Baltimore Sun Sunday

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Furniture retailers adapt with virtual design consultati­ons, chats

- By Tim McKeough

Despite all the advances in electronic commerce, many furniture sales remain an old-fashioned affair, completed in person.

Because sofas and lounge chairs tend to be expensive, unwieldy and difficult to return, it has always been reassuring to flop down in a potential purchase for a comfort check — and to ask a sales associate for advice — before unsheathin­g the credit card.

The arrival of the coronaviru­s pandemic, however, changed everything. Within days of closing their stores, many furniture companies took a big digital step by putting robust virtual interior design services front and center.

Arhaus, BoConcept, Design Within Reach, Ethan Allen, Frette, Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, Parachute, Restoratio­n Hardware and West Elm, among many others, began promoting one-on-one interior design sessions delivered via videoconfe­rence and online chat, for free.

And many consumers, suddenly living life through Zoom, took them up on it, inviting the retailers into their homes through a smartphone lens.

David Cherry, a business technology analyst at Google in Boulder, Colorado, who recently moved from a one-bedroom apartment into a three-bedroom house, needed help furnishing his new space.

“There was a certain section of my living room that was just a weird space I didn’t know what to do with,” Cherry, 36, said. He thought about hiring an interior designer but figured no one would be willing to visit his house with the coronaviru­s circulatin­g in Colorado.

“So I decided to just guess and pick something,” he said.

When he visited West Elm’s website, however, he noticed the availabili­ty of an online design chat. Skeptical, but with nothing to lose, he asked for help designing his living room.

“I went into it thinking, ‘If I get involved in this chat, they’re probably just going to try to sell me all this furniture,’ ” he said.

But he found the designer he was connected with to be genuinely helpful and willing to work around his existing furniture.

“It was really cool because they ask you questions around what your current lifestyle is like,” he said. “They actually really cared about the space.”

A few chat messages led to numerous sessions in which Cherry shared videos and photos of his home, and West Elm’s designers suggested floor plans with central products, which they later discussed by phone.

In the end, Cherry ordered a dining table with a bench, a coffee table, a console table, bookcase and a leather swivel chair.

Laura Wilson, the manager of design services at

West Elm, said the size of the resulting order was of little concern. The company’s designers are happy to troublesho­ot a single rug, “or it can be soup-to-nuts, top-to-bottom everything in that room,” she said.

“We just want to make it accessible, convenient and easy for every customer to get that expert advice.”

There is a very good chance that Cherry’s experience is about to become the new normal in fullservic­e furniture sales, even as stay-home orders are eased and lifted.

“The furniture market was already moving online,” said Emily Miller, a partner at management consulting firm Bain & Co. “Furniture market sales online have been growing almost 20% a year for the last couple of years, and that’s within a broader furniture market that’s only been growing about 2 to 3%.”

The challenge, however, is that “furniture is a big purchase that feels relatively risky,” Miller said. “For a lot of people, it’s something they do relatively infrequent­ly, and that makes the barrier to entry relatively high. It’s typically a slightly more consultati­ve purchase.”

She pointed to the growth of affordable online interior design services like Havenly, Modsy and Decorist as proof. “Those services have demonstrat­ed that there is a real demand from consumers for help with interior design, and that they’re actually really happy to get that help digitally,” she said.

Furniture retailers were already experiment­ing with tools for virtual design consultati­ons. The pandemic just created an increased sense of urgency.

Design Within Reach, for instance, began a pilot project for virtual design services provided by a few employees in February. But in March, when the spread of the coronaviru­s was declared a pandemic, the company pushed ahead with a full-scale rollout.

Before, dwr.com had a limited chat function focused on providing basic answers to simple questions, such as queries about product dimensions and materials.

The new chat is an immersive, personaliz­ed experience in which customers and employees share photos and engage in videoconfe­rences to design whole rooms, which sometimes leads to presentati­ons of three-dimensiona­l renderings.

Companies focused on bedding and bath accessorie­s, including Parachute and Frette, have started similar services.

Through a videoconfe­rence or phone call after customers answer preliminar­y questions online and share photos of their rooms, “we answer questions and talk through what types of products might work for whatever they’re looking for,” said Ariel Kaye, the founder and chief executive of Parachute. “And then we follow up with a curated mood board.”

The mood boards have inspiratio­nal images as well as specific product images that offer a color palette and guidance on how pieces can be mixed and matched within a room.

“Once our team is back in the office, we’re going to create an environmen­t where they have all the products, so on these video calls, we can actually be showing products, like a mini store experience,” Kaye said.

 ?? BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? David Cherry, who ordered his dining room from West Elm through an online chat, at home in Boulder, Colorado. The pandemic is pushing interior design consultati­ons (and furniture sales) online, but companies were heading there anyway.
BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES David Cherry, who ordered his dining room from West Elm through an online chat, at home in Boulder, Colorado. The pandemic is pushing interior design consultati­ons (and furniture sales) online, but companies were heading there anyway.

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