- Tess Van Straaten Photography by Lia Crowe
Chris Rotheryās passion for furniture and design dates back to when he was still in high school.
āIt might have started in shop class!ā says the 45-year-old owner of , a high-end furniture store in Victoria and now Nanaimo, with a laugh. āI became interested in furniture in my late teens and I like doing something with my hands. I appreciate quality and I appreciate other people creating things that are beautiful and interesting and quality, so Iāve always wanted to be a part of that.ā
After graduating from , Chris spent a few years making furniture for different companies before starting his own custom furniture business, making dining tables, chairs, free-standing cabinets and other pieces out of a little workshop in Rock Bay.
āI then opened up a little gallery in Dragon Alley [where he was living at the time] and eventually, we moved out of there to a slightly larger place, and then another slightly larger place, and then another slightly larger place,ā Chris explains. āI didnāt have much business experience, so I was just kind of winging it, but with just a lot of passion and care and love for design and interiors.ā
The next progression for Chris was to move more into a retail direction, after he found his passion for creating furniture waning.
āI found that it was difficult to do it as a job and still love it,ā he explains. āI was just trying to get by, and I felt very compromised making furniture. But I enjoy talking about furniture, and I enjoy interacting with people about it, so the retail aspect came from that.ā
That store, Only Human Modern Furniture, would also teach Chris the toughest lesson of this entrepreneurial evolution. After a couple of hard years, he was forced to close the store in 2014.
āI was in way over my head and I think I let my passion interest rule everything, when really I needed to balance that out with a successful business,ā Chris admits, saying it was the biggest mistake of his career.
āThat was a very painful mistake at the time and the failure was excruciating. But in retrospect, itās what got me to where I am now, which is a place where I feel comfortable, and I feel good and confident about what Iām doing. All the things that Iāve been picking up were worth something and they got put back into a package that is Chester Fields.ā
Chris also decided to partner with Ross Taylor and Amber Leask, who had a lot more business experience, when Chester Fields launched in Victoria more than nine years ago, offering modern, high-quality, and mostly Canadian-designed furniture and lightning.
āWe have a really unique offering in that what we sell here, with a couple of small exceptions, isnāt sold anywhere else in town, and probably 80 per cent of whatās in our showroom is designed by Canadians, which is a point of pride for me,ā he says. āWeāve always been purveyors of things that are sort of on the cutting edge in terms of design.ā
With people driving from all over Vancouver Islandāfrom Campbell River and the Comox Valley to Port Alberni, Nanaimo and the Cowichan Valleyāto visit the Victoria store, Chester Fields opened the Nanaimo location in May, and Chris says the response from the Central Island market has been great.
āWe get a lot of people walking in and they say things like: āFinally, thereās something like this!ā and āIām so glad youāre here!ā and āNanaimo needs something like this!ā So, itās been very positive. And then thereās lots of people who are just seeing this kind of stuff for the first time.ā
For Chris, who recently completed a Bachelor of Commerce in Entrepreneurial Management at Royal Roads University, the biggest lesson in his small business career has been that you canāt be everything to everyone.
āYou have to kind of stick to what youāre very good at and push that, and roll with it, and really go for it,ā he advises. āDefining what we areāand what weāre bringing to the consumerāhas been really important, so that we arenāt chasing something new all the time. Weāre doing what weāre really good at.ā
Chris says this all stems from the best advice heās ever been given, which is to really understand your customerās needs, and then be very good at satisfying that need.
āYou really need to ask people what they want,ā Chris says. āDonāt presume you know! Just because you think you have a good business idea, doesnāt mean it will work. Ask and make sure, and youāll probably find you might be wrong or you can tweak something and really hit it out of the park.ā
Chris says he did that a lot before opening the Nanaimo store, joking that any chance he got to talk to someone moderately interested in modern furniture north of the Malahat turned into a mini market-research session.
āThereās lots of research you can do without a budget and those answers are very valuable,ā Chris explains. āThey can make you a success and save you a lot of pain.ā
With constant challenges from online competitors and more manufacturers moving toward a direct-to-consumer model, knowing your market is more important than ever in such a competitive landscape. Chris says having a physical showroom where people can actually sit on and feel things also helps.
āItās a lot easier to buy a pair of shoes online than to buy a sofa,ā he says with a laugh.
As for the career and successful business heās crafted after many design iterations?
āItās been a bit of a long winding road to get to this point and my advice to other entrepreneurs is to expect that things wonāt be a straight line,ā Chris says. āBe comfortable with uncertainty but at the same time, donāt be reckless.ā
Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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