A Marketer in Training: Julianne Yurek

Julianne Yurek

Julianne Yurek

Although we hate to see Alison Heath leave us as director of marketing, we will be in good hands with Julianne Yurek.  Julianne, who graduated from James Madison University last spring, will be working with one of our owners, Ricardo Berrum, as she gets up to speed.

The story of how Julianne came to be with us is as interesting as any of our customers, which include her parents.

First, though – and we love this – she took a break after graduating by heading out to the Philmont Scout Ranch in Cimarron, New Mexcio. This place is like Mecca for Boy Scouts, who come from all over the country to this 165,000-acre spread each summer – 20,000 of them in all. They spend the entire summer hiking through the back country, rock climbing, logging, learning music, watching the stars, even learning about weather.

The Tooth of Time at Philmont Scout Ranch

Baldy Mountain at Philmont Scout Ranch

Julianne, who heard about the gig through an Eagle Scout friend of hers, worked at the trading post and hiked every weekend. “It’s really life-changing for some of those young men,” she says. And by the way she describes it, it might have had a similar effect on her.

When she came home for the fall, the interior design major found out that her parents had just ordered the Waterfall chest from Hardwood Artisans, but her mother was worried about the order. The light finish she requested might not go well with the yellow walls in the house, and her mother wanted to know Julianne’s opinion. “When I come home, I always play interior designer for my mom.”

She ended up calling Mark and putting the order on hold. Julie came down to the shop and met Alison to discuss a better finish for their chest. Here is the result, in mahogany with curly maple accents:

Waterfall Chest in mahogany

Waterfall Chest in mahogany

Waterfall Chest side detail in curly maple

Waterfall Chest side detail in curly maple

While Julianne was there working out the new design and finish, she and Alison got to talking, Alison asked for a resume, and as it would happen, Alison’s assistant ended up leaving fairly soon thereafter for another job. Enter, Julianne!

Now that she’s been here for five months, we asked her about her favorite pieces. “I’m still on the fresh-out-of-college budget,” she says, but: “I’ve been eyeing the platform pedestal bed – I really love it.”

Platform Pedestal Bed

Platform Pedestal Bed

She’s also falling for the Shinto Bench. “It has beautiful details in it – it’s an elegant design.”

Shinto Bench

Shinto Benches in mahogany and walnut

We asked Julianne about her marketing goals for us, and she said she’s most interested in featuring the work of local artisans in the Fairfax showroom. “I think it will be neat to involve more local artists in our store and bring the community together,” she says.

She also wants to put more of her interior and graphic design skills to work. “I believe our furniture is a functional piece of art and deserves that respect. I am excited to engage more interior designers and art collectors with our company and keep up the excellent reputation it already has,” she says.

We have nothing but great expectations.

Auf Wiedersehen, Good-Bye

Must all good things really come to an end?  Alison Heath, our marketing director extraordinaire, will be leaving us after this week. Her last day in the showroom is Sunday.
Alison Heath

Alison Heath

She came to us in 2007 after a career in marketing for non-profit organizations, and after a well-earned spring break, she plans to return to that realm. We’re just happy she decided to venture into our realm for a few years.

It all started when Alison was at the Convention Industry Council, but she had developed a habit for vintage and antique furniture on the side. “That was part of why, when I was looking through The Washington Post Magazine, I noticed a curly maple Waterfall coffee table” in our regular ad, she says.

Waterfall Coffee Table in curly maple

Waterfall Coffee Table in curly maple

She looked us up online, and loved the furniture. “Most people wonder, ‘Which piece should I buy?’ But I was wondering if these people needed any help.”

Alison called General Manager and Co-Founder Greg Gloor, and they later met for an informational interview. That led to Alison working in the showroom part time for about nine months while she kept her day job. Two years later, however, she signed on full time with us.

I asked her what her favorite parts of the job were. “It all comes down to the customers. Where in the furniture world do people just come for a visit?”

Customers – especially our repeat-customers – will often stop into one of our showrooms, ostensibly to look for something new, but end up staying for an hour just to chat.

“It’s like going to work and meeting the coolest new people every week,” Alison says. She adds that another favorite element was writing the newsletter.

“I loved it when someone would come up to me in the showroom and mention something I had written about, like the 3/50 Project (www.the350project.net), which promotes shopping at independent retailers,” Alison says. “It made me feel like I was providing a valuable service and it was fun to share some of my values, like buying local, and events that I enjoy, like Smithsonian programs and exhibitions, with other people who would ‘get it’.”

So why is she leaving? At 31, she’s still exploring different avenues in the marketing world, and she wants to make room for some “balance,” she says, such as her volunteer work with the Smithsonian, her church, and her family when they come into town from California.

And we admit it – a seven-day retail operation has a way of invading every pore of your life – but in a good way, right?

At any rate, it will be hard for her to forget us, as she is the proud owner of two pieces by Hardwood Artisans – a file cabinet she helped design (“sort of a combination of the Linnaea and Essentials styles”), and the pièce de résistance: A platform bed with floating headboard.

Alisons dresser and sideboard

Alison's dresser and sideboard

Alisons Platform Pedestal Bed

Alison's Platform Pedestal Bed

Alisons file cabinet

Alison's file cabinet

“Once you get accustomed to a certain quality of furniture, it’s hard to go back,” Alison says.

We all hope she’ll keep her word and continue coming back to visit. We wish her the best of luck!

P.S.  From Mark Gatterdam: Alison’s leaving is very hard for me to get used to. Since almost day one she and I have worked to update the look of Hardwood Artisans. We agreed and fought and settled with each other. We completed each others sentences. She has done a lot of good for this company, and I for one am a much better person for having known her.