►Beltway
Baby Book - "Great Beginnings is a serious devotee of the
quick-stop, A-to-Z baby shopping. This colossal store is about a mile from
Lakeforest Mall...plan to spend a considerable amount of time. It takes a
while to go through every crib, stroller, and rocking chair known to
humankind. Great Beginnings offers helpful service, good value and serious
middle-of-the-road and upper end options. Their staff is the best."
►Families
Magazine - Great Beginnings
was chosen to the Best of DC guide.
►Partnership
Award - Presented to Great Beginnings by Montgomery County
Executive Douglas M. Duncan for "initiating and developing a children's
car seat inspection program." Great Beginnings dedicates space and
manpower resources to help facilitate trained safety specialists who will
check car seats for proper installation, age/size appropriateness and to
determine if the seats have been damaged or recalled. New data from the
National SAFE KIDS Campaign showed that 74.6% of seats checked in
Montgomery County from February 2001 to March 2002 were used incorrectly.
►The Washingtonian Magazine
- "Great Beginnings has a great
selection of well-priced baby and kid furniture from brands like Pali,
Sorelle, and Dutailier along with accessories like mirrors, stepstools,
and lamps, most in simple styles. Despite the huge array of merchandise,
there’s a lot of space. The service is
excellent."
►The Nest -
"a delightful, well-organized and easy to navigate store...
everything you need for your baby under one roof... friendly,
knowledgeable staff will help you choose the stroller that's right for
you... wide selection of cribs, bedding and dressers... they often beat
other stores' prices... they are willing to hold the items you purchased
until after the baby comes... staff was extremely accommodating - they
even delivered and set up a loaner crib until ours arrived"
|
 |
|
The
extensive stroller area is manned by dedicated employees who can walk
customers through the more than 200 makes and models on the floor.
|
By Jane
Kitchen
GAITHERSBURG, Md. — This 80,000-square-foot independent superstore has
been operating in the Washington D.C. metro area for 15 years with a
single store.
When designing Great Beginnings an open, airy feeling when customers walk
in the store was highly desired, and they have succeeded at that. With
22-foot ceilings, the store features neat, open room settings arranged by
manufacturer, with 120 crib vignettes and 50 teen vignettes on the floor.
Cribs range from $200 to $1,800, and include manufacturers like Ragazzi,
Pali, Munire and Natart. The teen section includes offerings from Ragazzi,
Flexa, Rumble Tuff, EG and Morigeau. Plus a clearance center allows good
deals to be found.
Around the perimeter, different sections feature apparel, feeding and
safety, toys and developmental products, gear, artwork and child-size
furniture, making the store easy to travel.
The apparel area includes brands such as Kushies and kissy kissy, and the
buying is done by a former Nordstrom clothing buyer. General Manager Brian
Green said the department focuses on boutique brands with more of a
European flavor and quality fabrics.
Great Beginnings works with several local artists who have painted murals
throughout the store in exchange for referrals to customers — a win-win
situation for artist, owner and customer. The latest mural, which towers
over the stroller section, features a Victorian park setting and adds mood
to the store’s tall walls.
The stroller and carseat area is manned by one part-time and three
full-time employees who are dedicated to that section — something that
becomes important when you have 220 strollers on display. “We show models
in every color,” Green said. “If you show it, you sell it.”
The gear section has been a success for Great Beginnings, which has both
installed carseats and conducted carseat checks for the past 10 years. The
store is very involved in the community, and Holy Cross hospital has an
office in the back of the store where Lamaze classes and babysitter
certification classes are held.
Also in the back of the store: the Bored Husbands’ Lounge, which features
leather sofas, a copper ceiling reminiscent of old-time bars, and CNN on
the television. Great Beginnings has paid attention to details; no expense
has been spared on the women’s restroom, which features Italian tile,
granite countertops, toddler-sized toilets and a nursing lounge with
leather chairs. The store also employs a full-time housekeeper to keep the
place looking good.
Like most independent specialty operators, Great Beginnings is all about
customer service, but at Great Beginnings, hand-held service is the name
of the game. The store offers personal shopping on Wednesday and Thursday
nights, where customers can set up appointments to walk through the store
with Green or another manager to pick products for registries.
Appointments are booked up six weeks in advance.
He provides the customers with his own suggestion list of must-have
products in each category, and explains his choices. For items like
strollers, he talks to the customers about their lifestyle and needs and
then helps them make their choice. The whole process takes about an hour
and a half, depending on the customer, and Green said it helps
tremendously with inventory, return rates and damage rates.
For customers who want to keep the gender of their baby a surprise, Great
Beginnings offers an innovative program where the parents pick the
merchandise for both sexes, and then the store finds out from the doctor
what the sex of the baby is and orders the appropriate pieces, so they’re
ready to be delivered after the baby arrives.
►Earnshaw's Small World Magazine-
October 2007 Edition Pages 40 & 41
“SMALL WORLD, BIG IDEA – CLASS ACT”
“As the
Nordstrom of the baby industry, Great Beginnings of Gaithersburg, MD
offers everything for new arrivals, from strollers and high chairs to
bedding. Though measuring an impressive 80,000 square feet, the mammoth
store is still a mom-and-pop shop at heart, according to general manager
Brian Green. That close knit feeling is due in large part to the services
it offers, a list that includes classes and demonstrations.
The store has
an ongoing partnership with the local fire and police departments, which
trains volunteers and gives customers free car seat inspections several
times a month. Green estimates about 22,000 car seats were installed last
year alone. ‘We’re very proactive with car seat safety and with the
liability of our own staff,’ he said.
In addition,
Great Beginnings employees work in conjunction with the nearby Holy Cross
Hospital to host infant CPR, baby massage and breastfeeding classes.
Nurses and doctors from the hospital run the sessions a few nights a week
and on the weekend. ‘It didn’t really start off as a sales technique,’
Green explained. ‘We’re a local store and we know a lot of people. Our
goal was always to establish a relationship with our customers first and
then to sell.’
While
in-store classes benefit patrons and their kids, retailers agree they
often translate into greater foot traffic, increased name recognition and
sales. ‘They’re bringing customers into the store,’ Green explained. ‘It
gets your name out there, makes you visible to the community and helps you
giveback.’ But furthermore, Green contends his store’s car seat
inspection service and breastfeeding classes are responsible for creating
big sales in those departments. ‘During the breaks, customers walk around
the store and impulse buy-they’re getting lotions, outfits and bottles,’
he noted.”
| As seen in, quoted or referenced: Washington Post
Washingtonian Magazine
Denver Post
The Nest
Kids Today Magazine
Small World
Family Magazine
|
Baby Bargain Book
Lila Guide
Monkeysee.com
Gazette Newspapers
Beltway Baby Book
NBC, ABC and CBS local news
Courier Newspapers |
