Subscribe to Furniture Today
Subscribe to Enewsletters
Other Home Furnishing Sites
Weblogs

Tom Russell
Associate Editor

I’m Tom Russell and have worked at Furniture/Today since August 2003. Since then, I have had covered the international side of the business from a logistics and sourcing standpoint. Since then, I also have visited several furniture trade shows and manufacturing plants in Asia, which has helped me gain some perspective about the industry in that part of the world. As I continue covering the import side of the business, I look forward to building on that knowledge base through conversations with industry officials and future overseas plant tours overseas. From time to time, I will file news and other industry perspectives on-line and, as always, welcome your response to these Web postings. (to view or add public comments click on "Add your Comment" below each blog post)


Tuesday, 1/22/2008
Domestic manufacturers challenge Asian counterparts by touting product safety

By Thomas Russell

In November, when the lead-based paint scare associated with Chinese-made toys was still making headlines, I published a column addressing this issue as it relates to the furniture industry. As some readers may recall, the column requested feedback on what individual companies were doing to help ensure painted furniture finishes, particularly on youth and infant furniture, were lead free. In that respect it was a chance to tout ways in which the industry was taking a proactive stance to protect both retailers and consumers alike. 

Surprisingly, the column only generated one response and that was from a reader who reiterated the need for manufacturers to understand and adhere to product safety standards.

Why talk about the safety issue? Because if you don’t your competitors will.

This occurred to me while visiting the Atlanta International Gift & Home Furnishings Market this month. There, a number of domestic manufacturers touted not just the number of custom finishes in their line, but also pointed out that all their coatings were lead-free. Another domestic producer who wasn’t marketing this aspect of his line, thought it would be a good idea to do so when I asked him about it.

Most of these companies are small producers with small factories. But you have to give them credit in that they are savvy marketers who know how to exploit a weakness, or perceived weakness, in their competition. Perhaps some Chinese manufacturers and their customers can tout the same thing, but we aren’t hearing that message.

Ultimately it’s a message that needs to get out to the retailer and the consumer. That’s because in the long run, consumers will likely be able to spend more on products they feel good about, such as those with lead-free paint. Can we at least communicate this to them in some meaningful way? 

 

Post a comment


Display Name

Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above:



at 1/30/2008 9:35:53 PM, Scott Eisenlohr said:
Don't know much about furniture, but but I did work with you at The Press of Atlantic City. All of us have graying hair and mine is turning white. I worked in news, then community, now I am on the copy desk. Married and one daughter, 11. seisenlohr@pressofac.com

at 2/8/2008 8:25:09 AM, Mike said:
Interesting as I just today received a new dinette table and chairs sold by JCPenney and all the boxes they arrived in were from Vietnam and all were marked with Proposition 65 warning tags that touching this product would expose me to lead. There was no indication of this in their advertisements. I''m now having to hustle an answer as to wheather or not to keep the stuff! What a disappointment. Everything I read says it shouldn''t be there. Consumer Product Safety Commission also says it shouldn''t be there. Their customer service says that they hvae been assured that products manufactured for jcpenney all meet their standards, but that they have to put the labels on the boxes even though they don''t have lead in them. I wonder if my table will eventually be recalled...



Please visit these other Reed Business sites