Organized Living
Industry | Manufacturing |
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Founded | Ohio (1919) |
Headquarters | Cincinnati, Ohio |
Website | http://organizedliving.com/ |
Industry | Retail |
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Founded | Kansas (1985) |
Revenue | USD Est. $75-100 million in 2004-05[1] |
Number of employees | ~1000 in 2004-05[2] |
Organized Living, formerly known as Schulte Corp.,[3] is a company that manufactures storage and organization products for the home, sold through independent dealers in the United States and Canada.[4] Prior to 2007, Organized Living was a specialty retail chain in the United States that sold storage solutions for home and office.
The company was founded as Containers Unlimited by Mark Ferrel in Kansas in 1985,[1][2] with its first location in Overland Park.[5] In 1993, the then-two store chain changed its name from Containers and More to Organized Living.[6] By mid-1996, the chain had three stores (the original location plus two locations in St. Louis) and next expanded by adding two stores in Las Vegas in early 1997.[5] As it grew, the company consciously decided to focus expansion on markets not already served by The Container Store, its primary competitor.[7] As of mid-2000, the chain had grown to 11 stores.[8]
The store eventually grew to 25 stores before filing for bankruptcy in 2005 after planned financing did not come to fruition.[1] After private equity firm Saunders Karp & Megrue bought a majority stake in the company,[2] the former head of Bath & Body Works, Beth Pritchard, was hired in January 2004 to grow the chain into a national presence.[9] Pritchard also moved the company's headquarters from Lenexa, Kansas in the Kansas City area to Westerville, Ohio near Columbus.[1] Pritchard was released in May 2005 during the bankruptcy proceedings.[10] Pritchard cited changes in Saunder Karp's commitment to finance growth as the cause of the collapse.[2]
Schulte Corp., one of the company's biggest creditors, obtained rights to the Organized Living name in the bankruptcy, and operated OrganizedLiving.com as an online retailer through 2012.[11] On January 1, 2013, Schulte Corp. changed its corporate name to Organized Living and relaunched OrganizedLiving.com as its new website.[12][13]
See also
- The Container Store
- Hold Everything, storage chain that closed in 2006.
- Storables
References
- ^ a b c d Goins, Tony (June 24, 2005). "Organized Living liquidating stores". Columbus Business First. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ a b c d Buchanan, Doug (July 1, 2005). "'Sad deal' as Organized Living fails". Columbus Business First. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "What's in a name? For this brand, everything". Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
- ^ [(2) http://organizedliving.com/about/about-us "About Us"]. Organized Living website. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
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at position 4 (help) - ^ a b "Organized Living goes west (expanding in Las Vegas, Nevada)". HFN. June 24, 1996. Retrieved Oct 27, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Business Plus, Bulletin Board". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Jan 11, 1993. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Organized Living Stresses Solutions". HFN. Sep 21, 1998. Retrieved Oct 27, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Upscale Organized Living opening at The Summit". Birmingham Business Journal. June 9, 2000. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) [dead link ] - ^ "Organized Living names new CEO". Kansas City Business Journal. Jan 16, 2004. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ Goins, Tony (May 16, 2005). "Organized Living cuts chief in Chapter 11". Columbus Business First. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Firm shelves brass pipes for Organized Living chain". Business Courier of Cincinnati. March 30, 2007. Retrieved Oct 26, 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Organized Living Launches a New Website and Rebrands, Benefiting from 90 Years of SCHULTE Experience". Digital Journal. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
- ^ "About Us". Retrieved 15 April 2014.