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Retail Success: Furniture Enterprises of Alaska

Furniture World Magazine

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Interview with Dave Cavitt

How Dave and Rachel Cavitt navigated Alaska’s retail challenges, positioning its Sadler’s Home Furnishings, Williams & Kay, Ultimate Mattress, Mattress Firm and Ashley Home Store brands for growth.

Furniture World caught up with Dave Cavitt sailing off the coast of Ketchikan, Alaska, which would be a mere 1,119 mile car drive from his home base in Anchorage, were it not for the fact that Ketchikan is only accessible by sea and air.

Furniture Enterprises of Alaska, based in Anchorage, is owned by Dave and Rachel Cavitt. The company operates 13 locations under the brands Sadler’s Home Furnishings, Ashley Home Store, Williams & Kay, La-Z-Boy, Mattress Firm, and Ultimate Mattress.

“Operating furniture stores in Alaska is a very different experience than in the lower 48. It’s big, has few roadways and is sparsely populated,” said Cavitt. “Only about 550,000 people can actually drive to our stores.

“Many places, including our capital, Juneau, don’t have road access. The Alcan Highway links the Lower 48 to Alaska. The roadway is still a little rough with long unpaved stretches and often minus 45-degree winter temps. Because of that, about 90% of goods are shipped by container ships or barges from Seattle to the Port of Anchorage. That makes for multiple complications. For example, Ashley can’t send us frequent smaller loads on their trucks.

Instead, they fill 53-foot trailers and deliver them to the port of Seattle. Most of our domestic product is reloaded by consolidators onto containers bound for Anchorage four times weekly. The cost to ship goods from Seattle to Anchorage is three times our current cross-Pacific cost, so we work hard to maximize every inch of space in those containers.

Bumpy Road

“I run the day-to-day business as president of the company,” he continued. “And when there are significant decisions to be made, Rachel, who has a very strong marketing mind, gives two cents and maybe a little bit more. She was responsible for positioning our store brands.

“What’s most important isn’t what’s written down in the employee handbook; it’s what owners and managers actually do and allow.”

“Before we founded FEA, she was an airline marketing executive. For many years, she did all of our new-hire sales training. Our daughter, Haley, studied business management at the University of Anchorage and participated in the debating world championships three times. Following graduation, she joined the business, working in multiple departments.”

Dave Cavitt isn’t an Alaska native. He was raised in a farming community in the Central Valley of California and became intrigued with Alaska at an early age. “I knew I was going to live in Alaska,” he recalled. “A few days after high school graduation, I packed my backpack and hitchhiked there.

Pam Miller

“Once in Anchorage, I held down a couple of odd jobs, including one painting a small furniture store. The owner, Mr. Sadler, was impressed with my work ethic and at 18 I became his second employee, handling warehouse and delivery operations. After a few years, I started waiting on customers and was soon promoted to store manager. I became the general manager and partner when the business grew to four locations.

“In the early 1980s, the Alaskan economy was booming. People moved here for high-paying oil field and construction jobs. We bought bigger locations, thinking this growth would continue for years, financing buildings with low down payments and high interest rates. But the boom didn’t last. Construction stopped, thousands of jobs were lost, and people moved out of state, leaving behind foreclosed homes and failing banks.

“People also stopped buying furniture, and Sadler left the state to pursue new ventures. Rachel and I chose to stay and find a way out of the mess. We survived while most other local furniture stores did not.

“As terrible as the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill was, it created thousands of Alaskan jobs overnight and turned the economy around. We were able to purchase foreclosed properties we could never have afforded previously.”

“I knew I was going to live in Alaska. A few days after high school graduation, I packed my backpack and hitchhiked there.”

FEA’s Branding Strategy

Furniture World asked Cavitt why, instead of adding store locations under the banner of Sadler’s brand name, Furniture Enterprises of Alaska chose to create new store brands and add franchise store locations.

He explained that in the early ‘80s, Sadler’s had been a lower-end store with a strong brand identity in Anchorage, home to about 200,000 people, “Sadler decided to open a second higher-end location called Sadler’s Diamond, on the far side of town. The unexpected result,” said Cavitt, “was that our operating costs increased, but we didn’t gain additional business. The new store location confused our customer base. Upscale customers didn’t want to shop at Sadler’s because the brand was associated with promotional products.

“There are a few large furniture retailers like Nebraska Furniture Mart, that can be everything to everyone. Instead, we choose to introduce different store brands into our trading areas, each targeted to a different consumer demographic.”

Cavitt explained that the book “Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind,” first published in the late 1970s, helped crystallize his thinking about brand expansion. “It talked about how a brand name can be devalued by extending it too far and explained how brands can stand out,” he recalled. “That was another reason we decided not to extend the Sadler’s brand name further.”

He went on to explain the roll-out and positioning of FEA’s individual brands.

Pam Miller

Williams & Kay: “Our first new store brand was Williams & Kay, which at the time featured a Thomasville Gallery, Flexsteel and other higher-quality lines. It was a hit. Today W&K carries Stickley, Hooker Furniture, some Amish lines, Bassett Upholstery, Natuzzi Editions, Jonathan Lewis, American Leather, Flexsteel, Canadel, and others.”

La-Z-Boy: “Next we located a La-Z-Boy gallery store next to our Sadler’s Anchorage location. The addition increased cross-shopping. Sadler’s didn’t lose any business, and the La-Z-Boy store did great!”

“Ashley’s current national directive is to move Ashley Home Stores up in price point. We plan to backfill our starting price point position by opening what we tentatively call ‘Outlet.”

Ultimate Mattress: “We have always been big believers in the potential of the mattress business. To expand sales, we followed the advice of researcher Britt Beemer, whose research suggested that if furniture retailers failed to open mattress specialty stores in their markets, their competitors would. So, we opened our Ultimate Mattress brand store close to Sadler’s. Ultimate Mattress did well, and Sadler’s mattress sales didn’t suffer.”

Mattress Firm: Later, Cavitt approached Mattress Firm to inquire about securing a franchise for Alaska as a defensive move. “We watched Mattress Firm’s growth,” he said, “and we knew it was just a matter of time before they opened stores in Alaska. So far, we have three Mattress Firm store locations.”

He added that the addition of Mattress Firm stores necessitated repositioning Ultimate Mattress’ product selection. “It serves the same higher-end clients as Williams & Kay, so, the store now features a starting Queen at about $1,499 and, at the top, a dual king Tempurpedic on an adjustable base for about $12,000. Also carried are the top ends of the Beautyrest Black, Purple, and Stearns & Foster lines.”

Pam Miller

Ashley Home Stores: “When Ashley Furniture asked us to consider becoming the Ashley Home Store licensee in Anchorage, we said yes. Their quick shipping meant we could grow sales without expanding our warehouse.”

A New Concept Store For FEA: Cavitt explained, “Ashley’s current national directive is to move Ashley Home Stores up in price point. We plan to backfill this starting price point position by opening what we are tentatively calling ‘Outlet.’ It’s a new concept furniture and mattress store in Wasilla, a neighboring town 45 miles outside of Anchorage, serving budget-conscious customers moving into their first apartments and starter homes. Luckily, we found a suitable 100,000-square-foot building with room to house new Sadler’s and Ashley locations to facilitate cross-shopping. We are working with the talented store designer Jennifer Magee to renovate the space.

“Increased price points at Ashley will compete a bit more with Sadler’s, so we plan to add more solid wood casegoods selections to Sadler’s lineup and use the slogan, ‘For better quality home furnishings, step up to Sadler’s.’”

A Focus on Brand Positioning

“We place each of our brands into unique market positions with sharp edges between them, setting low and top price points for each, with appropriate product selections aligned to the needs and merchandised to appeal to well-defined customer groups,” noted Cavitt.

Pam Miller

“For example, Williams & Kay’s bedroom displays feature king beds with a mix of other pieces, while Sadler’s shows a 50/50 mix of king and queen beds. Our Ashley Home stores are merchandised with all queens with matching side pieces priced per group. Williams & Kay is more highly accessorized. Custom orders make up about 50% of its sales. Sadler’s custom order sales are about 20%, and since FEA’s Ashley Home Store customers want their purchases ASAP, its custom order percentage is negligible.

“Margaret Janke heads up our buying team. She’s logical, disciplined and does a great job. It’s amazing to watch her shop the High Point Market for lower-priced sofas and then quickly change gears and shop high-end Williams & Kay vendors.”

Customer Service

Even though Furniture Enterprises of Alaska doesn’t have a formal customer service department, it provides great customer service. “Over a decade ago, I concluded that the job description of everybody in our company includes customer service,” Cavitt recalled. “For us, customer service isn’t a department; it’s all of us.

“FEA serves a relatively small population, so we must get repeat customers. We also realize that upsetting customers at any of our stores may stop them from shopping at all of our stores. That’s why we try to be clear about our policies. Clarity is especially important for returns on stocked items. Our salespeople review those policies printed on the back of every sales order with customers before they sign off at the point of purchase. We never knowingly reject a legitimate claim, but should a dispute arise, referring back to that signed policy statement usually clears up any misunderstanding.”

“We brought in a consultant to do kaizen events to create a culture of continuous improvement. FEA’s employees became more productive, and we were able to reduce staffing levels without sacrificing competitiveness.”

Delivery and Repair

Delivery and repair functions for FEA store brands are handled centrally.

“Let’s say we have a dozen stops on a particular day,” said Cavitt. “Three might be from Sadler’s, two from Mattress Firm, one from Ultimate Mattress, and the rest from Ashley Home Store, Williams & Kay, and La-Z-Boy. That way, we can route for efficiency. Customers are given a two-hour window two days in advance, and deliveries are made within that window over 99% of the time. Given the rough weather conditions in Alaska, that might seem surprising. Still, I would rather deliver in Alaska than deal with crowded city centers and bottlenecked freeways in other areas of the country.

“FEA offers white glove delivery in Anchorage and the Wasilla area Tuesday through Saturday, as well as in Fairbanks, 360 miles north of Anchorage, and the Kenai Peninsula area, 120 miles south of Anchorage.

“Outside of those areas, the population drops. Customers who live between Wasilla and Fairbanks must pick up purchases themselves or hire a third-party carrier to deliver,” Cavitt continued. “We deliver by air to the towns of Nome and Barrow, with populations of 2,500-3,000 people, five days a week and to smaller villages of 200 to 500 people via different air carriers that go to the smaller bush communities because roads don’t connect to these villages and towns.

“We utilize our delivery staff to do repairs. If they can’t fix something, it’s returned to the warehouse, where our super-qualified shop techs make repairs.”

Pam Miller

Kaizen & Staffing

“In 2015, we started having trouble finding people, especially to fill management positions. People got laid off from well-paying oil company jobs and moved out of Alaska. Our response focused on creating more efficient operations and increasing wages. We already had a solid benefits package, paying 75% of health insurance premiums, a 33% 401(k) program match up to 10% of wages, and two weeks of initial PTO that moves up to four weeks with seniority.

“We brought in a consultant to do kaizen events to create a culture of continuous improvement. The result was that Furniture Enterprises of Alaska’s employees became more productive, and we were able to reduce staffing levels without sacrificing competitiveness.

“That allowed us to pay more to attract good people. We also found that, as they became more efficient and we measured and communicated their productivity increases, it helped build a more positive company culture.

“Post-COVID management recruiting has continued to be a struggle, so we work with recruiter Bill O’Malley to help us fill open positions. This is primarily because we don’t have a large enough pool of furniture talent here in Alaska not already working for FEA.”

Pam Miller

Advertising

Furniture of Alaska used television years ago almost exclusively, buying larger contracts and dividing spots between its brands. “It was efficient in that way,” Cavitt said. “But after doing a large kaizen study to measure which media brought in customers, we dropped most of our television and radio advertising in favor of direct mail and every-door direct print campaigns. That’s still working for us.

“At first, during the Pandemic, like many retailers, we cut back advertising expenses by sending out two four-page broadsheets nested together to make an eight-page mailer. The first headline read, ‘Alaska Statewide Furniture and Mattress, Memorial Day Event.’ Sadler’s, Ashley, La-Z-Boy, Williams & Kay, Ultimate Mattress and Mattress Firm were allocated space proportionately to their sales volumes. That worked surprisingly well, and so we continue to run that promotion.

“In addition, Sadler’s and Williams & Kay send out magalogs featuring lifestyle images of brands like Stickley, Bassett, and Fusion Designs Amish.” Cavitt also mentioned that he plans to develop a playbook to ramp up his digitally integrated postcard marketing by the end of this year. “We buy Google Ad Words and do everything we can to ensure that all of our brands’ websites appear as near to the top as possible on the first page of Google results when consumers are looking for furniture in Alaska.”

He’s less excited about the benefits of digital advertising. “Members of the performance group we belong to through Impact Consulting probably get tired of hearing me say that I don’t like digital advertising. The group includes retailers Pilgrim Furniture, Matter Brothers, Turner’s Furniture, Woodstock Furniture, Howell Furniture, Stacy’s Furniture, Schneiderman’s, Seldens Furniture and Woodbridge Interiors. It’s my view that people involved in digital marketing think they know what they are doing, but many don’t. They might tell me we received two million impressions, but at least in our market, we don’t see digital campaigns moving our traffic numbers.”

However, Sadler’s is getting excellent results from Facebook. “When we cut back on our broadcast television spend, our long-time Sadler’s television spokesperson, Victoria Rivera, transitioned to working on the Sadler’s Lady Facebook page, currently with over 54,000 followers. She posts inspirational messages, interesting tidbits, winners of our weekly furniture giveaway Super Sadlersday Event! and lots more. She has a great time doing it, and the page doesn’t come across as pushing product.

“When she posts pictures of items we’re considering buying at Market, we might get a thousand people weighing in, telling us, “Oh, yeah, we think that’d be great.” Or, “Oh no, what could you be thinking?” For the most part, those comments have helped us improve our buying batting average.”

Community Involvement

“Sadler’s has sponsored Go Red for Women in Anchorage and Fairbanks for a decade. Go Red’s mission is to fund research, education, and prevention of women’s heart disease.”

FEA was also a top sponsor of the 2024 Arctic Games held in Wasilla.” Cavitt said, “Athletes from Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Finland and Norway compete in many traditional sporting events, including numerous Eskimo and Athabaskan Indian games.”

He has served on the executive committee of the Anchorage Economic Development Corporation (AEDC) and was a past president of the National Home Furnishings Association, a predecessor organization of the Home Furnishings Association (HFA).

Ethics & Conduct

Concluding his remarks, Cavitt advised, “What’s most important isn’t what’s written down in the employee handbook; it’s what owners and managers actually do and allow. Any company that isn’t honest with its customers will suffer from employees who cheat the company they work for. I believe it’s important for store owners and managers to treat staff with fairness, honesty, and never ask them to do anything they wouldn’t do themselves.

Pam Miller

 

Russell Bienenstock is Editor-in-Chief of Furniture World Magazine, founded 1870. Comments can be directed to him at editor@furninfo.com.