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Harden Furniture plans major capital investment
McCONNELLSVILLE — The year was 1844. The 15th quadrennial, national, presidential election, between James K. Polk and Henry Clay, was underway. The great debate in the U.S. Congress was whether slavery should be extended to future states. That year, the Harden family began making quality kitchen chairs to supplement the work at the family sawmill, […]
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McCONNELLSVILLE — The year was 1844. The 15th quadrennial, national, presidential election, between James K. Polk and Henry Clay, was underway. The great debate in the U.S. Congress was whether slavery should be extended to future states.
That year, the Harden family began making quality kitchen chairs to supplement the work at the family sawmill, located on Fish Creek in McConnellsville.
For the past 170 years, five generations of Hardens have manufactured solid-hardwood furniture products for homes and businesses, offering desks, chairs, sofas, beds, and tables. The company’s desks and office furniture are featured prominently at the White House and in the Executive Office Building.
“This industry is changing rapidly,” says Gregory M. Harden, current president & CEO of Harden Furniture, Inc. “For a long time, furniture makers have been moving overseas to compete on labor costs. As a result, the industry has seen a lot of mergers and acquisitions among manufacturers, retailers, and suppliers, compounded by the effects of the recession in 2008. That year, Harden lost 40 percent of its business. As our industry shrinks, we have also lost a lot of talented workers who made the furniture and fabrics.
“The consumers’ tastes have also changed,” continues Harden. “I have been with the company 33 years, through the era of the Baby Boomers and now the Millennials. Very few people want formal dining rooms with china cabinets anymore. The younger generation is foregoing the traditional 18th-century look with dark finishes for softer, transitional, and smaller-scale furniture. We need to be responsive and innovative to changing tastes in order to prosper.”
Harden supplies a startling statistic to note the shrinkage in the furniture business. “Consumers now spend more money just on Apple products than they spend on the entire furniture industry. The domestic market generated only $80 billion in wholesale revenue; Apple’s annual sales are $182 billion.”
Despite the contraction in the furniture business, the company president is optimistic. “I’m just back from the annual High Point Furniture Market [North Carolina], one of the largest furnishings-industry trade shows in the world. There was more optimism there than I have seen in years, because the housing market is making a comeback and it’s driving growth. The consumer is still looking for value, and we’re being helped by a revival of the “Made-in-America” movement. Labor rates in Asia have been rising and so has the cost of transportation, which is leading manufacturers and suppliers to return to America. What has also helped case-goods manufacturers (wood products) like Harden is the introduction of technology in sanding, fitting, and cutting to offset the decline of a skilled labor pool, boost productivity, and compete with overseas wages.”
Capital investment needed
In 2011, Greg Harden concluded negotiations with the 13 stockholders of the family’s fourth generation to transfer ownership to himself. Harden funded this through life insurance and by selling off the 10,000 acres of timberland owned by the company.
In 2012, Harden Furniture began a three-year, $3 million effort to modernize the plant. “In order to compete in our current location — to which we are committed — it’s clear that we need to make additional capital investments,” asserts Harden. “Also, if we want to grow, the company needs more working capital to cover expanding receivables and inventory. Even though Harden Furniture is not in financial distress and has a strong cash position, the decline of the furniture industry and the slow growth of the last six years have made the financing of property, plant, and equipment unattractive to many lenders.”
Unable to generate interest among conventional lenders, Harden turned to Tim Stump of Stump & Co., based in Charlotte, N.C., which specializes in selling privately held furniture companies throughout the world. According to Stump’s website, his firm has concluded more than 400 deals. “I have talked with different companies this year and expect to conclude a sale of the operating company sometime before the end of this year. I have more than one option, but probably will select a Taiwanese company that is both a furniture manufacturer and retailer,” Harden says.
“The manufacturing operation will remain here in McConnellsville, and I will continue to have a vested interest in the operation and manage the plant. The transaction could inject up to a 20 percent sales increase in the short term, because we will sell Harden furniture through the new owner’s retail outlets,” he continues. While Harden did not disclose any details of the deal, he stated that the sale would generate sufficient investment capital to “completely modernize” the facility and operation and to grow sales.
Harden Furniture currently sells its domestic home products through distributors, and utilizes an international distributor network in Canada, Kuwait, Russia, Turkey, Indonesia, and China. It also sells contract manufacturing directly to government entities and to the business community.
“Our residential business represents two-thirds of our annual sales, but it is growing slowly. The contract business, on the other hand, is growing more quickly, especially in the hospitality industry. Our manufacturing operation is set up from engineering to the shop floor to produce custom products, which gives us a big advantage in the custom-contracting end of the business. Another bright spot is exporting, which now represents 10 percent of total company revenue and 20 percent of the revenue generated from the company sawmill. (Harden Furniture uses 25 percent of the company sawmill’s output; the remaining 75 percent is sold.) There is a growing middle class among developing countries, and they are attracted to ‘Made-in-America’ furniture built with solid woods,” Harden says.
“This company is poised for more growth,” he declares, “because we have talented, dedicated employees and an outstanding management team. We hire people who are looking for a career and who take pride in their work. That’s why we still proudly display a hangtag on each piece of furniture which bears the signatures of the key craftspeople responsible for the piece. Harden has multiple generations of employees working [simultaneously] at the facility, many who have been here more than 20 years, and some who have five generations of historical roots with the company.”
Management team
In addition to Harden, the management team includes Andy Clark, vice president of marketing; Pete Raynsford, vice president of purchasing; Roxanne Seymore, director of human resources; Joanne Karboski, director of contract sales; and Doug Cleveland, director of residential sales. Harden Furniture also works closely with local professional vendors: Oneida Savings Bank for its banking needs, Hiscock & Barclay LLP for legal matters, and Testone, Marshall & Discenza, LLP for accounting.
Harden Furniture employs 250 people and occupies 450,000 square feet of manufacturing, office, and warehouse space. The company is vertically integrated from saw mill to its fleet of company trucks and trailers; only the woodlands are leased. The Business Journal News Network estimates the company’s annual revenue at between $30 million and $40 million.
Harden received his bachelor’s degree from Colgate University in 1978. Upon graduation, he worked for three years at Huffman & Koos Co., a furniture retailer located in New Jersey. Harden joined the family business in 1981 and assumed his current position in 1992.
The story of Harden is more than the history of a furniture company and a family. It reflects the history of the community, the region, and the country. Harden has grown and changed over the generations to adapt to changing tastes and to a changing marketplace. With a new capital investment, Harden Furniture is planning to continue the company tradition of producing quality, hardwood products for decades to come.
Contact Poltenson at npoltenson@cnybj.com

Cuomo signs Craft New York Act, offers $3M in promotional funding
Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently signed the Craft New York Act that he says cuts “burdensome” requirements placed on craft-beverage manufacturers and eases restrictions on the marketing of products. Cuomo also launched two craft-beverage grant programs. The $3 million in promotional funding includes a $2 million craft-beverage marketing and promotion-grant program, and $1 million craft-beverage industry
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Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently signed the Craft New York Act that he says cuts “burdensome” requirements placed on craft-beverage manufacturers and eases restrictions on the marketing of products.
Cuomo also launched two craft-beverage grant programs. The $3 million in promotional funding includes a $2 million craft-beverage marketing and promotion-grant program, and $1 million craft-beverage industry tourism-promotion grant.
The programs seek to “further develop” the craft-beverage manufacturing industry and “raise the profile” of New York’s beverage producers, Cuomo’s office said in a news release.
Both the legislation and new grant programs are part of Cuomo’s promise made at the second Wine, Beer, Spirits & Cider Summit to continue to support and provide resources for this growing sector.
The Craft New York Act, which will take effect in mid-December, provides New York manufacturers with more opportunities to market their products.
Under the legislation, producers can conduct tastings and serve “by the bottle” and “by the glass,” according to the governor’s office.
It also permits farm distilleries to increase the number of retail outlets where they can sell and offer samples of their products.
The new law also lowers the food requirement that manufacturers must meet when offering tastings and consumption at their locations.
It allows farm distilleries to obtain a permit to operate a branch office, eliminating the need for a separate license.
The new law also reduces costs for small manufacturers by increasing the production cap and permitting the additional production without higher fees.
“New York produces some of the best wine, beer, spirits and cider in the world — an industry which not only creates jobs but supports farmers and brings in tourism dollars across every corner of the state,” Cuomo said in the news release. “This new law builds upon this administration’s ongoing efforts to promote this industry
by cutting red tape, reducing burdensome regulations, and removing artificial barriers that stifled growth.”
Grant programs
The state created the $2 million craft-beverage marketing and promotion-grant program to increase the “profile, awareness and sales” of New York-produced wine, beer, spirits, and hard cider.
It will provide matching funds for the marketing and promotion of craft beverages.
The state will award up to $500,000 to eligible nonprofit organizations to help cover the costs associated with marketing the craft-beverage industry.
Applicants must incorporate the Taste NY initiative, Cuomo’s office said.
Empire State Development provides the funding in coordination with the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets.
At the same time, the $1 million craft-beverage industry tourism-promotion grant seeks to help grow tourism across New York by promoting destinations, attractions, and special events “explicitly” related to the craft-beverage industry, Cuomo’s office said.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
ESD awards funding to Broome, Oneida County firmsESD awards funding to Broome, Oneida County firms
Companies in Broome and Oneida Counties will use state funding that the board of directors of Empire State Development (ESD) approved during a recent session
Welch Allyn unveils new website, online parts store
SKANEATELES FALLS — Welch Allyn’s customers spoke and the medical diagnostic-device manufacturer listened. The result is a newly launched website for U.S. customers that includes improved features, making it easier for clients to interact with Welch Allyn by computer, tablet, or smartphone. “We recognize that customers like our product, but we have to recognize that’s
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SKANEATELES FALLS — Welch Allyn’s customers spoke and the medical diagnostic-device manufacturer listened. The result is a newly launched website for U.S. customers that includes improved features, making it easier for clients to interact with Welch Allyn by computer, tablet, or smartphone.
“We recognize that customers like our product, but we have to recognize that’s not enough anymore,” says Julie Sheedy, director of customer experience and communications at Welch Allyn. That’s why the new site includes features such as new search capabilities, numerous self-service transactions like checking order status, webinars, and white papers.
A company survey showed that 70 percent of visitors to the device maker’s website come there for support or help, whether it’s to identify a needed part or check on the status of an order, Sheedy says. The new site (www.welchallyn.com) makes all of those processes easier, and Welch Allyn took it a step further with the introduction of an online parts store that bypasses the company’s normal distribution channels.
Customers had identified the capability to get parts quickly as an area that needed improvement, Sheedy says. Through the normal distribution channel, a customer would contact its distributor who would order the part and then deliver it to the customer once it was received from Welch Allyn. The whole process took anywhere from one to two weeks, she notes. That caused problems for some customers, particularly those who only had one of a particular piece of equipment and couldn’t afford to wait two weeks for a replacement part.
Welch Allyn worked with VML of Kansas City on the website redesign, including the parts store. To create the store, the company looked at what parts customers order most often and made those available for order online. That includes products such as component parts, probes, plastics, cables, lamps, and power sources.
A total of 700 parts are available through the online store to health-care customers, biomedical professionals, distributors, and medical students. Orders must be placed with a credit card.
Other features of the site include tools for easy access to information or to find a distributor, online warranty registration, how-to videos, a frequently-asked questions section, a new insight and research section, and other tools to connect website users with the content they need.
The goal, Sheedy says, isn’t so much about generating new sales. It’s more about building customer loyalty by making it easier for clients to interact with Welch Allyn and get what they need. With that in mind, the company is tracking online-order trends to measure customer loyalty. “We hope that percentage will increase,” she says.
The site soft-launched in October and the company received more than 100 orders in that three- to four-week period, Sheedy says. That shows there was a true demand for the service, if people are finding it without Welch Allyn even promoting it, Sheedy notes.
Going forward, Sheedy says the manufacturer will add more products to the online store as demand dictates, will make a significant investment in adding video content to the site in 2015, and may even consider expanding the online store to international customers at some point.
Welch Allyn currently generates 35 percent of its sales from international customers, and that makes expanding the online store an area of interest, Sheedy says.
Headquartered in Skaneateles Falls, Welch Allyn’s products including EMR-interfaced vital signs and cardiac monitoring diagnostic products, physical diagnosis instruments, and infection-control products. Founded in 1915, the manufacturer employs nearly 2,600 people in 26 countries.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Shop Small Business Saturday and Every Day
As we count down the days until the holiday season begins, many of us are planning our shopping strategy to make sure we get our loved ones those special gifts. I know many people may be focused on Black Friday, but please remember that the very next day is Small Business Saturday, Nov. 29. The
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As we count down the days until the holiday season begins, many of us are planning our shopping strategy to make sure we get our loved ones those special gifts. I know many people may be focused on Black Friday, but please remember that the very next day is Small Business Saturday, Nov. 29.
The mantra for the day is “Shop Small,” but I encourage you to follow this motto every day of the year. Shopping locally has a big impact on our communities.
Studies estimate that for every $100 spent at a local business, $68 will remain in our own communities. In comparison, about 60 percent of local money spent at non-locally owned businesses leaves the community.
Not only are small businesses the biggest employers in our economy, but they are more likely to do business with other small businesses, meaning more money stays in our hometowns.
I would love to see a revival of small businesses throughout the Mohawk Valley and the North Country, which is why I am so pleased when my staff and I are able to help navigate a business through any governmental obstacles and issues they may face. This is why I am proud to fight for our mom-and-pop shops by voting to cut red tape and taxes.
It is clear that our small businesses reinvest in the communities they love. Often we see them sponsor youth sports, help with downtown-improvement projects, and assist families in need. Our local small-business owners, the moms-and-pops of our hometowns, care about us, and we should show our appreciation for them.
Again, I encourage you all to take some time on Nov. 29 to participate in Small Business Saturday and to support small businesses beyond that day.
Marc W. Butler (R,C,I–Newport) is a New York State Assemblyman for the 118th District, which encompasses parts of Oneida, Herkimer, and St. Lawrence counties, as well as all of Hamilton and Fulton counties. Contact him at butlerm@assembly.state.ny.us
You can tell your grandkids you lived in historic times. You witnessed key turning points for billions of people. One is the energy revolution. Maybe you hate fossil fuels. Maybe you love them. Whatever, you cannot escape reality. New drilling techniques have dramatically increased supplies of oil and gas. The techniques have vaulted America to
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You can tell your grandkids you lived in historic times. You witnessed key turning points for billions of people.
One is the energy revolution.
Maybe you hate fossil fuels. Maybe you love them. Whatever, you cannot escape reality. New drilling techniques have dramatically increased supplies of oil and gas. The techniques have vaulted America to dominance. They have shifted major pieces on the world’s chessboard. They may topple a few pieces.
The heavy flow from American wells has helped pushed down world prices for oil and gas (especially natural gas at home). Extra supply does that. It surely looks as if the U.S. will keep increasing the supply. And its technologies will eventually ramp up oil and gas flows around the world.
This is momentous for various reasons.
1. When you lower energy prices, you raise living standards. Period. Here and elsewhere. You lower the cost of everything for the poorest folks — electricity, water, transport, food, farming.
2. Lower oil prices undercut the power of Russian and Venezuelan dictators. Vladimir Putin is clearly up to not much good. But half of his economy depends on oil and gas revenues. Whatever damage he will do to Europe and the world will be lessened with lower oil prices.
3. Lower oil prices will also help cut the flow of money to Islamic extremists. Yes, the villains who fund terrorism are not going to run low on cash. But the money that comes from oil is shrinking. They will cut their contributions to terrorism.
4. Lower energy prices will help the U.S. economy everywhere.
5. Maybe you feel lower energy prices will harm the environment. If so, surely these are momentous times.
Another momentous turning point is President Barack Obama’s campaign to shred the U.S. Constitution. His executive orders on illegal immigrants stole headlines. But they are only part of his campaign. That campaign is to test how much a president can do when the Constitution says he cannot or doesn’t specify.
The House Speaker John Boehner is suing the president over his executive orders on Obamacare. Both sides should be delighted he is. If the courts accept the case and rule on it, they will define the turning point. Either they will grant the president these powers, or they will declare that he violates the law. If you feel the president is doing the right thing, you will be happy if the judges agree. And, if you feel he is a lawbreaker, you will be delighted the judges decree that so.
The vital issue here is not this president. Nor Obamacare. Nor other issues. It is the legal issue of what a president can do and cannot do. The ruling will determine tactics of our leaders for decades.
If the courts approve his behavior, they may open the doors to a future of dictator-type presidents. For if a president can ignore these parts of our Constitution, he ought to be able to ignore many other parts, too. Our Constitution defines and limits the powers of our president and Congress. That concept could be no more.
Another turning point is a separate clash over Obamacare. As you know, the Supreme Court can demolish it with a ruling soon. And the new Congress may dismember it. Or, the president will win out and limit future damage to the law.
Whatever happens, the course is being set for health care for millions of folks. Either health care will be run by immense government bureaucracies, or government’s role in it will be diminished.
A last turning point is public education. Charter schools are on the rise. That’s because in urban areas — where public schools stink — parents want more charters.
They want less of what prevails now.
The teachers’ unions love Democrats and fund them generously. They hate Republicans. Don’t be surprised to see the new Republican Congress support charter schools. And school vouchers, too.
The point is that we are seeing the teachers’ unions lose power. That, of course, will affect most of us.
You have heard the expression, “May you live in interesting times.” Congratulations. You do.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta, in addition to his radio shows and TV show. For more information about him, visit his website at www.tomasinmorgan.com
Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C.
Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C. has recently hired Brittany Lightall and Vitaliy Zhuravel as a staff accountants in the audit and accounting department. Lighthall is a graduate of Messiah College. Zhuravel holds a master’s degree from Le Moyne College. Daniel Fernandez has joined as an advanced staff accountant in the audit and accounting
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Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C. has recently hired Brittany Lightall and Vitaliy Zhuravel as a staff accountants in the audit and accounting department. Lighthall is a graduate of Messiah College. Zhuravel holds a master’s degree from Le Moyne College. Daniel Fernandez has joined as an advanced staff accountant in the audit and accounting department. He has three years of accounting experience. Fernandez earned a master’s degree from Le Moyne College. Laura Christopher joins the firm as an in-charge accountant in the tax department. She has seven years of accounting experience. She is a graduate of SUNY Brockport.

Tompkins Trust Company has named Alyssa M. Barreiro as vice president, senior trust counsel for the banking company. She is based at Tompkins Trust’s office at 119 East Seneca St. in Ithaca, where she provides trust and estate-administration services and works with attorneys and financial advisors to create financial and trust arrangements for clients. Barreiro
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Tompkins Trust Company has named Alyssa M. Barreiro as vice president, senior trust counsel for the banking company. She is based at Tompkins Trust’s office at 119 East Seneca St. in Ithaca, where she provides trust and estate-administration services and works with attorneys and financial advisors to create financial and trust arrangements for clients. Barreiro brings more than 20 years experience as an attorney in private practice, most recently as a partner in the law firm of Levene Gouldin & Thompson, LLP in Vestal, and previously as a partner at Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP in Binghamton. She is a frequent lecturer for the New York State Bar Association and a contributing author for a number of legal publications. Barreiro earned bachelor’s and MBA degrees from Binghamton University and her law degree from the Syracuse University College of Law.

Cindie Schultz Adams has been appointed executive director of alumni and corporate relations for the Martin J. Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University. Prior to joining the Whitman School, she worked as the director of the Nicholas Center for corporate finance and investment banking at the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s School of Business. Adams has
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Cindie Schultz Adams has been appointed executive director of alumni and corporate relations for the Martin J. Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University. Prior to joining the Whitman School, she worked as the director of the Nicholas Center for corporate finance and investment banking at the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s School of Business. Adams has also worked in various management positions in higher education as well as in the private sector. She received both her bachelor’s degree and her MBA from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, as well as a master’s degree in counseling.
Community Bank System to pay dividend of 30 cents a share
DeWITT, N.Y. —– Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) announced that it has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 30 cents a share on its
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.