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Restoration Hardware's Catalog Lands With A Thud
by Thom Forbes, Friday, June 20, 2014 7:53 AM
That thwack I heard emanating from the front stoop yesterday, it turned out, was the outcome of more than 10 pounds worth of UPS-delivered catalogs
hitting the bluestone — Restoration Hardware’s “2014 Annual Source
Books” collection of “the most comprehensive and curated collection of home furnishings in the world.” In his effusive
introduction to a chat with Restoration Hardware chairman and CEO Gary Friedman — “the most inventive
person in retail today” — Jim Cramer proclaimed on “Mad Money” last night that the company’s
“management has an incredible vision like none other I’ve ever seen in retail.” Friedman went on to point out that
only 8% of all sales are currently online and “nobody is talking about the 92%” where business is conducted in fluorescent-lighted boxes “that lack any sense of humanity” and
were “were built for a different generation and convenience.” His modus operandi, therefore, is “to destroy today's reality
to create tomorrow's future and we're doing things very differently. In some cases that makes people uncomfortable. Sometimes it's scares people.” Such as people concerned about the environment, for one. “Twitter has exploded with disgust.
Search hashtag #restorationhardware and you’ll find these — and many more — little gems,” writes Will Burns on Forbes’ “CMO
Network”:
- I thought I was able to escape this utter marketing debacle. No thanks @RestorationHardware. Come take it back. Now.
—Mark Boles
- If I sit down with 3300 pages, there better be a scarfaced wizard or a lot of Jesus involved. —Marilyn
Thomas
Burns’ own brother shipped the whole caboodle back to Friedman at his own expense ($32.54) “on the assumption that
the landfills in your neighborhood have more capacity than ours here in Chapel Hill,” as an attached note said. Reports on the weight of
the package vary from 17 to 12 pounds, by the way, apparently depending on whether one received the entire 13-book, 3,300-page offering or not. My bundle, which only contained nine volumes, was
slightly more than 10 pounds outside its vacuum-packed wrapping. A one-page flyer accompanying volumes attests to the company’s
“commitment to the environment” with three points: The collection is “published just once a year and shipped to you in a single package”; the “paper is forest
certified”; the “shipping is carbon neutral.” A fourth point is
added online:
“we are the founding sponsor of the Verso forest certification grant program.”
Bloomberg Businessweek’s Ben Elgin,
however,
dissects each of the claims and finds
“Restoration Hardware’s paper is certified to a weaker standard than that of many competitors”; the “catalogs are nowhere near carbon-neutral” and “many of
Restoration Hardware’s sustainability claims lack sufficient detail.” That applies specifically to the Verso program, which
purportedly provides funding to develop new projects for reforestation. “Katya Sorokko, Restoration Hardware’s vice
president of public relations and marketing, declined to answer questions about the company’s contribution to the Verso program,” writes Elgin. “Two people listed by Verso Paper as
contacts for its grant program didn’t respond to several e-mails and phone calls.” Seven concerned citizens gathered up
“nearly 2,000 pounds” of catalogs and dropped them at the Restoration Hardware store in Palo Alto, Calif., on Wednesday hoping they “might send a message to the home furnishings
store's corporate headquarters,” Barbara Woods
reports on Palo Alto Online. Store employees responded by handing out the flyer, saying they were not allowed to comment. “When contacted via email, a company representative simply
emailed the same
flier [cq] and a link to the company's website and ignored questions about the delivery,” Woods
writes. Under the headline, “Restoration Hardware Unleashes 12+ Pound Catalog, Trees Weep,” Racked’s Erika Graham
writes about the “swift and vicious” reaction to the mailing on social media. “The
Daily Mail rounded up the best of
the bunch,” she reports, “including ‘Oh I get it, the Restoration Hardware catalogs ARE the furniture,’ and ‘'Going out in the morning to clean up all the dead
UPS guys who were delivering Restoration Hardware catalogs today.’” “When we look at this industry, we say, there's
those with taste and no scale and there's those with scale and no taste,” company CEO Friedman told Cramer. “And what we're trying to do is scale taste.” In a tasteless way, many potential customers would have it.