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Featured Reports

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IMG Worldwide Inc.

IMG Worldwide Inc.

Pittsburgh-based General Nutrition Centers (GNC) has been synonymous with healthy living through healthful products since 1935. Its chain of retail locations extends around the globe, and its reputation...

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NFL

NFL

At the end of July, the National Football League owners, players, and fans breathed a collective sigh of relief when the NFL and NFLPA finally reached a deal that ensured labor peace for the next decade....

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U.S. Cavalry Store

U.S. Cavalry Store

When US Cavalry Store opened its first location 38 years ago, it did so with one goal: to fill a gap. Prior to the store’s opening, military members had two venues to purchase what they needed: government...

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Electrolux

Electrolux

With brand names like Electrolux, which originated in 1909, or AEG – a global brand that was established in Germany in 1887 – Electrolux Global Brand Licensing has been offering companies brands with...

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National Cattlemen's Beef Association

National Cattlemen's Beef Association

For more than 100 years, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) has represented the interests of U.S. cattle breeders, producers and feeders. The organization’s goal is to create “a dynamic...

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Retail Reports

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Tedeschi Food Shops

Tedeschi Food Shops

When Peter Tedeschi stepped in as president and CEO of Tedeschi Food Shops four years ago, complete unification was his first mission. The convenience store brand – with 190 stores in Massachusetts,...

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Pep Boys

Pep Boys

Pep Boys has been in business since 1921, and it was only about two years after the first location opened that the company created its iconic logo – the caricatures of founders Manny, Moe & Jack....

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New Hampshire State Liquor Commission

New Hampshire State Liquor Commission

It takes more than good customer service for a retail business to succeed, but a retail business surely cannot succeed without it. That is one of the keys to the success of the New Hampshire State Liquor...

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Joester Loria Group – Annoying Orange

Joester Loria Group – Annoying Orange

How annoying can an orange be? Pretty endearingly annoying when it has the eyes, mouth and persona of Dane Boe­digheimer, creator of the iconic Internet phenomenon. The Annoying Orange, the most-watched...

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Kohll’s Pharmacy & Homecare

Kohll’s Pharmacy & Homecare

The great thing about having a full line of services is that it provides companies with a diverse portfolio, giving them the ability to weather storms. When one product or service is in low demand, the...

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Licensing Reports

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Sony Pictures Entertainment

Many of the largest entertainment studios in Hollywood take an exhaustive approach to the marketing of their properties – they will create anything and everything that relates to a television show or...

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Mind Candy

Most popular children-oriented brands start their lives as traditional entertainments with fixed production cycles such as television series, films and comic books. While new characters, settings and elements...

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Global Icons

When some of the most iconic brands around the world come to you for help, you know you’re doing something special. Since Global Icons was established more than a decade ago as a premier brand-licensing...

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Empowered Media LLC – Jillian Michaels

For 20 years, Jillian Michaels has inspired countless people to lose weight and lead healthier, fulfilling lives through a combination of high-energy workout routines, easy-to-follow diet plans and motivational...

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Beanstalk New York

Everybody loves puppets. Watch people of all ages at a toy store – they pick one up and make it say funny things in funny voices. That human tendency to speak through other characters is at the root...

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Supplier Reports

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B-O-F Corp.

B-O-F Corp.

In any business, companies have to remained concerned about what their clients think. At B-O-F Corp., associates stay focused on this question its clients might ask themselves: “What has B-O-F done for...

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Kiva Systems Inc.

Kiva Systems Inc.

When Dansko opened a new distribution facility in Pennsylvania and needed to fill orders for shipment to 2,500 premium U.S. and international retail locations, it turned to Kiva Systems Inc. to ensure...

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EVOL Foods

EVOL Foods

There is a food revolution unfolding in North America, and EVOL Foods is leading the charge. The producer of frozen organic pizza, handheld and entrees has pushed the junk food out of grocers’ freezers...

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Chain Drug Marketing Association

Chain Drug Marketing Association

Since its establishment in 1926, the Chain Drug Marketing Association (CDMA) has helped give its members an edge in a highly competitive retail marketplace. Initially founded solely to support the marketing...

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2Checkout.com

2Checkout.com

During the height of the Internet boom in 1999, former database technology consultant Alan Homewood aspired to start his own web-based business, but struggled to develop a specific plan. After extensive...

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Special Reports

How quality products and unsurpassed service are ensuring the success of this family-run lumberyard despite a recession and stiff competition. Roughly 50 years ago, Maurice Brock was trucking rough– sawn lumber in Southern New Hampshire, providing the raw materials to a wooden box manufacturer. He knew the rise of plastic would eliminate that business, so one day in 1961, he bought $1,000 worth of a new kind of wood—plywood, set the product up in his garage, and with his wife Anne started selling to local homeowners and contractors.

Scott Brock, Maurice and Anne’s son and current president, now oversees one of the largest retail suppliers of building materials to customers throughout the seacoast and lake areas of New Hampshire, Southern Maine, and the North Shore of Massachusetts. Today, Brock’s employs 65 full- and part-time employees and is housed in an 85,000-square-foot showroom and warehouse in Rochester.

Brock’s store actually shares a parking lot with the local Home Depot, and Brock doesn’t underestimate the challenges of competing with big box retailers, especially in a recession and the worst construction downturn in years.

“The key for us is to stay on top of every new product,” Brock said. “Customer expectations grow every year with more people doing their research online before they come into the store. We make sure our staff knows the answers to any question a customer has or at least knows where to find the answer because if we don’t, we’ll flounder.”

Brock said when he first started work with his father, building a house was cut and dry: there would be one top line of windows, for example, that everyone would use. Today, there are so many kinds of products with a variety of features that the job is much more challenging.

That’s why the company takes advantage of every training opportunity its vendors offer in the winter months and often invites vendors to the warehouse for afternoon seminars for the employees. And if an employee gets a question he doesn’t know the answer to, Brock’s has manuals on all the products in stock.

The company’s annual contractor review night is another way to keep employees and customers in the know. Every April for the last five years, the company has rented out a local venue, inviting vendors to bring their latest products and allowing any Brock’s customer to stop by, ask questions, and talk one-on-one with company representatives.

“We have food and drinks; it’s a great night,” Brock said. “It positions us in the minds of our customers as a knowledgeable resource in our community and gives them an opportunity to meet the people they are buying from.”

Partnerships bring success

According to Brock, however, the best way Brock’s can compete is on service. He said the company has always catered to both contractors and homeowners. The company provides free estimations, free delivery, and will load up a customer’s car or truck for them.

“We offer the same level of service to all our customers, big or small. Most lumberyards don’t like dealing with homeowners because they have lots of questions and don’t always buy something after taking up your time, but by putting in that time and a little extra effort, when they do need something, they come to us,” he said. He added that lumberyards only serving contractors are doomed in this market. The business from the little guys is keeping Brock’s afloat. 

Although Brock’s offers competitive prices, Brock said the store only sells the highest-quality products rather than cheaper versions with less long-term value. The company also has an unadvertised 100% product support policy. Brock explained that if a customer has a problem with a product, the company replaces the product for free before going back to the vendor, which keeps the customer out of the equation and happy.

“We have long, healthy relationships with our vendors, so if there’s a problem, it’s much easier for us to talk to them about it than send a customer to them,” said Brock. Some of the company’s suppliers, he said, have been partners since the beginning, but nearly all have worked with Brock and his family for at least 20 years.

Toward the horizon

Brock also emphasized the importance of keeping the company’s systems and equipment up to date. Every few years, Brock’s replaces its entire fleet of boom trucks and forklifts. This year, the company is installing a new computer system that will improve POS, inventory control, and buying capabilities.

The change comes as most of the company’s vendors move toward Web-based buying programs, which reduce human error and expedite deliveries. Brock said with business slow, it’s a good time to retrain employees on a new system.

Although he doesn’t expect the market to turn around quickly, it isn’t all doom and gloom. “People will start migrating north in the next five or 10 years, and we’ve got our eye on being the local construction expert when they do. As long as we stay focused on the long term and keep our customers coming back, we have a lot to look forward to,” concluded Brock. 

Category: Retail Supplier

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