Rooms To Go

Rooms To Go Incorporated
Private
Industry Furniture
Founded September 7, 1990
Founder Jeffrey Seaman
Morty Seaman
Headquarters Seffner, Florida, U.S.
Number of locations
132 (July 2016)
Area served
United States
Puerto Rico
Key people
Jeffrey Seaman
(Founder and CEO)
Morty Seaman
(Founder)
Stephen Buckley
(President and COO)
Revenue US$ 2.1 billion (FY15)[1]
Number of employees
5,500 (2016)[2]
Website Rooms To Go Official Site
Rooms to Go in Durham, North Carolina

Rooms To Go Incorporated is a Seffner, Florida-based furniture store chain with 226 stores operating in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Puerto Rico.[3] The company was founded on September 7, 1990[4] by Jeffrey and Morty Seaman, when they sold Seaman Furniture Company.[5] According to Furniture Today, Rooms To Go is the 3rd largest furniture retailer in the country.[6]

History

1933–1990: Seaman's

Main article: Seaman's Furniture

Julius Seaman opened his first store in 1933 after dropping out of the seventh grade. His enterprise gradually increased to an annual $150,000 in sales and allowed him to send his two sons to the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. "His big[gest] goal in life was that his boys would follow him and build up his business," Morton Seaman told Forbes. Julius Seaman died at the age of 48 of a heart attack. He left Morton, the elder son and college graduate, to help his mother save for the business, while Carl, still in school, did what he could on weekends and vacations.[7]

In 1955, they spent $1,000 USD on the store's first ad. It was a full-page spread in a local paper. When sales tripled, the same week the ad was published, Morton decided to open a second store to reduce the cost of advertisement per unit. By 1971 there were seven Seaman stores.[7]

In 1988, Seaman's Furniture was taken over in a buyout by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. for $350 million, burdening the company with severe debt. Jeffrey Seaman, son of Morton Seaman, was only 28 at the time, but he shouldered a large portion of the buying duties for the company. He and his father developed an overseas program during Seaman's restructuring phase.[8]

In February 1990, four months after the major financial restructuring designed to reduce the company's debt, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts replaced the Seaman's with Matthew D. Serra, former president and CEO of the G. Fox division of May Department Stores.[8][9]

1990: Founding of Rooms To Go

After the Seaman father and son left Seaman's Furniture due to Kohlberg Kravis Roberts replacing them, they opened the first Rooms To Go in Orlando, Florida on September 7, 1990. Rooms To Go's founding concept was the sale of furniture in whole room packages. Furniture was offered in predesigned rooms, targeted at consumers looking to save both time and money, without sacrificing quality, when shopping for home decor.[10]

Distribution centers

Products

Cindy Crawford Home

Rooms To Go has been partnered with supermodel Cindy Crawford for over 10 years. The Cindy Crawford Home collection focuses on living room, bedroom, and dining room furniture. The collection specializes in designs that are fresh, colorful, and traditional in style.[11]

Sofia Vergara Collection

In March 2013, Rooms To Go announced a partnership with Modern Family star Sofia Vergara. Rooms To Go and Sofia's relationship began over 15 years ago when the single mother first moved to the U.S. According to Sofia, "My relationship with Rooms To Go began over 15 years ago when I moved to the United States as a single mother, and furnished my first apartment entirely from their store." The Sofia Vergara Collection offers contemporary living room, bedroom, and dining room sets.[12]

Eric Church "Highway to Home"

Rooms To Go began selling Eric Church’s “Highway to Home” furniture collection in 2016. “This collection of bedroom, dining room, upholstery and occasional pieces is inspired by Eric’s eclectic music and lifestyle.”[13] The furniture collection was a natural endeavor for the country music star. Before moving to Nashville, Church worked in a furniture manufacturing plant, and his father continues to work in the industry.[14]

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rooms To Go.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.