Making Money with Area Rugs - December 2009
By Brian Hamilton
Floorcovering retailers who don’t sell
area rugs are overlooking what can be a high-margin profit center, with zero
installation headaches, plus rugs offer an incremental sale to most hard surface
projects. However, to be successful, it’s not something that can be taken
lightly, with a few rugs on display back in a corner of the store. Selling rugs
successfully requires creativity, an eye for design, and a passion for the
business, along with a dynamic merchandising plan. But there’s no one way to
success.
Emphasis on Rugs Inc. of Evansville, Indiana is owned by Mike
Kishline and David Lewis, and they are the firm’s only employees, so it makes
for some long days. Last year they did close to $1 million in business, selling
only machine woven, hand-tufted and hooked rugs from Shaw, Nourison, and
Oriental Weavers, among others.
Lewis’ father runs a high-end rug
business—selling rugs $3,000 and up—in another location in the area. Lewis
worked for his father for 25 years before going out on his own. He also studied
the art of weaving rugs, and he does rug restoration himself, which he believes
gives him a leg up on his competitors. He offers some custom rug services. “The
rug business as a whole is behind the times compared to most businesses,” Lewis
says. “We are very old fashioned here.”
Emphasis on Rugs’ clients are
generally women age 30 to 60, many of them first-time rug buyers. The store
focuses heavily on customer service. Lewis will drive up to a hundred miles
after store hours to deliver a rug, free of charge, and even move a customer’s
furniture, something people often wonder how he can afford to do. But more often
than not, that service results in more sales because he has such a good eye for
design and can make suggestions on the spot that the customer will
like.
“Get me in your home and I’ll sell more than the rug I’m
delivering,” Lewis says. “It has worked fabulously.”
The company has
30-day sales events in April and October and advertises heavily around them
beginning a week before, mostly on television, both cable and network. Lewis
estimates he has about 400 television spots during the month. These events often
feature 20% discounts across the board. They also do some advertising in a local
lifestyle magazine.
That isn’t the only way the business gets the name
out. Lewis and Kishline will hand deliver 5,000 flyers in neighborhoods where
homes are valued from $90,000 to $350,000. “If we go to someone to mail the
brochures, they’ll just blanket the area and a lot will be wasted,” Lewis says.
Plus, they get to “kiss babies and shake hands” while out in the
community.
The physical store is different from most as well. The 10,500
square foot showroom was added on to the back of a house, so customers first
walk through the house. The showroom has always been well stocked with 8’x10’
rugs since their grand opening sale three years ago. Another touch is that the
showroom contains nothing but incandescent lights, rather than fluorescent, so
the rugs will look more like they’ll look in a customer’s home. The standard
bulbs add substantially to the company’s electric bill, but Lewis says it’s well
worth the expense.
About three quarters of the company’s business is in
traditional rugs, in mid grade jewel tones, with typical Persian designs. Much
of the remaining business is in shag rugs and hooked rugs. Roughly 15% of the
business is commercial, with clients like the University of Evansville and area
banks and churches. Kishline works on commercial floor plans with
designers.
Rug sales make up about 10% of flooring sales for Roberts
Carpet and Fine Floors of Houston, Texas. The firm has eight locations (a ninth
is under construction) but only three of the stores have rugs, with showroom
sizes ranging from about 4,000 square feet to 11,500 feet. It specializes in
upper end rugs, although it sells machine made rugs but doesn’t display many of
them. However, the firm has rugs at all price points, from polypropylene to
hand-knotted Persians.
“The dollar volume contribution is so poor with
machine made rugs,” says owner Sam Roberts. “Rugs is one of those things,
because there’s no installation, that you find yourself competing with someone
operating out of his home office with a good website.” This, he believes, is
especially true with less expensive rugs.
Roberts has seen many cases in
which a customer will take a rug home from the store, decide she likes it, and
then find a better online price and return it. “It’s just one of those unfair
things that you have to deal with.”
Partly for that reason, Roberts also
specializes in rugs with very limited distribution, even one-of-a-kind rugs. To
sell a high-end hand knotted rug, he says, requires developing a relationship
with the customer, who usually wants to see and feel the product. And that falls
to his wife, who runs the rug department and decides exactly what to
order.
High-end rugs also fit better with the rest of the flooring the
store sells, along with items like granite countertops. They also beautify the
store, Roberts says, which helps create an impression of quality, and they can
help make a sale for hard surface flooring or even an intricate
countertop.
A key to selling rugs, Roberts says, is for a salesperson to
view them as art, rather than as floorcovering. And like any art seller, they
have to know as much as possible about rugs, from construction to history. “That
changes their perspective totally and they become more enthusiastic. If they see
it as just another piece of carpeting or something, it doesn’t have that effect
at all.” Roberts says it’s been his experience that women do a better job than
men at selling rugs because they are generally more patient, design oriented and
sensitive to color.
Another key is to show a lot of rugs. Roberts uses
Galt electronic display racks, in which the arms move up and down. He has
separate racks for 10’x14’, 9’x12’ and 6’x9’. Each rack can hold 40
rugs.
“The area rug business might not be for everybody,” Valerie Roberts
says. “It takes a lot of time to sort them out and merchandise them properly.”
She says rugs are a very fashion forward business and it’s important to keep up
with new products and trends, and have the current styles and colors. She keeps
an eye on trends in clothing and furniture because rugs often
follow.
It’s also important for the salesperson to be able to envision
the space in the customer’s home. She encourages customers to bring in fabric
samples, pictures, and anything else that can help her create the vision.
Customers can take rugs home and try them out, or the store will deliver them
since they can be bulky and not easy to transport.
It is the largest
floorcovering retailer in the area and has become known as a resource, including
for area designers. The stores have periodic rug sales events but Valerie
Roberts says she tries not to repeat events very often.
“What happens is
that when one store has a certain type of sale, then everyone starts doing them,
like private sales, so we like to keep things extremely varied.”
Nebraska
Furniture Mart of Omaha, Nebraska, which specializes in floorcovering,
furniture, appliances, and electronics, sold 46,000 rugs of all sizes last year,
with the most popular sizes being 5’x8’ and 6’x9’. About half of the rugs the
stores sell come out of inventory.
“Generally the customer we see wants
to change the look and feel of a room without a complete remodel,” says Gary
Cissell, the company’s director of flooring.
The recession is causing
people to trade down, he said. Before the recession, the most popular price
points were from $699 to $1,199, but that has fallen to $499 to
$899.
Cissell adds, “As the recession goes on, and people aren’t
traveling, they’re investing in their homes and rugs are a simple and economical
way to look and feel different.”
The firm has a very structured process
for hiring rug salepeople, with a specific set of questions to find the right
people. “They have to have a passion for selling and an eye for color,” Cissell
says. Nebraska Furniture Mart is highly event driven, and Cissell tries to think
of unusual ways to get rug buyers into the store. One of his most successful
promotions was a post Thanksgiving day event in which he offered 2’x3’ rugs for
$1. They sold about 4,000 of those rugs in a few hours. However, Cissell had the
rugs placed in such a way that shoppers had to walk by beautiful 5’x8’ rugs,
then 6’x9’ rugs, all at good prices.
“We sold every five by eight and six
by nine rug we had,” Cissell says. Another time he brought in a $250,000 Persian
rug to display, which brought a lot of people into the store.
A key,
Cissell says, is his stores are always changing out merchandise on display, so
frequent visitors will always see something different. That applies to every
department in the store. His rug showroom in Kansas City is about 9,000 square
feet, and the display area in Omaha is about 5,000 feet.
“I think a
retailer could probably show a lot of rugs in a small area but I don’t think we
could do the volume we do with anything less,” Cissell says. “I think a lot of
retailers are missing the boat.”
He prefers to hang large rugs on a
single arm because customers can see them better and relate to them better.
“When we did that, it dramatically increased total dollars,” Cissell
says.
He also has platforms of solid oak, featuring hardwood flooring the
store also sells, to lay the rugs on.
Rug margins, Cissell says, are
better than other flooring categories, and there are fewer problems. Customers
are generally satisfied, rugs are fairly easy to handle, and there’s no
installation. “Installation keeps me awake at night,” he says.
Other
modern touches include a custom area rug kiosk to help customers design the
perfect rug on a computer and print out the design on a laser printer. Cissell
has other areas devoted to scatter rugs and has started focusing on custom
runners, which he believes will do very well.
Copyright 2009 Floor Focus
Related Topics:Shaw Industries Group, Inc., Nebraska Furniture Mart