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2003 Fantastic
50
Retail-Wholesale: Lumber
Liquidators
by
Leila Marija Ugincius
Virginia
Business
May 2003
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Year
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Revenues
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2001
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$35,835,000
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2000
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$22,511,000
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1999
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$17,627,000
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1998
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$9,563,000
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They say the third times
the charm. And it certainly was for Tom Sullivan. The
Boston native always had the entrepreneurial bug, yet
his first business, a contracting firm, never quite
made it off the ground. So Sullivan switched gears and
next tried syndicating a television show on travel.
That went OK, save for one minor detail: I couldnt
make any money, he says.
It was only during his third attempt
that everything finally clicked into place for Sullivan.
He had started yet another business this time
a construction company. One thing the company did was
build decks. But Sullivan didnt have the space
to store his building materials, so he hired another
firm that specialized in distributing building materials.
We hired them to store material for us and wed
take it out as we needed it, he says.
That planted the seed for yet
another venture in Sullivans mind. He began to
buy materials such as excess wood that other
companies or retailers didnt need and resell
them: Sullivan wasnt selective. He bought any
and all types of wood that he could find. We ...
bought it during the week and sold it on weekends,
he says. Sullivan soon realized the lumber retail business
was where the money was he made $20,000 in his
first week and dropped the construction company
in lieu of selling wood as the Lumber Liquidators company.
Buying and reselling lumber eventually
led to Sullivan discovering a niche market for his wood
hardwood flooring. Sullivan quickly switched
to providing hardwood floors directly to the contractor
or homeowner. Between 1998 and 2001, Lumber Liquidators
revenues grew by 275 percent. According to Sullivan,
the companys revenues have jumped every year since
its inception, increasing 68 percent from 2001 to 2002.
Sullivan attributes the rapid growth to a simple and
sometimes forgotten business axiom: We sell a
good product at a good price, he says. Nothing
fancier than that.
Although big-name chains such
as Lowes and Home Depot also supply hardwood flooring,
Lumber Liquidators has been successful because it cuts
out the middlemen. In our case we cut out all
those people and sell it for cheaper, he says.
Whereas Lowes sells flooring for between $10 and
$12 per square foot, Sullivan says Lumber Liquidators
can sell the same wood for between $4 and $6.
In addition to selling hardwood
flooring, Lumber Liquidators also has started manufacturing
its own brand of wood flooring Bellawood, which
has been widely popular for the company. The Bellawood
flooring comes pre-finished with an aluminum-oxide-based
finish. All you have to do is nail it in,
he says. No sanding or finishing is required. Plus,
the flooring comes with a 50-year warranty, as opposed
to most floors 25-year guarantee.
Today, Lumber Liquidators employs
180 people and has 31 warehouse stores across the nation.
Sullivan expects to have 40 stores by the end of the
year. Although Sullivan originally started Lumber Liquidators
in his hometown of Boston, he had outsourced the manufacturing
to a Canadian company. When it came time to build his
own manufacturing plant, Sullivan chose Virginia, rather
than Massachusetts, because of its central location.
After opening the 80,000-square-foot manufacturing and
distribution facility in Colonial Heights in 1999, Sullivan
decided to move the entire company here.
Despite his misses early on, Sullivan
always knew that he would have a successful business.
I never knew exactly what it [would be] till I
fell into this by accident. But I always envisioned
having a chain of stores around the country.
Return
to Virginia Business - May 2003
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