October 11 2011
Tuesday at 01:43 PM
The Story Of Apt2B Founder Mat Herman
Boompedia
recently featured Apt2B founder Mat Herman and told the story of how the company came to be. Here's an excerpt:
As a child, the last thing Mat Herman wanted to do for a living is to sell furniture. And, through a weird twist of fate, that is exactly what he ended up doing. But as with any true entrepreneur, they donât just look to do things, but to reinvent the way those things are done. And that is just what he did when he founded Apt2B. But it took a lot of struggle and at times major disappointment to get to where he is today. Herman graduated from Indiana University in 1996 with a degree in General Studies. Originally, he aspired to become a sports agent, but the fates had another calling for him. Once he graduated, his father, a sales representative for 35 years for a leading reclining furniture brand, StratoLounger, proposed to him the idea of joining his companyâs team as an associate. After giving it some careful consideration, Herman accepted the job and was immediately given control of the Ohio and Western Pennsylvania territory selling to mom and pop furniture stores and department stores. As his father has always said, âYou have to sell to the masses if you want to live with the classes,â and he took that funny, yet true view to heart.For over a decade, Herman worked as somewhat of an old-school traveling furniture salesman. He even moved out to California and began selling reclining furniture to retailers there. While most of his colleagues were older reps who had been working in the industry their entire lives, Herman was of a much younger generation, giving him an advantage over them, by being able to relate to a younger demographic and adding a bit of youthful energy, creativity and ambition to the mix. Life was good for the young upstart. Not only was he pulling in six-digit figures, but he was able to have somewhat of an entrepreneur lifestyle, giving him a taste of what was to come. He lived in a house in the Hollywood Hills, decked out his house in expensive furniture and was living a life of luxury. Overnight, everything he was used to collapsed. The morning after his 35th birthday, in January of 2008, Herman received a troubling voicemail, notifying him that he no longer had a job, since his companyâs factory was shut down due to the economy. Herman tried desperately to hold on for many months, but eventually lost everything he had worked so hard for. What he didnât realize was that this situation was only setting him up to achieve a greater goal. In October of 2008, he began conceptualizing on a napkin an idea for an online home furnishing and home décor brand, but put it on the backburner when he was offered an opportunity to work for Ashley Furniture, the No. 1 furniture company in the world. After two years of working for Ashley, and having tripled business during those worst two years for the industry, Herman decided to go off on his own. It was that same month, in January of 2011, that Herman went full force into starting the brand he had conceptualized a few years prior, Apt2B. In June, it was officially launched. Herman says his transition following being laid off and having to move into an apartment helped him feel akin to his own brandâs mission. âQuickly, I wasnât just building it, but I was identifying more than ever as an Apt2B customer,â says Herman. âI knew I needed to downsize, but I didnât want to have to downsize my taste, as well. But I knew I did have to live within my new means.â What Herman learned is that nice things donât have to cost an arm and a leg. Consumers can find the exact same products sold in higher-end stores, at a fraction of the cost, through Apt2B. This is due to various factors. For instance, Apt2B works on a very short margin; doesnât have high overhead, such as rent, freight and warehousing costs; and because Herman knows the furniture industry inside and out, especially the wholesale arena, heâs able to navigate it exceptionally well, in order to bring his customers the best possible prices. âWeâre trying to bridge the huge gap between IKEA and Crate and Barrel. Everything in my house is from Apt2B. If weâre going to sell this, I want to make sure we sell what I believe in. Every product I sell, I put through my own tests.â
You can read the rest of the article here.