The New Zealand Herald

New owner will rebrand furniture chain

- Matthew Theunissen

The buyer of embattled PK Furniture says the chain is going to be nothing like it used to be, with a complete rebrand and change of direction.

PK Furniture, which at one point ran 17 North Island stores, went into receiversh­ip in May owing its creditors $22 million.

It was recently bought by newlyincor­porated firm Highbury Group, whose sole director Stephen Salmon told the Herald he planned to keep five stores and retain about 50-60 of its 150 staff.

Salmon, who has been in retail for the past 42 years, was PK’s general manager of sales and marketing for about a year before it went into receiversh­ip.

“Literally weeks after I started it became pretty clear what a big hole that business was in and how much work it required,” he said, not least the name, which stood for “Price Killer”.

“One of the first things I said to the owner was that in the hostile world we live in, using the word ‘killer’ isn’t such an endearing thing. So we dropped that within a few months and we introduced the PK Panda.”

Salmon said he had faith in the company’s business model, but said the reason it had failed was because of a “distressed owner as opposed to being a distressed business”.

“I agree that the name is definitely tainted and I fully understand and appreciate that. We are going to create what I believe is a brand new entity and a brand new identity.”

The new business, which had yet to come up with a trading name, had let go of all former directors and would introduce a completely new line of stock, while trying to retain a position in the value-for-money end of the market, where most purchases were made.

The stores that would be kept and opened mid-September were in Manukau, Sylvia Park, Dominion Rd, Pukekohe and Hamilton.

Salmon, who is originally from Surrey in the UK, said he was “born into retail” with his parents owning a greengroce­ry.

He left school at 15 and got his first job in the butchery of a Sainsbury’s supermarke­t, working his way up the organisati­on’s hierarchy to management level at a time the chain was going through a huge expansion.

He moved to New Zealand with his Kiwi wife and fortuitous­ly met retailing giant Sir David Levene, who he said became something of a father figure to him. His own father died when Salmon was 8.

Salmon, 57, has held high-ranking positions with the Levene home decorating chain, Briscoe Group, Guthrie Bowron, Smiths City and Rebel Sport.

Salmon said he would try to help the customers who had ordered but not received their purchases from the old owners of PK furniture.

 ??  ?? Stephen Salmon
Stephen Salmon

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