inc. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Hampstead, Md. Annual sales: $243.3 million Type of business: Men’s apparel Number of stores: 200 Area of operation: Nationwide ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ R obert Wildrick had been enjoying a self-imposed sabbatical, spending time on his sailboat in Palm Beach, Fla. That was until Andy Giordano, chairman of Jos. A. Bank, called … and called … and called. Wildrick, who had been serving on the Hampstead, Md.based men’s apparel retailer’s board since 1995, took some time before he agreed to become chief executive. “It took Andy about six months to convince me to come on board as CEO,” says Wildrick, 55. “My plan was to come in, get the company going in the right direction and then slip quietly off into the sunset after two years. But we were able to achieve things much faster than we originally thought we could. I got caught up in the whole thing and now I want to see it through.” At a time when many had given up on the men’s wear industry, Wildrick took the reins and crafted one of the most successful turnarounds in retail. A big part of the change was shifting how Jos. A. Bank bought its merchandise. www.chainstoreage.com Under Robert Wildrick’s helm, men’s wear retailer Jos. A. Bank returned to its merchandising roots. Rather than buying goods from one place and then stitching its label on it, Jos. A. Bank transformed back into a manufacturer that just happened to operate retail stores. “The standard of quality was inconsistent,” recalls Wildrick. “Previously, we had been akin to a department store buyer. We went to market, bought things and put labels on them. You can’t get consistency that way. Today, we are less market-oriented, and more brand- and manufacturer-oriented. We control the specs and have exacting standards. We have a great deal of confidence in our design ability and to do it ourselves, and that is the single biggest change.” The shift also has boosted Jos. A. CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Bank’s bottom line. Operating margins reached 8.1% of sales in 2002, compared with just 3.5% when Wildrick and the current management team took over in 1999. For the year-to-date through September, the retailer’s sales increased 19.7% to $171.7 million, from $143.4 million. Comparable-store sales are up 7.5% while combined catalog and Web sales rose 16.2%. Another change Jos. A. Bank witnessed has been a reduction in the median age of its customer. Last year, men aged 26 to 55 accounted for 74% of all customers, compared with 64% two years prior. There was a major shift in the 26 to 35 age group. “ The trend over the past four years has been toward more dressy outfits,” he says. “People are dressing less grungy and nicer, and I think that’s true even with the young men’s category. When I joined in 1999, I felt that the company and the men’s wear industry were way underrated and that we had a great opportunity to grow. I never gave up on the men’s wear industry.” Despite the success over the past few years, Wildrick believes that there is much more to do. Reaching the 500store count by the end of 2007 is just one of those goals. Jos. A. Bank recently opened its 200th store, its 40th new store opened in 2003, near its goal of adding 50 stores this year. Wildrick plans to double the chain’s store base over the next three to five years. Plans call for 50 to 75 new stores in 2004 and 75 to 100 new locations in 2005. Wildrick may still be around then. “I get a lot of the credit because I’m the CEO, but our top management team is so outstanding,” he says. “I’ve got three guys who could step in and be president tomorrow. My contract is for another year and a half, but there’s no reason to believe that I won’t be around after that. I’ll be here until my job is completed.” ❖ 74 Craig Jerabeck President/founder/CEO @Wireless ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Rochester, N.Y. Annual sales: More than $30 million Type of business: Wirelesscommunications retailer Number of stores: 72 Areas of operation: Primarily the East Coast, from Virginia to Vermont I t’s a good thing Craig Jerabeck is the president, founder and CEO of a wireless-communications provider. Otherwise, he might not ever keep in touch with his busy wife and their three active children. “My daughters are 8 and 13, my son is 11. The girls do ballet, softball, soccer, swimming and cross-country. My Craig Jerabeck, president, founder and CEO of @Wireless, still finds time to spend with his family. son plays baseball and hockey,” the 42year-old says. “I sponsored their softball and baseball teams, and I assistant coach the little one’s soccer team. All my free time I dedicate to the kids.” His wife is no slouch herself. She volunteers at the kids’ school and serves on the church advisory committee. “Everyone’s so busy that without our wireless phones, it would be impossible to keep in touch,” Jerabeck says. “I sent www.chainstoreage.com my wife to the store to get herself a phone, and she came back with a $500 palm phone. At first, I asked her, ‘Did you really need to spend that much?’ But she uses it all the time.” Jerabeck supports his family’s expensive cell-phone habit with his business, @Wireless, a franchiser of wireless-communications stores. Currently the company has 72 locations, primarily across a swath of Atlantic seaboard stretching from Virginia to Vermont. The company continues to grow at a heady clip. Jerabeck forecasts more than 100 locations by the end of next year. The day he spoke with Chain Store Age, four new franchisees were engrossed in a training and orientation session at the company’s Rochester, N.Y., headquarters. Revenues are keeping pace, too. Jerabeck expects sales to increase by roughly one-third next year, and same-store sales this year are poised to top last year’s by 10%. The @Wireless business was a natural outgrowth of Jerabeck’s career experience in the telecommunications business. Jerabeck went to work at AT&T’s commercial long-distance business in 1984, spending eight years there before jumping to a young upstart called Cellular One. “Wireless seemed like a hot business at the time, so naturally I wanted to be involved,” he says. The Cellular One division Jerabeck worked for was sold to SBC Communications two years after he joined. Jerabeck had an employment contract with SBC, but SBC’s preference for third-party distribution, plus Jerabeck’s own entrepreneurial drive, gave him other ideas. “I went to SBC and asked them how they’d feel about me becom- CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ ing a distributor for them,” he says. SBC agreed, and Jerabeck launched Cellular Unlimited in 1994. By 1997, the chain had grown to 23 locations. Jerabeck sold 14 of them to Let’s Talk Cellular and Wireless. The remaining stores became the core of @Wireless, which Jerabeck began building out in spring of 2000. Jerabeck’s @Wireless continues to grow. Jerabeck’s own family is a testament to growing consumer demand for wireless communications. “With all of us so busy and in different places, we’d find it very hard to keep in contact without our cell phones. A few years ago, you wouldn’t have dreamed of buying your kids cell phones, but now it’s commonplace,” he says. “People have realized in the past few years that wireless devices are personal productivity tools as much as they are tools for business,” he concludes. ❖ Jon Nordmark CEO/founder EBags ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Greenwood Village, Colo. Annual sales: $40 million (est.) Type of business: Bags, luggage Sales channels: Web site, catalog Area of operation: Nationwide been reading books such as “Blur,” which outlines the changing business landscape and the new rules of the connected economy. That got him excited at the prospect of a new way to sell merchandise. But when Samsonite rejected the idea of selling merchandise via the Web—it was too early for them—he left in the spring of 1998 to found eBags. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ I t’s a good thing eBags didn’t raise more than $30 million when it started out. Otherwise, it might not have made it past the Internet bust. “When you get a lot of money, you create a lot of waste,” says Jon Nordmark, CEO and founder of Greenwood Village, Colo.-based eBags. “You do things that are easy, not smart. Had we raised more, we probably wouldn’t be here today.” EBags was able to survive the Internet bust by being prudent with its spending and predicting many potential problems ahead of their arrival. And while the drop-off in airline travel also had an effect on sales a few years back, eBags has overcome those setbacks, too. Prior to starting eBags, Nordmark spent 11 years at luggage company Samsonite, where he oversaw distribution. An avid reader, Nordmark, 40, had 76 CEO Jon Nordmark adapted to a new distribution channel when founding eBags. The site launched in March 1999. “I had been studying the theoretical rise of the Internet as a major distribution channel for the future,” recalls Nordmark. “Amazon hadn’t gone public yet, but I had ordered from them and it seemed natural to sell goods to people over the Internet. It was a big opportunity for selling bags beyond Samsonite.” Nordmark then reconnected with some former coworkers who had already left Samsonite to start eBags. Of www.chainstoreage.com the five people who founded eBags, four were former Samsonite employees. Taking what they knew about selling luggage, they simply adapted the process to a new distribution channel. Switching from distribution to marketing was not a problem for Nordmark, who spent a year after college writing direct-marketing copy with his dad, who runs a small ad agency. To date, eBags has sold roughly 2.3 million bags. Over the next 12 months, it expects to sell another 1.5 million bags. The company also launched a catalog, which is shipped mainly to customers. One million copies will ship this holiday season. Today, about 10% of eBags’ sales come from the catalog business. More importantly, it has been profitable for five straight quarters. “ The catalog is an opportunity for us to build our brand that can’t be done on line,” he says. “It allows us to showcase our selection. We make it more lifestyle- and visual-oriented. We want to be seeded in emotion, not price.” EBags is now expanding beyond premanufactured luggage. The company is accepting orders from people who want to put a picture of their baby on a diaper bag or of their pet on a carrier bag. It also is dabbling in monogramming, although Nordmark doesn’t want that to be eBags’ focus. Rather, he hopes to create a process of discovery for unknown designers across the country who can’t get distribution to major channels. He also wants to double the number of SKUs to 20,000 by including items such as urban gear bags and sport bags for carrying skateboards or snowboards. “ There are a lot of specialized bags that we want to get to,” Nordmark says. “We want to make complete bags for someone and we are tying to find a way to get to that. We’re trying to carve out a shopping segment that has never been carved out before.” ❖ CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ A lan Rosskamm got started in the family business early. As a boy, he would spend weekends tidying up his grandparents’ fabric shop and running the occasional errand there. The errands always began with a tap on the shoulder, and a dollar bill and a note silently passed to him from his grandmother. On the note was the name of the fabric pattern Rosskamm was to buy from the Woolworth’s across the way. The pattern was one a customer had requested, but was not in stock. Rosskamm speedily retrieved the pattern for his grandmother to sell. The sale generated no profit for the family business, but the customer’s loyalty was saved. For that reason alone, young Rosskamm understood, the shoe leather was worth it. Since then, Rosskamm, now 53, has Alan Rosskamm, above center with founders, values Jo-Ann’s family focus. advanced from errand boy to CEO. The business has grown, too, transforming from a single fabric shop to Jo-Ann Stores, a leading fabrics and crafts chain with 826 stores across the nation. In its last fiscal year, the retailer collected $44.9 million in net profit on $1.68 billion in sales. The seeds of Jo-Ann Stores were planted in 1943 when Rosskamm’s grandparents, Hilda and Berthold Reich, fled to the United States from Nazi Germany. They were supporting themselves with a cheese shop in their adopted hometown, Cleveland, when 78 Alan Rosskamm Chairman/president/CEO Jo-Ann Stores ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Hudson, Ohio Annual sales: $1.68 billion Type of business: Fabric/crafts retailer Number of stores: 826 Area of operation: Nationwide they were approached by Sigmund and Matilda Rorhbach, themselves refugees from Hitler’s Germany. The Rorhbachs’ son had lost his job selling fabric for a mill when he was drafted to fight in the war. In a gesture of goodwill, the fabric mill offered to provide the Rorhbachs with fabric if they could find a storefront to sell it. The Reichs invited the Rorhbachs in as partners, and the cheese was moved to the back of the store. As Jo-Ann Stores pushes forward—the company celebrates its 60th anniversary this year—Rosskamm tries to keep the company true to the principles set by the family founders: Superior focus on the customer, fair dealings with suppliers, and respect for team members. The bronze bust of his grandmother that Rosskamm keeps on the wall of his office serves as a constant reminder of those values. Although the days of getting out-ofstock patterns from the competition are long past—the merchant added a new 630,000-sq.-ft. DC in Southern California not long ago—pleasing the customer remains a Jo-Ann Stores priority. One of the ways Rosskamm is doing that is by giving the customer more of what she wants, in the form of a larger, 35,000-sq.-ft. supercenter. The new format, which is more than double the size of Jo-Ann’s traditional stores, indi- www.chainstoreage.com cates the new direction for the company, Rosskamm says. Jo-Ann Stores already has 80 supercenter locations. Rosskamm plans to convert all of JoAnn’s existing stores to the new format in the coming years. The increased customer satisfaction can be seen at the bottom line. The new stores collect more than $150 in sales per square foot, more than half again as much as the older stores. The company’s founders would certainly approve. ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ S taying in sync with consumer trends isn’t enough in a competitive retail arena; the most successful entrepreneurs are at least one step ahead of the pack. When Donald L. Tate opened the first Fas Chek Supermarket in 1965, he was several paces ahead of his time. “We were the first 24-hour supermarket in our region, probably one of the first in the country,” he says. “The other grocery stores closed at 6 p.m. and weren’t open on Sundays.” “ Television was just taking off and Americans were becoming more nocturnal,” he continues. “Suddenly, people who had always gone to bed at dark had a reason to stay awake. My store was covered up with business. My favorite description of those years was that we were an ‘overnight’ success.” Within five years, he had opened six stores under the Fas Chek banner, a name intended to convey fast service in a full-line grocery store. Almost four decades later, Tate has continued to bring competitive innovations to the retail industry in his West Virginia and Virginia markets. In the late 1990s, he converted CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Donald L. Tate, left, Fas Chek president and founder, poses with NASCAR driver Mark Martin at a Fas Chek grand opening. Donald L.Tate Founder/president Fas Chek Supermarkets ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Charleston,W.Va. Annual sales: $116 million (2002) Type of business: Regional grocery stores Number of stores: 24 conventional Fas Chek supermarkets and six Sav-A-Lot stores Areas of operation: West Virginia and Virginia select stores to the popular Sav-ALot brand, which are ideally positioned to compete with Wal-Mart’s entrance into the markets. “Our six Sav-A-Lot locations have recorded sales increases every year since 2000,” he notes. “ The biggest increase, more than 12%, was in 2001 and, in 2002, our Sav-A-Lot stores had an 8% increase on top of the previous year’s growth.” The Sav-A-Lot stores produced $34 million of the company’s total $116 million revenues last year. Average sales at each of the Sav-A-Lot stores is nearly $6 million, signifi- 80 cantly higher than the average Fas Chek store. However, the 69-year-old Tate has reached a comfortable point in life where he doesn’t have to make all of his decisions based on financial returns. “I recently bought a small independent grocery store and turned it into a Fas Chek location. The store probably isn’t going to be a top performer, but sometimes you do things for the sense of accomplishment, not the money,” he explains. “There were 52 employees in the store, all members of our local community. It would have been hard for those people to find jobs if that store had been closed; all but one of the employees have continued to work for us.” Before opening his first store, Tate worked for Kroger, which was the dominant national chain in the market until Wal-Mart came on the scene. When he was only 23 years old, Tate managed the second-largest Kroger store in the Charleston, W.Va., division of 65 stores. By the time he was 31, Tate was eager to open his first Fas Chek, although he admits he was “scared to death.” He attributes his success to the people who work in his company and to the autonomy he has as an independent retailer. “I have flexibility that major chains can’t have,” he says. “I can make a decision instantly that could take weeks or months for a national chain to evaluate.” In addition to the grocery business, Tate owns a car dealership in Ohio, which sells every brand manufactured by General Motors. ❖ www.chainstoreage.com S tanley R. Smith had a few false starts early on his career, but with Shoes For Crews he struck paydirt. Starting with a small nurses’ footwear business in 1984, Smith grew the company to its current status as the nation’s leading manufacturer of slip-resistant footwear. Along the way, he created a new footwear niche. The company’s success, however, was far from a sure thing in its early days. At the time, Smith and his wife were struggling, selling “comfort” shoes for nurses out of their Manhattan apartment. They started promoting darker versions of the shoe to the fastfood industry. Stanley R. Smith Founder/CEO/chairman Shoes For Crews ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: West Palm Beach, Fla. Type of business: Manufacturer and marketer of slip-resistant footwear Sales channels: Web and catalog Areas of operation: Nationwide, Canada and Europe “We made a lot of cold calls,” says Smith, founder, CEO and chairman, Shoes For Crews, West Palm Beach, Fla. “Most people couldn’t hang up fast enough. But a safety manager at Burger King told my wife that while comfort shoes were of no interest to his company, they would be impressed if we could create a shoe that was ‘slipresistant.’” Smith jumped on the idea. Within a short time, he had made contact with a Korean manufacturer and had a prototype. “We changed the name of the company to Shoes For Crews because it was catchy and to the point: We sold shoes for restaurant crews,” Smith says. CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Donald L. Tate, left, Fas Chek president and founder, poses with NASCAR driver Mark Martin at a Fas Chek grand opening. Donald L.Tate Founder/president Fas Chek Supermarkets ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Charleston,W.Va. Annual sales: $116 million (2002) Type of business: Regional grocery stores Number of stores: 24 conventional Fas Chek supermarkets and six Sav-A-Lot stores Areas of operation: West Virginia and Virginia select stores to the popular Sav-ALot brand, which are ideally positioned to compete with Wal-Mart’s entrance into the markets. “Our six Sav-A-Lot locations have recorded sales increases every year since 2000,” he notes. “ The biggest increase, more than 12%, was in 2001 and, in 2002, our Sav-A-Lot stores had an 8% increase on top of the previous year’s growth.” The Sav-A-Lot stores produced $34 million of the company’s total $116 million revenues last year. Average sales at each of the Sav-A-Lot stores is nearly $6 million, signifi- 80 cantly higher than the average Fas Chek store. However, the 69-year-old Tate has reached a comfortable point in life where he doesn’t have to make all of his decisions based on financial returns. “I recently bought a small independent grocery store and turned it into a Fas Chek location. The store probably isn’t going to be a top performer, but sometimes you do things for the sense of accomplishment, not the money,” he explains. “There were 52 employees in the store, all members of our local community. It would have been hard for those people to find jobs if that store had been closed; all but one of the employees have continued to work for us.” Before opening his first store, Tate worked for Kroger, which was the dominant national chain in the market until Wal-Mart came on the scene. When he was only 23 years old, Tate managed the second-largest Kroger store in the Charleston, W.Va., division of 65 stores. By the time he was 31, Tate was eager to open his first Fas Chek, although he admits he was “scared to death.” He attributes his success to the people who work in his company and to the autonomy he has as an independent retailer. “I have flexibility that major chains can’t have,” he says. “I can make a decision instantly that could take weeks or months for a national chain to evaluate.” In addition to the grocery business, Tate owns a car dealership in Ohio, which sells every brand manufactured by General Motors. ❖ www.chainstoreage.com S tanley R. Smith had a few false starts early on his career, but with Shoes For Crews he struck paydirt. Starting with a small nurses’ footwear business in 1984, Smith grew the company to its current status as the nation’s leading manufacturer of slip-resistant footwear. Along the way, he created a new footwear niche. The company’s success, however, was far from a sure thing in its early days. At the time, Smith and his wife were struggling, selling “comfort” shoes for nurses out of their Manhattan apartment. They started promoting darker versions of the shoe to the fastfood industry. Stanley R. Smith Founder/CEO/chairman Shoes For Crews ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: West Palm Beach, Fla. Type of business: Manufacturer and marketer of slip-resistant footwear Sales channels: Web and catalog Areas of operation: Nationwide, Canada and Europe “We made a lot of cold calls,” says Smith, founder, CEO and chairman, Shoes For Crews, West Palm Beach, Fla. “Most people couldn’t hang up fast enough. But a safety manager at Burger King told my wife that while comfort shoes were of no interest to his company, they would be impressed if we could create a shoe that was ‘slipresistant.’” Smith jumped on the idea. Within a short time, he had made contact with a Korean manufacturer and had a prototype. “We changed the name of the company to Shoes For Crews because it was catchy and to the point: We sold shoes for restaurant crews,” Smith says. CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ J Stanley R. Smith and his son, Matthew, work together to grow Shoes For Crews. Today, the company services more than 100,000 foodservice, hotel, supermarket, health-care and industrial customers, and offers some 40 styles of slip-resistant footwear. Smith developed a number of innovative business models to grow the company. One of the most successful was a payroll-deduction plan whereby the cost of the footwear can be paid for through multiple deductions from employees’ paychecks. It proved especially appealing to large national operators. At 72, the chairman entertains no thoughts of retirement. While his son Matthew, who holds the titles of president and COO, oversees day-to-day operations, Smith now spends most of his time developing the company’s European operations. Smith says he realized a while back that in order to grow Shoes For Crews, he could not oversee every aspect of the business. It was an important lesson. “The reality is, if you want to have a successful business of a certain size, you have to stop thinking and acting like an entrepreneur at some point,” he says. “You have to build an executive team and develop the company with them. It helps a lot if you are fortunate enough to have a good son or daughter to come in and help you out.” ❖ 82 oe Fedele may sell groceries over making everything to order, not to the Web, but he doesn’t necessar- stock. We aggregate the orders at ily consider himself an e-grocer. noon and then begin cutting and The Web is simply how Fresh- picking orders, so it’s only hours old, Direct, the company he founded in not days old. I don’t even grind cof1999, interfaces with its customers. fee until a few hours before I ship it. “Companies that have been suc- Also, the only hand that goes on the cessful on line are those that are run product is the guy packing your by people who follow a simple busi- order. The customer’s hand is the ness procedure that has been around second and final one.” for years,” says Fedele, 50. “If I sell Since it launched in September you better food at a lower price, will 2002, FreshDirect has fulfilled more you buy from me or someone who than 500,000 orders, primarily in gives you poor qualiManhattan. A fleet of ty at a higher price?” 82 trucks, which opTheorizing that traerate at about 90% ditional supermarkets capacity, deliver an had fallen out of line average of 24,000 orwith the consumer’s ders each week, leavchanging taste, Fedele ing from a 300,000formed FreshDirect sq.-ft. manufacturing with the purpose of plant that is 95% rerevolutionizing how frigerated—from 36 fresh food is sourced, degrees to minus 30 processed and deliv- For Joe Fedele, CEO and foun- degrees Fahrenheit. ered to customers. As der of FreshDirect, controlling FreshDirect’s average growth is the toughest part. the name suggests, order size is more than FreshDirect focuses on getting the $100, and a delivery charge ranging highest quality of product to the cus- from $3.95 or $4.95 is added to tomer with the fewest number of each order. touchpoints. While controlling the growth of “Meat has to go through three dis- the company is Fedele’s biggest chaltribution systems, which can take lenge, he is taking a steady approach anywhere from 10 to 14 days. We cut to expanding beyond Manhattan. that down to one to four days. I’m FreshDirect only recently began delivering to parts of Brooklyn and will begin shipments to Queens in the Joe Fedele near future. After that, it will expand CEO/founder into peripheral markets such as Long Island and Westchester. Fedele is Jason Ackerman confident that he will never fall the President way of e-grocers past, who “weren’t FreshDirect business people.” ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ “I won’t send a truck out to an Headquarters: Long Island City, N.Y. area unless it’s 80% full with delivAnnual sales: $250 million (2003 est.) eries,” he says. “I’m not going to pull Type of business: Grocer Sales channel: Web site a Webvan, where the truck will Area of operation: New York deliver two orders and then become a marketing vehicle.” ❖ www.chainstoreage.com CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ John Mackey founded natural-foods retailer Whole Foods Market in 1978. J ohn Mackey, 49, might not deserve all of the credit for transforming natural foods from an alternative fad to a lucrative, mainstream business, but he certainly deserves the lion’s share. The cofounder and CEO of Whole Foods Market, Mackey heads the world’s largest retailer of natural and organic foods, a Fortune 100 company that raked in $2.7 billion in sales and $85 million in profits in 2002. John Mackey Founder/president/CEO Whole Foods Market ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Austin,Texas Annual sales: $2.7 billion (2002) Type of business: Natural and organic-foods supermarkets Number of stores: 145 Area of operation: Nationwide Mackey started the business in 1978, opening a store called Safer Way Natural Foods in Austin, Texas. In 1980, he merged it with another store under a new banner, Whole Foods. The company flew under the radar for a while, growing slowly but steadily. In the early 1990s, it started to accelerate its expansion and up its profile with a series of similarly minded regional acquisitions. By the end of the decade, Mackey had put together a coast-to-coast network of stores under the Whole Foods banner. 84 Oddly enough, if things had gone differently, Mackey might have achieved his fame on the court rather than in the aisles. Back in high school, he planned on being a professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association. For whatever reason, it didn’t work out. Mackey got interested in natural products and organic foods the very first time he walked into a food co-op. He was about 20 years old and the experience was one of those life-defining moments. He became a vegetarian, learned to cook, read books and set himself to learning about nutrition and “the politics of food.” In 1978, he and his girlfriend opened Safer Way. Mackey, often described as a New Age capitalist, has said he never prepared or planned for the Whole Foods phenomena. As he tells it, he started out with one store, added another and so on, learning as he went along. Whether by fortune or design, however, he turned himself into a first-class supermarket operator and a fierce competitor. Mackey wasn’t the first retailer to put a new, more upscale spin on natural foods. But industry experts agree he has done it better than most anyone else. Whole Foods’ stores combine the best of natural-foods retailing—high-quality organic products, friendly, knowledgeable service and a social mission—with the selection, inviting interiors and amenities of a traditional supermarket. Mackey’s business know-how is matched by his commitment to a larg- www.chainstoreage.com er mission. The company’s motto— Whole Foods, Whole People, Whole Planet—informs all of its operations and decisions. The retailer holds itself to stringent quality standards for the products it sells, supports sustainable agricultural and promotes environmental responsibility. Whole Foods is a generous neighbor. It donates at least 5% of after-tax profits to not-for-profit organizations and encourages community service. It provides financial support to associates (called team members) for volunteer community work. The CEO has tried to eliminate the “us vs. them” thinking so common in large corporations. A salary cap limits the maximum potential annual compensation (wages plus profit-incentive bonuses) of any associate, including top executives, to 10 times the companywide average for full-time associates. The company’s list of core values includes providing an “empowering and fulfilling” work environment for employees. They are encouraged to participate at all levels and to experiment with new ideas. Whole Foods’ growth and success have made it—and Mackey—a sitting duck for all sorts of advocacy groups. Recently, after two years of intense pressure from animal-rights groups, the company became the first major grocery store chain to adopt humane animal-treatment standards. Mackey, who has said Whole Foods will never respond to coercion, said the move was not motivated by outside agitators or the desire to be politically correct. Rather, the retailer re-examined the activists’ claims and decided they were largely right. Mackey himself switched from being a standard vegetarian to a vegan (someone who abstains from foods with animal byproducts). By far, however, Mackey’s biggest and most unrelenting critics are union activists, who say there is a huge gulf CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ between the chain’s stated values and claims when it comes to employees. The CEO has made no secret of his disdain for labor unions and some associates and union advocates have complained of union-busting practices. Allegations of dirty tactics on both sides have been raised. To date, only one Whole Foods store has been unionized, in Madison, Wis. Recently, a group of employees initiated an effort to reverse the election. It’s inevitable that as Whole Foods expands, it will find itself increasingly open to criticism on all fronts. But criticism has never seemed to bother Mackey. He keeps his eye on the future. And with natural and organic foods the fastest-growing segment of food retailing, it’s looking pretty promising right now. “By 2010, our goal is to have $10 billion in sales,” he wrote in the company’s 2002 annual report, which “should translate into approximately 300 stores.” ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ S ome entrepreneurs are amazed at the twists and turns of their career paths, but not Chris MacAllister. The president and COO of family-owned MacAllister Machinery Co., the Indianapolis-based dealer of heavy Caterpillar construction equipment, always had a feeling he’d be where he is today. “As a kid, I was mechanically inclined and naturally drawn to the family business,” says the 47-year-old MacAllister. “I never really wanted to do anything else.” Walking around one of the seven Indiana locations today, any young fan of Tonka trucks or Bob the Builder would enjoy the impressive collections of Caterpillar bulldozers, dump trucks and backhoes. MacAllister Machinery 86 President and COO Chris MacAllister hopes to grow MacAllister Machinery beyond the borders of Indiana. Chris MacAllister President/COO MacAllister Machinery Co. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Indianapolis Annual sales: $250 million Type of business: Construction equipment sales, parts and rentals Number of stores: Eight Area of operation: Indiana has been a Caterpillar dealer since 1945, selling and renting machines capable of moving massive amounts of earth. The family has played a significant role in the physical development of the Hoosier state by supplying the big builders with the machines for the big jobs—major roads, housing subdivisions, farms, even golf courses. Since MacAllister rose to president in 1991, the company has made a couple of major strategic moves designed to keep up with the times in a mature industry. Promoting the rental business more than it had in the past was one of the moves. Another was to introduce smaller machinery into the mix. “ The decision to embrace and enter the rental business in a much broader manner was a big decision for us,” MacAllister says. “We had always rented equipment and we stuck to traditional Caterpillar equipment. But people also wanted a one-stop shop to build or maintain a project. And I think when www.chainstoreage.com we finally decided that smaller equipment was where the future was headed, we began to service that market.” MacAllister has an equipment-rental division called MacAllister Rental & Supply, The Cat Rental Store, with locations on the west side of Indianapolis, Fort Wayne and Terre Haute. The company’s major push into rentals took place in 1999, and the smaller equipment began finding its way into the dealerships not long afterward. “ These days, the big dirt jobs are few and far between,” he says. “And our machines are smaller than we ever envisioned.” The changes failed to disrupt the company’s tradition of customer service. A 2001 Caterpillar survey gave the company the highest customer satisfaction rating in North America. When he’s not in the driver’s seat of MacAllister Machinery, MacAllister enjoys machines of a different kind: race cars. He’s yet to drive on the world-famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but he has reached high speeds at a lot of other tracks around the state and the country. Part of his passion is the joy of restoring classic old cars. For instance, at the 2003 U.S. Vintage Grand Prix, he took to the track in his 1970 Porsche, as well as a 1969 Gulf Mirage. MacAllister also is keeping his eyes on the road when it comes to the family business. “We’d like to keep growing and expanding,” he says. “We’re always positioning ourselves for an opportunity, and we’d be keenly interested in expanding beyond the borders of Indiana. I think we will someday.” ❖ CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Gerald Heller, president and CEO, has been running May’s Drug Stores since 1971. G erald Heller believes in keeping things in the family. He joined May’s Drug Stores, founded by his father and uncle, in 1960, shortly after receiving his pharmacy degree. Forty-three years later, he is still going strong—and so is the still family-owned May’s, which ranks among the top 25 drug store chains in America. Does he ever think about retirement? “Not really. I still enjoy what I do very much. I’m very content,” says Heller, 66, president and CEO, May’s Drug Stores, Tulsa, Okla. Heller, who was named president in 1971, transformed May’s from a four-store pharmacy to a regional drug store powerhouse with two formats, May’s Drug Stores and the deep-discount Drug Warehouse. Despite intense competition from national chains, May’s maintains the No. 1 share in the Tulsa market. To what does he attribute his and May’s success? “I think it all comes down to people, to having the right people in place and getting the best out of them,” Heller says. “Beyond that, we have always stayed focused on run- 88 ning clean, well-merchandised stores with good in-stock positions. I’ve always tried to tell people exactly what I want our stores to be like.” May’s hometown advantage also figures into its success. “We are very involved in the community,” Heller says, “and we know the market very well.” Heller decided years back that May’s operations would be limited to an area within a 165-mile radius of Tulsa. That strategy remains in place, at least for the foreseeable future. “We still have plenty of sites left for expansion within that radius,” he says. Gerald Heller President/CEO May’s Drug Stores ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Tulsa, Okla. Annual sales: $178.6 million (2002) Type of business: Drug stores Number of stores: 38 (11 May’s Drug Stores and 27 Drug Warehouse units) Areas of operation: Oklahoma and Missouri Currently, May’s has one store under construction and two other sites in negotiation. Most of the new stores will be under the Drug Warehouse banner. May’s has been a family-owned and operated business since its inception. Among the family members currently employed by the chain are Heller’s son, son-in-law, cousin and cousin’s wife. The CEO admits that running a family business takes a certain amount of finesse. The key is not to treat family like family during the course of business. “Everyone has to be treated on the www.chainstoreage.com same footing,” explains Heller, who is the largest single shareholder in May’s. “You have to treat everyone equally so that, ultimately, it’s all one big family.” Still, every so often the boss has to take someone aside and remind them who is in charge. “But that doesn’t happen too often,” Heller says. “My family works hard and they do a great job. We all respect one another.” Heller has a high profile in the chain drug store industry. Highly respected and well-regarded, he serves nationally on the National Association of Chain Drug Stores (NACDS) board of directors and has served twice as NACDS chairman. A member of the Oklahoma Pharmaceutical Association, he is active in state political affairs regarding health care and serves on the board of the Jewish Federation of Tulsa. Despite a busy schedule, he still finds some personal time. “I just returned from two weeks in Turkey,” he says. “I like to travel.” ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ T he students of Cleveland’s John Carroll University can get their Internet fix a little more easily thanks to a recent donation of more than $1.2 million in wireless technology from one of the school’s most successful alumni. Nextel Communications president and CEO Tim Donahue’s personal donation brought integrated cellular and wireless broadband service to all 60 acres of John Carroll’s campus. “Innovative thinking is a given at universities,” Donahue, 54, said this fall when he made the donation. “Innovative technology should be, as well. The donation of ubiquitous CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ Tim Donahue President/CEO Nextel Communications ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Reston,Va. Annual sales: $8.7 billion (2002) Type of business: Wirelesstelecommunications provider Number of stores: More than 400 Area of operation: Nationwide communication is just a small token of my appreciation for John Carroll University and its contributions to my development as a business leader.” To some, Donahue’s degree from John Carroll—a Tim Donahue has B.A. in helped Nextel grow English Literto serve 11.7 million ature—might U.S. subscribers. seem like a dubious credential for running a wireless-communications empire. But don’t tell that to Nextel’s shareholders. They’ve seen Reston, Va.-based Nextel grow to $1.66 billion in net income in 2002, its last completed fiscal year. Nextel’s domestic revenues leapt 24% that year to $8.7 billion. Donahue began his Nextel career in January 1996 as president and COO. In August 1999, he swapped the COO position for the CEO title. Prior to that, he learned the ropes of the wireless market as Northeast regional president for AT&T Wireless Services, where he spent 10 years. Under Donahue’s watch, Nextel has built up a sizeable retail pres- 90 ence. Today, the company markets its wares at well more than 400 Nextel stores nationwide. Those, plus its telephone and Web sales divisions, account for more than 22% of all Nextel sales. The rest comes from other merchants that market Nextel’s offerings. Nextel’s reach only continues to grow. The telecommunications provider already serves 293 of the top 300 U.S. wireless markets, and serves more than 11.7 million U.S. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Same-day delivery gives Keith Koenig’s City Furniture an edge over other chains. Y ou may not want to believe it, but free cookies and coffee can go a long way in turning a mundane family shopping trip into a successful sale. Just ask Keith Koenig, president of City Furniture, a homefurnishings chain that dispenses the snacks at all of its 13 stores in South Florida. “If a family is out shopping and someone gets a grumble in their stomach, that can curtail the shopping trip,” says Koenig, 52. “We have www.chainstoreage.com seen that cookies and coffee help fix that.” Of course, the company’s success is due to more than just free cookies and coffee. Koenig believes that City Furniture has raised the bar in customer service, particularly with its same-day delivery service. “The home-furnishings industry is only now waking up to the 21st-century consumer, who has a fast and active life and seeks immediate gratification,” says Koenig. “Most home-furnishing retailers are not technologysavvy, nor are they very efficient in Keith Koenig President City Furniture ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Annual sales: More than $250 million Type of business: Home furnishings Number of stores: 13 Area of operation: South Florida their delivery and logistics method. We offer same-day delivery, seven days a week. You can buy furniture until 9 p.m., and we will deliver it to your house that night.” CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ City Furniture was originally founded as Waterbed City in 1971 by Kevin Koenig, Keith’s brother, who used the few thousand dollars he had saved by working his way through college to open an 800-sq.ft. store in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. In September 1994, the company transformed into City Furniture after the “handwriting was on the wall” for the waterbed business. Today, City Furniture sells a full line of home furnishings for the entire house. Sales of mattresses, which still include some waterbeds, account for about 10% of overall revenues. After working here and there for the company for a few years, Keith joined his brother full time in 1975 after earning his M.B.A. at the University of Florida. At that time, the company had just three small waterbed stores. “Kevin made me an offer I couldn’t refuse,” recalls Keith. “We worked hard to recreate the business. Money was tight when we grew up, but he saved. We couldn’t have had more humble beginning.” After Kevin passed away in November 2001, Keith took over the helm. City Furniture plans to double its business over the next four to five years. One of the reasons why Keith is particularly upbeat is the growth of second-home owners in Florida. The globalization of furniture manufacturing, which is bringing in more quality furniture at affordable prices, is also contributing to a gain in sales volume. “ There is much more attention to detail at a value that used to be available only to the high-end customer,” says Koenig. “Now, most of our customers can afford what used to be only that high-end look.” ❖ 94 Daymond John Co-founder/CEO FUBU The Collection ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: New York City Annual sales: $350 million (2002 sales) Type of business: Manufacturer and retailer of urban-influenced apparel, accessories and home goods Sales channels: 40 stores and wholesale distribution Area of operation: Worldwide John, who learned how to sew from watching his mother, bought some fabric and enlisted the help of three childhood friends. In one day, they sold 40 hats and made about $800. Convinced he was on to something, John mortgaged his house, turning half of it into a factory and the other half into living space for him and his three buddies. The four remain partners today. The fledgling business did all right for itself selling hats with the new FUBU logo. T-shirts and other items followed. Its audience consisted large- From left, Carl Brown, Daymond John, J. Alexander Martin and Keith Perrin founded FUBU in 1992. S ome 11 years after he began selling hand-sewn hats out of his mother’s home in Queens, N.Y., Daymond John, 32, heads a hip-hop global fashion empire. As the co-founder and CEO of FUBU (“For Us, By Us”) The Collection, John helped turned streetwear into mainstream fashion. What began simply as a means of making “easy money” has evolved into a sportswear and lifestyle powerhouse. “It started in 1992, back when I was working as a waiter at Red Lobster,” John says. “I bought this hat and thought, ‘I could make this.’ So I decided to give it a try.” www.chainstoreage.com ly of young males. The company’s repute grew, largely by word of mouth and some wellplaced music tie-ins. John got an old neighborhood buddy, rap artist LL Cool J, to wear FUBU gear in music videos. Other performers also embraced the brand. “Our connections with the music industry helped us a lot,” John says. “We were a very small company, but our stuff was in music videos all the time.” The brand reached a major turning point in 1995 when Samsung America was brought on as manufacturer and distributor. With Samsung’s involve- CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 ❖Retail ment, FUBU wear was introduced to a national audience. “Things took off from there,” John says. Its funky, hip designs and street credentials gave FUBU wide appeal and a mystique that other, more mainstream brands couldn’t match. Currently, the label is carried in more than 5,000 doors, from Macy’s to The Buckle to Foot Locker. The company operates 40 freestanding stores in 60 foreign countries and a number of outlet stores in the United States. “We are looking into opening a flagship in downtown Manhattan,” John says. FUBU has proved adept at extending its brand. It has licensees in everything from tuxedos and children’s wear to fragrances and handbags. Home goods and eyewear are new to the line-up. The company also has an entertainment division, FB Entertainment, that develops music, film and television projects. John stays close to his roots through the FUBU Foundation, which refurbishes inner-city basketball courts, provides scholarships to design students and gives assistance to the homeless and to low-income families. In recent years, the company has racked up one award after another, as much for its community involvement as for its fashions. Despite the acclaim, neither John nor his partners take their good fortune for granted. “In the beginning, we were always thinking, ‘Something is going to happen and soon we’ll be out of business.’ We still say the same thing today,” John says. The growth of FUBU has surprised no one more than John himself. “In the beginning, I thought we could have one store … a boutique,” he says. “I never imagined we would have stores around the world.” CHAIN STORE AGE, DECEMBER 2003 Entrepreneurs of the Year ❖ To what does he attribute the company’s success? “Luck had a lot to do with it,” he says. “I think we came along at the right time and that the market was ready for us.” Other factors, including FUBU’s music connections, savvy marketing and distribution network, also played into it, John adds. “We’ve been good at making the right moves at the right time,” he says. As for advice, John cautions wouldbe entrepreneurs to learn their business inside and out. “That way,” he explains, “no one can ever hold you hostage to your own business.” ❖ ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ B ecoming one’s own boss is an achievement. Becoming the employer of one’s family is another. Robert W. Barnitz, owner of Bob’s Market & Greenhouses, the Mason, W.Va.-based wholesaler and retailer of flowers, vegetables and related products, has managed to achieve both since launching his company in 1971. His five sons—Alex, Jeffrey, John, William and Eric—are with him today as VPs, and wife, Corena, serves the company as secretary. In addition to his role as head of the family, Barnitz, 71, oversees an operation that includes more than 80 additional employees and more than six acres of greenhouses that produce and sell more than 20 million greenhouse plants every year. The business was recognized by Ernst & Young as an agricultural entrepreneur, but the company also runs a thriving retail business. Bob’s Market & Greenhouses gets about 75% of its revenue as a wholesaler, and the rest comes from its retail operation. The company has www.chainstoreage.com three year-round stores and one seasonal store in Ohio and West Virginia. Customers in these areas come to Bob’s for flowers, bedding plants and hanging baskets, garden-center hard goods, mulches and gardening needs and also produce. Barnitz is also on the board of directors of the Ohio Florists Association. One thing, though, Barnitz has kept his business going without the help of the chain-store distribution channel. And he’s proud of it. As a wholesaler, Bob’s Market products can’t be found on the shelves of the big retail chains, and Robert W. Barnitz, Owner Corena L. Barnitz, Secretary Eric D. Barnitz,VP William R. Barnitz,VP John M. Barnitz,VP Jeffrey A. Barnitz,VP Alex S. Barnitz,VP Bob’s Market & Greenhouses, Inc. ❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖❖ Headquarters: Mason,W.Va. Annual sales: $8 million Type of business: Wholesaler, retailer Number of stores: Four Areas of operation: West Virginia and Ohio that’s the way Barnitz likes it. The unconventional attitude for a wholesaler stems from his view that the smaller retailers are easier to deal with. “We’re not in the big chains, and we’re proud of that,” he says. Barnitz declined to elaborate on the decisions that led to his success, but his 32 years of making a living from the soil—with the help of his family and the greenhouses—speaks for itself. The company reached $8 million in sales last year. ❖ 95