The Market Makers
What does it look like to steward a family business that started with a man who walked home from a POW camp and opened a general store? Alex Shuford III is the CEO of Rock House Designer Brands, the family behind Century Furniture, Hickory Chair, Hancock & Moore, and several other pillars of the American furniture industry. The first Alex Shuford survived Gettysburg, walked back to Hickory, North Carolina, and started trading. His grandson may or may not have won a textile company in a poker game. Three generations later, Alex is running one of the largest private furniture companies in the world—debt-free, by design. Alex talks about growing up pushed away from the family business, buying a struggling fabric store in San Francisco in his 20s, and learning every brutal lesson small business has to teach—writing checks out of his personal account, deciding which vendors got paid that week, laying people off when the dot-com bubble burst. That experience, he says, is why the 2008 collapse didn't break him. He'd already been through it at a smaller, more personal scale. He walks through the disciplined acquisition playbook that brought Hickory Chair and Hancock & Moore into the fold—always taking on debt, always paying it down aggressively, always staying ready to move when others can't. And he shares how Rock House is thinking about AI not as a threat to their craftspeople, but as a superpower for the humans who answer the phone. The prepared are often lucky. Alex has been preparing for a long time. Follow The Market Makers wherever you get your podcasts for more stories of transformation from the people shaping how we live, work, and gather.
27 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Market Makers-Community!