A
Alex
Guest
I would like to discuss the INVASION into the framing industry by industry GIANTS. I'm in the Pacific Northwest, and we are being INVADED by not one but TWO more huge framing chains, Aaron Brothers and Corners Custom Framing (formerly Frame King Express).
Corners is is doing the equivalent of saturation bombing on the West Coast the next two years, opening 25 to 50 stores in EACH of the following markets--San Francisco (where they already have about 24 stores), Portland and Seattle. This info was relayed to me via the president of our local picture framing guild. The extent of Aaron Brothers isn't known yet.
My question(s) to any of you is: Have any of you been in a market where any large chains like this have arrived and blanketed your area? What has been the effect/results? To a certain extent I realize that the large chains can't really provide the exceptional service and quality as we do as professional framers. Well, we like to fool ourselves in this fallacy a bit. But they are TRYING. And they will have established internal controls and policies to deal with customer disatisfaction. They will also attempt to fairly deal with requests for higher and higher upgraded services and design. With the question of computerization addressed and all the high tech tools available to them as well as us, I take this as a serious issue. I'm not in a panic yet, but I see continual inroads being made to our livelihoods. All due in part to the generally high gross margins seen in this industry. The business/investment world sniffs the blood of high gross margins and whammo! We are in for the fight of our retail lives. Witness the office supply business over the last fifteen years or so. As an aside, in 1980, there were over 2,000 mom and pop office supply stores in the United States. By 1995, there were less than 200. And today that number is even less I'm sure. Hello, hello, hello. What are we as individual owners in the framing industry going to do to address this? How have any of you addressed this? Has anyone garnered any insights from previous owners of office supply business owners, perchance? I wonder what any of them would say to us using their hindsight?
I have a friend who is in the Chiropractic industry. About ten years ago many of them as individual owners of of small businesses got together and decided to create a unified "presence" under one name, but each still maintaining their individual ownership. Is a similar idea workable among us? Some kind of larger structure with a common identified national name? Certainly, the PPFA isn't going to come to our rescue. Let's not go there.
One of my personal modes of operation has been to not seek answers for the answers sake, but to learn to ask the right questions. I hope maybe some of you are able to respond to this. I would enjoy dialoging with you.
There are myriads of other pieces to this issue. Please bring up those questions and lets focus this discussion. Thanks for your ear.
Alex
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Corners is is doing the equivalent of saturation bombing on the West Coast the next two years, opening 25 to 50 stores in EACH of the following markets--San Francisco (where they already have about 24 stores), Portland and Seattle. This info was relayed to me via the president of our local picture framing guild. The extent of Aaron Brothers isn't known yet.
My question(s) to any of you is: Have any of you been in a market where any large chains like this have arrived and blanketed your area? What has been the effect/results? To a certain extent I realize that the large chains can't really provide the exceptional service and quality as we do as professional framers. Well, we like to fool ourselves in this fallacy a bit. But they are TRYING. And they will have established internal controls and policies to deal with customer disatisfaction. They will also attempt to fairly deal with requests for higher and higher upgraded services and design. With the question of computerization addressed and all the high tech tools available to them as well as us, I take this as a serious issue. I'm not in a panic yet, but I see continual inroads being made to our livelihoods. All due in part to the generally high gross margins seen in this industry. The business/investment world sniffs the blood of high gross margins and whammo! We are in for the fight of our retail lives. Witness the office supply business over the last fifteen years or so. As an aside, in 1980, there were over 2,000 mom and pop office supply stores in the United States. By 1995, there were less than 200. And today that number is even less I'm sure. Hello, hello, hello. What are we as individual owners in the framing industry going to do to address this? How have any of you addressed this? Has anyone garnered any insights from previous owners of office supply business owners, perchance? I wonder what any of them would say to us using their hindsight?
I have a friend who is in the Chiropractic industry. About ten years ago many of them as individual owners of of small businesses got together and decided to create a unified "presence" under one name, but each still maintaining their individual ownership. Is a similar idea workable among us? Some kind of larger structure with a common identified national name? Certainly, the PPFA isn't going to come to our rescue. Let's not go there.
One of my personal modes of operation has been to not seek answers for the answers sake, but to learn to ask the right questions. I hope maybe some of you are able to respond to this. I would enjoy dialoging with you.
There are myriads of other pieces to this issue. Please bring up those questions and lets focus this discussion. Thanks for your ear.
Alex
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