restonic review - Restonic Brand Central
Transcription
restonic review - Restonic Brand Central
October 2011 Issue 6, Volume 2 RESTONIC REVIEW A Publication for Employees, Partners and Friends of Restonic Mattress August Las Vegas Market Boasts Strongest Summer Market Attendance in Three Years, Plus Hundreds of New Showrooms and Exhibitors Seven Percent More Buying Units and 23 Percent More International Buyers Attend Nearly Half-Million Square Feet in New and Expanded Showrooms Tens of thousands of home furnishings industry professionals around the world turned to Las Vegas Market, held Aug. 1-5, to plug into the latest products, trends and business insights in an effort to boost their bottom line for the second half of the year. According to scores of market exhibitors—with nearly 200 companies showing at Las Vegas Market for the first time—an aggressive approach to new product introductions and show specials drove better-than-expected orders throughout the five-day show. IN THIS ISSUE: Restonic Partners with Sears .02 Clare Bedding Renews Commitment .03 Lights Out, Game On .05 Restonic is Women Certified .08 Look for the new Women’s Choice Award Banners on Brand Central 1 Restonic FLASH: Hot news at Sears: Restonic is now available at Sears via their web based program.Two great brands together “Supporting Dreams” for the consumer! Sears Product Comparable Product We are not servicing Sears distribution centers across the Bellflower ET & Firm CC S Belvedere ET & CF country, rather deliveries are direct to the consumer via a Caspia ET & Firm CC Classique ET & F Daylily ET CC Brilliance ET Fressia Plush & Firm CC Atlantis P & F Felicity HR Aruba Bliss HR Barbados This is a retail, web-only dealer: restonic@sears.com 3rd party delivery service. We are not on the Sears’ floors. (Daylily is 1” lower profile) Here are the details: 1. We are on www.sears.com only – (Fressia models are 1” lower profile) not in any brick & mortar locations. 2. We are a “drop ship” vendor – in that we are using (Sears product traditionally tailored) HomeDirect for in home consumer deliveries – we are not shipping to any Sears distribution centers. (Sears product traditionally tailored) 3. We are absorbing the cost for all in home delivery. Congratulations to our Yes, HomeDirect ships to every zip code in the US. Restonic team in Buffalo! You Gotta Read It to Know It! Announcing a new contest for readers of the Restonic Review! Each month we will pose a question to our readers. The answer is found somewhere in the newsletter, so you Gotta Read It to know the answer! Do You Have News? We are always looking for tasty tidbits and noteworthy news to publish in the Restonic Review monthly newsletter. Our June winner is: John K. Matthews, Accounting Manager Restonic Fayetteville John has won the coolest ever beach towel! If you have an interesting story, a new mattress tale, an old bedding saga - please send it to the Marketing Manager at: brooke@restonic.com and it will be included in the next exciting issue! The prize for October: The new and very spiffy Restonic Coffee Mug AND a bag of Dunkin Donuts Coffee! We are also looking for your Success Stories! Tell us about a novel way you do business and how it was successful. Did a promotion add to consumer interest? Do you promote the brand in a fabulous fashion? We are interested to hear from you! Q: What is our Marketing Manager’s new married name? T hank You! 2 E-mail your answer to brooke@restonic.com before October 28th. A random drawing from all correct answers will determine the winner. Winner’s name will be published in the November newsletter. Clare Bedding Strengthens its Restonic Mattress Lineup Furniture Today, July 2011 ESCANABA, Michigan — Clare Bedding, a longtime Restonic licensee here, is strengthening its commitment to that Top 15 bedding brand. Owner Don Balsavich, a bedding veteran whose 30-plus years of experience include top management positions at Spring Air and Restonic’s corporate headquarters, has been focusing on the bedding business as a licensee since 1993. “This is the era of the smaller, wellrun mattress producer,” he said. “As the mattress business is currently very volatile, there are great opportunities for growth for the second-tier brands that can out-maneuver and out-merchandise the big ‘S’ brands.” And that’s good news, he said, for Clare Bedding, which has been in business since 1936 and has been a Restonic licensee since 1972. understand. And by continuing to rely on quality components and not compromising on materials or production methods we experience a return rate of less than 0.5%.” Clare Bedding supplies Restonic-branded bedding to about 200 home furnishings retailers and bedroom specialty stores throughout the Midwest, including Darvin Furniture in the Chicago market; Golden Fowler Furniture and Currie’s Furniture in Traverse City, Mich.; Land-O-Dreams, Rochester, Minn.; Al Grace, Rockford, Ill.; and Kirkish Furniture, Houghton, Michigan. As part of its decision to emphasize its Restonic roots, Clare Bedding has discontinued its affiliation with the Eclipse and Eastman House brands, Balsavich said. That will enable the company to streamline its production and increase manufacturing efficiencies; three national brands were difficult to manage and support, he said. Clare Bedding will continue to manufacture its successful private label Platinum Dreams line for retailer Penny Mustard Furnishings, formerly known as PM Bedroom Gallery, with stores in Chicago, Milwaukee and Minneapolis. And it will continue to market its own Clare Bedding products. Balsavich says he’s seizing opportunities in the bedding market by emphasizing the Restonic brand in the Upper Midwest. His 50,000-square-foot factory services Michigan, Wisconsin, northern Indiana, northern Illinois and eastern Minnesota. “We are going to be focusing on the Restonic brand, which has one of the strongest trademarks in the industry - the Marvelous Middle,” Balsavich said. The Marvelous Middle is a reinforced design in the center third of the mattress, set off with visible stitch lines, that provides extra support where consumers need it most, he said. Balsavich says he will be featuring several expanded Restonic product lines: • The Comfort Care Select line of individually wrapped coil beds, retailing from $999 to $2,499. • The Health Rest memory foam line, retailing from $599 to $1,699. The line touts a “100% made in the U.S.” story that resonates with retailers who don’t want to turn to Chinese memory foam imports, he said. • A Restonic line featuring Flexsteel-designed box springs that was remerchandised this year and retails from $1,299 to $2,999. There are openings in the current bedding market that favor companies like Clare Bedding, according to Balsavich. “Locally owned factories can tailor their beds and their programs to fit the region and the dealer base that they serve,” he said. “And the local factory owners and management usually know the retail store owners and have open lines of communication with them. That makes for a stronger, mutually beneficial business partnership.” “We have already experienced a shift to and a resurgence of the $1,299 and up retail price points,” Balsavich said. “If there are real benefits the consumer can see and feel they are willing to pay the higher price points and invest in better sleep. Our two-sided mattresses continue to be very strong. This is an obvious feature/benefit that consumers can easily Clare Bedding’s Don Balsavich, center, supervises construction of the Flexsteel-designed box spring used in the Restonic bedding line. 3 Working with Restonic is like a dream come true. Restonic has been making your sales dreams come true since 1938. We are focused on supporting you through successful marketing and strong sales development. Restonic pledges to become your preferred supplier due to our exceptional products, passionate people and flexible programs. The body-conforming sleep surface of our HealthRest ® Memory Foam mattress reacts to your unique shape, resulting in a bed that’s customized to your specific needs. Our HealthRest ® Latex mattress instantly responds to every inch of curve and contour, allowing for a customized sleep surface. Follow Restonic on Twitter! High Point Market | October 22-27, 2011 restonic.com High Point, North Carolina International Home Furnishings Center | Suite M408 New Restonic HealthRest™ Ad! Look for our new Restonic HealthRest™ Ad which will be featured at the High Point Show as a full-page advertisement in Furniture Today’s opening day publication. The promotion features the recent Women’s Choice Award honor and a QR code that sends readers to our Twitter social media page. Look for the new “No Partner Disturbance” Logo on Brand Central Winter 2012 Las Vegas Market January 30 - February 3, 2012 Monday-Thursday: 8:00am - 5:30pm Friday: 8:00am - 11:00am 4 Lights Out, Game On By Penelope Green, The New York Times mom or an athlete, everybody has to perform the next day. We’re making a performance home story. We want to own the consumer from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m.” Doesn’t everyone? Sleep has always been big business. In 2010, Americans spent more than $5.8 billion on their mattresses and box springs, up 4 percent from the year before. But as sleep studies have increasingly focused on the health risks associated with lousy sleep, from Type 2 diabetes to hypertension, obesity and a weakened immune system, the makers of so-called sleep products have begun marketing their sheets, pillows and mattresses as fitness aids, crucial gear to prep for the athletic event that is your life. Lisa Mercurio, left, and Cindy Bressler want to “own bedtime,” as Ms. Bressler put it, with a new online community and lifestyle site called the Bedtime Network. Last night I slept on athletic shorts. Or more accurately, I slept on the stuff athletic shorts are made of: high-tech performance fabric, the sort of super-Lycra that goes into the uniforms of, say, basketball players. It looks like a bed, but it feels like a sneaker. A new mattress called Blu-Tek actually looks like a sneaker, when its innards are viewed in the cross-section graphic that mattress makers love to show, with pockets of blue gel atop crenulated layers of foam. My sheets were, in fact, made by two former women’s college basketball coaches, Susan Walvius, 46, and Michelle Marciniak, 37, who worked together at the University of South Carolina, and liked the feeling of their athletic shorts so much that they decided to make sheets out of them. There are also odor-blocking sheets, like Therapedic AlwaysFresh (ideal for college students who do their laundry only on term breaks) and a host of mattresses covered with CoolMax (the performance fabric the Sheex makers hope to trump). Their sheets, which they called Sheex, would be a “performance” product, imbued with all the properties you associate with athletic gear: they would wick moisture away from your skin, stretch and breathe better than cotton, dry fast and wear long. Magniflex, an Italian company, says it uses “nanotechnology” to infuse its CoolMax pillow covers with lavender and chamomile, turning the pillow into a “vehicle for well-being,” its brochure promises. And Outlast sheets, made from yet another performance fabric, “balance the microclimate under the covers.” Indeed, Ms. Walvius and Ms. Marciniak hoped to carve out a whole “performance bedding category” by reminding folks that sleep is a fitness issue. You can even find sleep power bars: NightFood is made with a chocolate extract and melatonin. “I sleep hot, and I think most people do,” Ms. Walvius said by phone the other day. “But I don’t think people realize that if you sleep hot, your sleep is disrupted, and the next day you can’t perform well.” “The race to control the bedroom is the great game in retail,” said Marian Salzman, a trend spotter and chief executive for public relations operations of Euro RSCG Worldwide PR, North America. Ten years ago, she said, “as coaches, we were cotton purists. Then we saw the whole evolution of performance fabric. Now, you don’t train in anything but performance fabric, because of the moisture wicking and the temperature management. It just helps your body function better. We thought it would be great to take this technology and apply it to bedding.” Michelle Marciniak, left, and Susan Walvius, former women’s basketball coaches, are now in business, making sheets out of the high-tech performance fabric athletic uniforms are made from Ms. Marciniak, who was sharing the phone with her business partner, added: “Everybody needs sleep. Whether you’re a 5 continued on page 6 Lights Out, Game On, continued And beyond the so-called science, the notion of selling bedding products as athletic gear seems intuitive, tapping as it does into the American competitive spirit. “We are hyper-competitive, even when it comes to stress and relaxation,” Ms. Salzman wrote recently in an e-mail, still at work at 9 p.m. “And we want to amp up our lives, to ensure we have and enjoy the very best, better than others. Thus, who wouldn’t spring for a few extra bucks for a better, more sporty sleep?” is coming. But adults are falling asleep in front of the television, or checking their BlackBerry. Technology has taken away that time before your head hits the pillow when you should be transitioning to another place.” She continued, “Seriously, we want everything in our worlds to be high-performance, including our beds, our pillows, our bolsters, to ensure an empowered snooze and also a better next morning, a wittier, faster, smoother day.” The Mattress Development Company has taken the athletic theme even further, by In his new book, “The 4-Hour Body,” the tango-ing, looking at sleep itself testosterone-injecting human guinea pig and lifestyle guru as an athletic event. Its Ecstasy mattress, which sports the Timothy Ferriss tries sleep “hacking” — that is, trying to Playboy label, was designed, said Stuart Carlitz, the company’s engineer the perfect night’s sleep in the least amount of time. chief executive, to mimic “the ride and the motion” of a water bed. Mr. Ferriss packs himself in ice (cooler core temperatures send you to sleep faster), buys an REM sleep monitor to Individually wrapped coils are involved, as is natural latex. tweak his REM-sleep-to-total-sleep ratio (higher is better) Also, there is a steel bar in the middle of the mattress. Less and tests the polyphasic sleep habits of super-programmers bounce, in other words, for better sex. in Silicon Valley. (Polyphasic sleep is naps, and a blogger/ computer tech called PureDoxyk is the cheerleader of a The mattress has sold well in independent furniture stores, nap regimen called Uberman that prescribes 20-minute naps but hasn’t been picked up by larger retailers, Mr. Carlitz said, every two hours during a 24-hour period, which adds up to because “the buyers were concerned that Mrs. Consumer a total of 4 hours of sleep a day.) might be offended by the name Playboy.” “You can learn a lot by exploring the fringes,” Mr. Ferriss said recently. Though these days, he is happiest with 10 hours of sleep, not 4, he added, and he has replaced the ice-packed bathtub with a simple cold shower. His most elaborate sleep aid, he said, is paying for business-class seats on long flights. Now, he said, you can find the same technology in the company’s Eclipse mattresses (look for the ones in the Conformatic series). Who can keep up? “Sleep fitness” is the buzz phrase from the National Sleep Foundation, which promotes a “sleep fitness plan” on the hang tag that comes with Sheex. The sheets are one of nine branded products the foundation promotes on its Web site, including room-darkening curtains and shades, and an air filter. Meanwhile, the Bedtime Network, an online community and lifestyle site that went live this week, offers the services of seven life coaches (including a decorator, a stylist and a “mind-body expert”), all cozily photographed in white Hanes T-shirts. The site’s creators, Cindy Bressler and Lisa Mercurio, are two former music industry executives who got into the sleep business a few years ago, after reading a study that suggested that soft classical music playing at 60 to 80 beats a minute was an aid to sleep. “We see a lot of products,” said Tom Clifford, the group’s director of development. “Shucks, we hear from people a couple of times a day.Yesterday, it was like a far-out thing. Everything from adult diapers to bedding and pajamas.” Mr. Clifford doesn’t like the word “endorse.” Since then, they have made four “Bedtime Beats” CDs, collections of jazz and classical music that play at the sleepperfect rhythm. “But it was never just a CD,” Ms. Bressler said. “It was a sleep solution, something to incorporate into a bedtime ritual.” “We partner,” he said, in a relationship that requires those manufacturers to provide a copy of the foundation’s sleep fitness plan with each product, which includes an exhortation to “keep your bedroom cool, dark and quiet.” In fact, most new products are in service to this manifesto. Their goal now is a familiar one. “We want to own bedtime,” Ms. Bressler said. “Babies have a ritual that signals that sleep “Cool gel” has become the rallying cry of many mattress 6 continued on page 7 Lights Out, Game On, continued makers (the biggest complaint with foam mattresses, a staple for decades, is that they sleep too hot). And the Blu-Tek mattress might be the swankiest version of that technology. It’s true that most of these products aren’t going to win any beauty contests. Aesthetics is the Achilles heel of many performance sleep “products.” “We started with Nu-Tek” as a name, said Bob Hellyer, president of Kingsdown, the company that makes the mattress. “It evolved to Blu-Tek, because what we were really after is a cooler sleep surface, and in our consumer research, ‘blue’ seems to hit on the cool-support technology.” I loved the feel of the Magniflex Airyform pillow, for example, with its lavender-infused CoolMax cover and orthopedic humps. But you’d have to hide it in the daytime. (A scene from “Planet of the Apes” kept running through my mind: As Dr. Zira said to Charlton Heston, “You’re so damn ugly.”) His target is women 25 to 35, a new market for an industry that has been mostly geared to baby boomers. Why would a young woman spend $1,500 on a mattress? And Sheex draped flaccidly off a pillow, while the edge of the top sheet folded over a coverlet looked sort of like underpants. “There is a larger number of single females choosing to delay marriage,” said Dr. Robert Oexman, director of the Sleep to Live Institute, Kingsdown’s research division. “They are more affluent and more athletic, and they are saying: ‘If I want to look good, I want to feel good. I need my beauty sleep.’ And research is showing them that their cognitive performance really decreases if they don’t get a good night’s sleep. They know about all this.” But they felt better than you would imagine. They were a bit slimy, and your feet do tend to catch audibly on them, which is disconcerting on the way in.Yet they were comfy over all, in the same way those jersey cotton sheets that feel like T-shirts are. The stretch factor was fun, too.You can pull that top sheet up, up, up, over your head, and then let it spring back. Did I sleep deeper and longer? Did I dream more? Did I perform like a champ the next day? In addition, said Karin Mahoney, the director of communications for the International Sleep Products Association, a trade group for the mattress industry, young women “tend to respond to the ick factor when it comes to mattresses. Over time, your mattress collects dust mites, skin cells, perspiration, body oils, and they really respond to those messages.” (Bedbugs, one assumes, have been a boon to the industry.) Probably not. I’m the sort of sleeper that conks out the minute my head hits the pillow, no matter what the pillow is made of, or what it’s covered in, and I wake with a start at 4 a.m. to gnaw on existential questions. To my knowledge, there is no product yet on the market that will answer those. 7 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 1st 2011 CONTACT: Ron Passaglia 847-241-1130 info@restonic.com Restonic is Awarded thethe Women’s Restonic is Awarded Women’s Choice Award by ® Choice Award by WomenCertified ® WomenCertified forExperience Excellence in Brand Experience for Excellence in Brand Hollywood, FL – Women Certified announced today that Restonic has been awarded the Women’s Choice Award for Excellence in Brand Experience. Through a Women Certified Female Sales and Satisfaction survey conducted by Women Certified among Restonic female customers, we have established that Restonic meets and exceeds her expectations. Women Certified conducted an audit survey of their female customers to determine if they meet the high quality standards set by Women Certified, the collective opinion of female consumers. These included: salesperson product knowledge, women friendly customer service, high level of product satisfaction, and other aspects that women value and trust in a brand. These standards were confirmed through a Women Certified survey with Restonic scoring excellent in several areas including the likeliness that women consumers would recommend a Restonic mattress to their family and friends. In fact, more than 96% of the women polled said they would definitely recommend Restonic to their family and friends. Restonic CEO Ron Passaglia stated: “Restonic Mattress is honored to be awarded the Women’s Choice Award for Excellence in Brand Experience. This prestigious award recognizes the Restonic brand’s overwhelmingly positive experience among female consumers, and validates the brand’s focus of Supporting Dreams for all who experience our brand”. “Restonic is a gold standard when it comes to meeting her high standards of quality and service. We are proud to award them the Women’s Choice Award by WomenCertified, which will simplify a woman’s choice when selecting a mattress brand she can trust.” said Delia Passi, Founder of WomenCertified and author of “Winning the Toughest Customer: The Essential Guide to Selling to Women”. 8 Restonic Marketing Manager, Brooke Palmieri, Gets Married! Brooke Palmieri is now Mrs. Brooke Kibrick Brooke and her husband Sean Kibrick were married on Saturday August 13th 2011 in Buffalo New York. The wedding took place in downtown Buffalo where all of their friends and family were there to witness their union. Brooke’s husband Sean is a 6th grade teacher and High School Track and Field Coach. The couple honeymooned in Jamaica and plan on making their home in Buffalo, New York. 9