How I Built This with Guy Raz - Room & Board: John Gabbert. A Broken Deal, a Family Rift, and the Birth of a Furniture Giant
Episode Date: May 11, 2026John Gabbert built a massive furniture brand. But in order to do it, he had to defy his family. John grew up working at his dad’s furniture store in the suburbs of Minneapolis. It sold... classic, American-made furniture, with flowery prints and curved legs. But in 1972, John took a life-changing trip to Sweden, where he discovered an obscure store called IKEA. It was selling an entirely different type of furniture: simple, modern, and inexpensive, with a manufacturing process they controlled. To John, it looked like the future of furniture. The only problem, his dad didn’t agree. That disagreement led to a 10-year family rift—but also a new business. In 1980—zafter a deal to buy out his dad broke down—John spun out his own furniture brand, Room & Board. Today, it sells hundreds of millions of dollars of furniture in its own classic designs, mostly made by small American manufacturers. This is the story of how John did it, without outside investors, and without chasing growth for growth’s sake.What You’ll LearnWhy the right thing for your business might be the hardest thing for your familyHow John connected with young boomers—not their parents The key to long-term success: growing slow and saying “no”Why John refused private equity moneyWhy Room & Board transitioned to employee ownershipTimestamps:00:06:10 - Gabberts: flowery furniture in a fake living room00:09:41 - Becoming president of the family business at age 2300:13:33 - A fateful trip to IKEA in Sweden: “That's what the future needed to be”00:18:36 - John tries to buy out the family business… until his dad backs out00:35:47 - Design inspiration from modern art—and steel frames00:46:38 - Why making furniture in America makes sense00:55:27 - Investors come to call… and John says no01:01:48 - The decision that transferred ownership to employeesThis episode was produced by Chris Maccini with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant with research help from Rommel Wood. Our engineers were Patrick Murray and Kwesi Lee. Follow How I Built This:Instagram → @howibuiltthisX → @HowIBuiltThisFacebook → How I Built ThisFollow Guy Raz:Instagram → @guy.razYoutube → guy_razX → @guyrazSubstack → guyraz.substack.comWebsite → guyraz.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to How I Built This, a show about innovators, entrepreneurs, idealists, and the stories behind the movements they built.
I'm Guy Raz, and on the show today, how John Gabbard left his family's furniture business to branch out on his own with room and board, a national brand that was inspired by IKEA.
Many, if not most, businesses we profile on this show started with an insight that the founder or founders translated into opportunity.
And for John Gabbard, that insight happened on a trip to Sweden.
It was the early 1970s, and on that visit, he walked into a store that at the time, most of the same.
most Americans had never heard of. It was called IKEA. And what impressed John wasn't just
the designs he saw, though that was part of it. What struck him was the whole idea, that a store
could design its own furniture, control how it was made, keep costs down, and then sell it
directly to customers without all the layers in between. And when John came back to Minneapolis,
he couldn't stop thinking about this concept. Because at the time, he was working for the
the family business, a furniture store his dad started called Gabbertz. Gabberts was a pretty
successful local business, but what it sold was completely different than what John saw in Sweden.
Gabbard's furniture was the kind of stuff your parents or grandparents might have bought in the
1950s. But this was the 1970s. Baby boomers were starting to buy homes and build families.
And John believed that these customers would want more modern designs, more functional
and more affordable.
Unfortunately, John's dad didn't see it that way.
And over time, their differences in vision started to create real tension.
And that tension would eventually lead to a decade-long family estrangement.
John walked away from the family business and bought out a small experimental division he
had created inside of it.
He called it room and board.
And over the next two decades, the brand would evolve into a modern, mainly American-made furniture brand.
known for its use of steel, solid wood, and natural fabrics.
Today, room and board sells hundreds of millions of dollars worth of furniture a year,
and the company has never taken on outside investment.
Like the customers who originally inspired him,
John Gabbert is a true baby boomer, born just after World War II in 1946.
He grew up in the suburbs of Minneapolis,
working at Gabbards from a pretty early age,
and while we might associate the 1950s and 60s,
with mid-century modern furniture,
John says that is not what was selling in Minnesota at the time.
People today think of mid-century as being popular then,
but that was not the popular design at all.
The popular was more of this American colonial turned legs,
fabrics that had prints and flowers and birds on them.
It was a very Americana sort of feeling.
Where was the, was all the furniture at that time that he sold? Was it made in the U.S.? It was. It literally was all made in the United States.
And was it made locally or was he importing it from or bringing it in from all over the country?
You know, North Carolina was really the headquarters where furniture was made. But there was some made in New England, Michigan, Grand Rapids a little bit.
Still today, right? North Carolina and Vermont, even Michigan has still.
Yeah, exactly. But North Carolina was by the.
by far the focus of it. Family businesses in North Carolina that made the bulk of the furniture in the United States.
So I guess from what I understand, what made that store interesting and different was that at the time, a lot of furniture stores would just have furniture displayed, like you would just see rows of chairs or rows of desks or beds, but he actually decorated them as fully decorated room.
So you could see what it would look like in a room.
That is correct.
Was that unusual at the time?
That was unusual for retailers at the time, but it was a fairly common practice in North Carolina as manufacturers displayed their product to sell to retailers.
And my dad hired one of the designers that worked in North Carolina to do the store and present the furniture that way.
I read that.
He designed a part of this furniture store where people could sit and have coffee.
and there was even like an area for kids to play at.
I mean, this is in the 60s.
That just seems really unusual.
It was really unusual.
And you'll talk to adults today that say,
I remember when I was, you know, 50 years ago,
I was a kid and spent time there.
Yep.
So as a kid, like as a high school kid,
I mean, was your life weekends and after school working the store?
I would work in the store.
summers, probably starting when I was 16 or 17. You know, I would just do basic movement of product
and unpacking and that sort of thing. And did you, I mean, was it kind of assumed either in
the family or even from your perspective that you would join the business? You know, that's an
interesting question because I think about that today and I just never, I never asked the
question. I just assumed that I would go into the business.
While you were in college, were you also working at the store?
I was, yes, yes.
I went to University of Minnesota, and I actually, I don't have any degree.
I rejected taking a lot of the required courses.
I took business courses, design, art-related courses.
I knew I was heading into the business, and it was a combination of I was being groomed,
and I think my dad had worked really hard his entire life.
he had purchased a home in Florida.
He'd fallen in love with golf.
And basically for six months of the year, he was gone.
And so as I started working first as a salesperson, then picking up different management roles,
in a fairly short period of time, I was running the business.
And what do that mean?
Like you were dealing with inventory, you were managing personnel.
you were managing personnel, people, the staff, all those things?
Yeah, very quickly it was everything.
Yeah.
And he acknowledged it, and I was president at, I think I was 23.
How did you learn how to do those things?
Because, you know, managing people, for example, what do you remember about learning how to be a boss?
I don't know.
initially how I learned it. I guess much of that came later through reading. I must say Jim Collins.
Good degree, yeah. Yeah, great books about what it is to be a manager and all of that. I don't remember the exact year I started reading that, but that literally became my Bible. Margaret Wheatley, she's written several books about management in a kind of different point of view. So she was the second influence on me. I think I just felt comfortable.
I just felt comfortable making the design, merchandise decisions.
I basically felt comfortable managing people that were older than me, which almost everyone was.
Do you remember finding it stressful or challenging, or do you remember being like thrilling and exciting?
Probably initially exciting, but over a relatively short period of time, I became frustrated with the process.
So it was a process where the manufacturers really controlled the product.
You went to market, you went to different manufacturers that were well known then,
and you'd select, oh, I'd like to carry this or that or whatever.
Or they'd say, you can't carry this because Dayton's now has it or somebody else.
And it was especially complicated because they didn't ever make the product for a very long period of time.
So there was tremendous turn of product based upon the manufacturer's decisions
who carry something or not carry it.
If it sold well for us in Minneapolis,
it may not sell for the rest of the country,
and they would drop it.
So you'd be starting over.
So I became quickly frustrated with that process.
And then the salespeople were all on commission.
And I became very frustrated with that process
because the truth is if somebody's working for you
on 100% commission,
they're working for themselves.
They're not working for you.
All right, let's break this down a little bit.
So the employees were on 100% commission, which I don't think you can do that today.
I think in most states it's not, probably not allowed.
I think you have to pay a salary.
But in theory, you could do very well or you could do not so well.
I mean, you can walk out of working a whole day and make a zero dollars in theory.
Exactly right.
And I don't think they were doing what was actually best for the customer.
Because they were really just trying to make a sale.
They were just trying to make a sale.
Got it.
Okay.
The other part of it is you were getting your furniture from manufacturers in North Carolina and New England and maybe Michigan.
And you had no input.
Like if they, whatever they made, you sold.
But I think that's that that makes sense.
I mean, obviously it has changed today.
But from their perspective, they're thinking, well, you guys are just a sales channel.
Like we make the thing and you put it in your store and keep your mouth shut and sell it.
Exactly.
You know, we were one retailer basically in Minnesota.
I mean, not a lot of impact to them at all.
They were doing their own thing.
Yeah.
You probably did not have much, much pull there, right?
You didn't carry a lot of yet.
No, not at all.
But in 1972, I took a tour with a company to visit other retailers around Europe, primarily.
And I went to IKEA.
and at that point I think they had a couple stores in Sweden and one in Germany maybe
but as I learned more about what they do the design I really was fascinated by the design
and the whole process of lower cost product that's well designed but what really fascinated me
was their process in that they designed everything and then they went to at that time eastern
Europe to have it made so they kind of turned the process upside down and
And they said, we are the creators of the product.
You are going to be to manufacture and manufacture what we determine for the value that we want,
for the period of time that we'd like you to continue to make it.
And that really hit me as, oh, this makes a whole lot more sense from the retailer's point of view.
So essentially, when you saw IKEA in Europe, this is the first time that you saw a furniture company,
a furniture store that actually was selling furniture that they designed.
Yes.
And so the manufacturer was just making their designs to spec.
Yep.
That must have been like a road to Damascus moment, like so revelatory.
It was, absolutely.
I mean, I just remember being startled by how much sense it makes,
knowing that the frustrations are with dealing with American manufacturers,
the way the process was set up.
And I couldn't do a lot about it at that time.
But I tucked it away and knew that that's what the future needed to be.
Okay, so you have this trip to Europe, E.C. Ikea, and you come back to the U.S. and you're running Gabberts, and you were seeing at Gabberts, you were seeing stuff that was, that I guess sounds like you don't really like a lot of the stuff that was being sold.
Yeah, you know, it's, what happened, though, is I started changing things at Gabberts, and I found little, little openings, right?
So I found a New England manufacturer that wasn't doing all that great.
And they were really interested in a true partnership in terms of product being designed together,
or being literally vertically integrated as a manufacturer and retailer.
And I started down that road of finding those people that were different kinds of manufacturers.
And what's the idea you had?
I mean, you start to figure out how can we take some of this IKEA model?
and apply it to Gabberts.
Is that fair?
Is that where you were starting thinking?
That's totally fair.
Yep, that's exactly right.
So how are you going to do that?
Well, it was mostly imported product.
There was some made in the United States.
We just opened this small department inside of Gabbard's.
It was called Put Together originally.
I think we then called it Home and Company.
And it was like a section of Gabbards.
It was just a home and company.
And it was just modern stuff that you would assemble at home.
And it was a small section.
You know, if the store was 100,000 square feet, this was 4,000.
And much less expensive than what sold?
Much, much, much less expensive.
And how did it do?
It did fair, just fair.
Not great, but it was okay.
Okay, so what this kind of furniture line that had different names was called Put Together and then Home and Company,
it eventually you guys started calling it room and board?
Yes.
I just sat down with a couple of friends and we talked about names and something that was not too specific.
So it's had some reference to home.
I think I realized later that a room and board was more of a Midwestern term.
In East Coast, it's like bedenboard.
But it worked and that's how we got.
It was just a maybe not very thoughtful process, but one that has worked okay.
Okay, meantime, the family business, Gabberts, is expanding, right?
I mean, you, you, I believe, opened a second store in Dallas in 1973.
And then at some point, maybe it's around like 1980, you actually approach your dad with a proposal to take over the business, to take over Gabberts.
Tell me about this idea you had.
Well, it was first came.
I was on the National Home Furnishings Association Board of Directors.
I was the youngest member by maybe 15 or 20 years.
So we'd have our board meetings.
And after the board meetings, you'd sit around and talk and have a beer.
And it seems like the conversations for most of the other board members who were in their 40s and 50s evolved to, you know, their old man still owns the business.
What is the transition like?
That typical generational transfer.
So I listened to that and I went back to my dad.
this must have been in 77 maybe.
And I said, can we agree that I'm going to buy you out?
I'm running the business.
I'm going to running the business for a while.
Things are going pretty well.
And we had a legal document signed that I would buy enough of his shares of the business that I would have controlling interest.
Okay.
So he agreed and you were going to have.
And when you came to this agreement, how many years before he would,
he would
I'm thinking it was 77 or 76
when we agreed
and the date was October 1st, 1980.
He would step aside,
you would buy his shares
and then you would become
the full owner of Gabbards.
I would be the controlling owner
because I had siblings
that sell own some shares,
yeah.
Got it, okay.
Okay, that date comes 1980,
the moment for your dad
to sell the shares
and what happens?
I simply went to him,
said, here we have the agreement, and he said, I'm not going to do it. I said, we have a legal
agreement. And he said, I'm not going to do it. What was your dad's reasoning? I mean, he wanted to
retire. He was in semi-retirement already, from what I understand, going to Florida. What was the
reasoning he gave you? He thought the things that I was doing was going to ruin the company.
I mean, it was his baby. Gabbas was the business that he built.
and I was running it and I was making changes, and he thought those changes were a serious mistake.
And then you add on what was going on in the 70s in terms of the economy.
Interest rates were crazy.
I mean, it was a strange time.
We continued to be profit the entire time, but not overly profitable in that period of time.
So he just thought it was a big mistake for the business.
He was worried you were going to run it into the ground.
Yes, exactly.
Well, when we come back in just a moment, the family business comes to a crossroads, which might be good for the business, but is not so good for the family.
Stay with us. I'm Guy Raz, and you're listening to How I Built This.
Hey, welcome back to How I Built This. I'm Guy Raz.
So it's 1980, and John Gabbert is trying to recover from a gut punch.
His dad has reneged on an agreement to sell John the family furniture business.
So I went to my attorney and he said, well, this is the deal.
It's a clear document.
It will take two to three years, but you could win in court if that's what you want to do.
But let's talk about what some of the other options are.
So my dad's proposal as a solution was I would move to Dallas with my family and run the Dallas store.
And my younger brother would step in and run the Minneapolis.
store, and I was, that I'm not interested in moving to Dallas. So I went back to him with the
proposal that I would buy what was then room and board as a division of Gabbards, and basically
trade my stock. I owned about 30% of the business, and I would trade that 30% for the full
ownership of room and board. Okay, you had this legal agreement with your dad, and you at some point
considered taking him to court, which would have been very, that's a lot of friction,
taking your own dad to court.
I imagine, I mean, did you consider doing it?
Was that something that you might have done?
No, no, no.
I mean, I sat with the attorney and we quickly said, you don't want to do that.
That's not something you want to do to your family.
It's just disruptive to everybody.
So that's how we said, what are some of the alternatives?
And we came up with the alternative of just my vacating,
gabberts and buying what was then going to be room and board.
Okay, your proposal was, all right, fine.
You don't want to sell me the business.
I just want this slice of the business that I kind of created, this modern furniture thing.
And what did you get for that?
Would you get inventory?
I mean, you had this kind of name that room and board, but it wasn't a brand.
So what were you actually buying?
I was buying some locations that were open.
So we had leasehold improvements and inventory.
Okay, so you actually had opened a few locations.
Yes, we had opened a few locations.
How many? Do you remember?
I think there were three at the time.
And they were, where were they?
They were in Denver and Minneapolis.
Okay.
And at that point, under the name, Rumen Board.
Yes.
First of all, was it like what IKEA furniture is today?
I mean, mostly it's particle board.
It's not solid wood.
A lot of veneers.
assemble your own.
Is that what you were selling?
That's what
Ruman Board basically
was at that time.
It was still that
IKEA-like product.
And that enabled you
to sell it for low price
because particle board
is a lot cheaper
than solid wood.
Right, right, yeah.
And I wouldn't say
particle board was the focus.
But then there were things
made of plastic.
There was, you know,
more innovative.
I think people perceived
it as temporary furniture.
Yeah.
And by the way,
I think IKEA furniture
much of it is high quality. I think it's a great, you know, value for money for sure. But a lot of it is
particle board and veneer and, you know, not always the kind of furniture you're going to have for
25 years. Right. But the price point reflects that. Yeah, exactly. And so your customers were like,
what, I mean, college students or people out of college, young people, you know, with their first
apartments, that kind of thing? That and then older customers in secondary parts of the house. You know,
do the basement for the kids, that kind of thing.
Yeah.
Yep.
Okay.
So you gave up your shares of Gabberts, which were worth, I think, about $800,000 at the time.
Yep.
And you got these three locations, this room and board, which you had started internally in Gaberts.
Right.
And your idea was, okay, let me see what I can do with this thing.
Yes, exactly.
Before we get to what you did, let's talk about this decision in general.
I mean, you are leaving the family business that you had run at this point now for almost a decade.
Your dad, he kind of decides that he does not want to go through with this plan that you guys had agreed upon.
What did that mean for the family?
I mean, it must have been not an easy time.
time. No, it was it was not an easy time and it was a little more complicated because I owned about
30% of the business. I had three siblings that each owned about 10 and I sat with each of them and said,
okay, here's your choice. You can vote with me and I'll continue to run the business and this is
my future or you can choose not to vote with me and they all chose not to vote with me. So that
complicated it even more. Wow. So you've gone to your siblings and said, hey, if you guys
vote with me, we have 60% control and, you know, I'll run the business and I'll grow it. If not,
you know, and they decide not to. They went with your dad. Yes, exactly. And so I'm sure this is
not easy to talk about even now, decades later. I'm sure it's still quite painful, but,
I mean, it's also business that happens in businesses, right? Family businesses for sure.
All the time.
We've certainly dealt with it on this show.
That's not just a business disagreement.
That's a family fallout.
That's personal.
Very, very personal.
Absolutely.
Yeah, no, I basically didn't see family for at least 10 years.
Wow.
So you kind of, I mean, you were estranged.
You were estranged from family.
Yes.
But also living in the same city, right?
Yes.
Oh, yes.
So did you just stop talking to them?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it was difficult.
And on top of that, you're competing now against your family.
Actually, strangely enough, not directly for the first years.
I kind of avoided what that was.
So room and board stayed what it was, which is more of this IKEA-like product,
which didn't compete directly.
and I think I subconsciously said that's fine.
It's interesting.
I spent those next six or eight years.
I did a variety of things.
I started a business called Bedrooms for Kids.
I had a wholesale showroom.
I bought a design studio.
So I spent, as I look at it now,
I kind of wasted eight years doing things
instead of building room and board.
Tell me why.
What do you remember about that time?
you thought it was better to just be diversified?
You know, I really asked, I asked myself that question today and say, well, what was I thinking?
Why did I try those different things?
And I looked back.
It was a bad, it was not a good time from a business standpoint.
I was doing too many things.
It was just a mistake.
Were you making money yourself?
Some, but not a lot.
and I didn't feel like I was doing something that was important to me.
I started having this clear vision of what room and board could be,
and as that grew in my mind, it became clearly clear to me that that's way more important to me than doing all of these other things.
Okay, this is happening against the backdrop of a family rift that had happened.
So there's that personal component that is not easy.
And then there's the professional component, which is it is what it is.
I wonder, do you remember at that time between 1980, let's say 1980 and 1988, ever having doubts, ever thinking,
God, I think I might have made a mistake?
I don't think I had doubts about my choice at Gabbard's initial choice, right?
I knew that was the right thing to do.
I certainly started having doubts about the focus on those different businesses.
And that's when I really, it was about 88, 87, that, you know, I turned 40.
It's a time when you think about life and you say, what's the rest of it going to be?
And that led me to really reevaluating the whole process and making the changes pretty quickly.
All right.
So you decide to give up on these other businesses, the kids' furniture and I guess the design studio and really focus on room and board.
And I guess one of the things you do is move your store in Edina into a much bigger space, right?
Absolutely.
And the decision seemed pretty easy.
We moved room and board into this much larger building.
and part of what we did is we put room and board in,
and then we created another department, if you will,
which focused on better quality, American made,
at a considerably higher price.
And I think the shock that hit us is our room and board customers,
once they saw that, they bought it.
They bought it readily and easily,
and it just opened our eyes to the fact that this customer we were trying to,
appeal to, you know, out of college, not a lot of income. They don't mind having the IKEA-like product.
Well, now it's 10 years later, and they're established in their job, and they want more, not temporary
furniture, they want permanent furniture. And they saw what we had, which was really quite beautiful
American-made. And it sold way more than we expected. Okay, so you've got to expect it.
and now you have an opportunity to add a new line, and you decide, okay, let's go up a notch and we'll still sell this flat-packed assemble at-home stuff.
But let's see if we can make more sort of high-quality design furniture.
But who is going to make this stuff?
Well, we were aware of a few of these mostly New England manufacturers, some in the Midwest, that made this beautiful,
quality product. Okay. And so were you going out to these places yourself and saying, I like that,
I like that, I like that. Because this is before the internet. This is, you know, there were catalogs,
but these places didn't have catalogs. It was a few people in a garage, not a garage, but in a small warehouse.
You know, strangely, one, if there's a furniture market in North Carolina, right, where everybody,
shows, and usually these little guys don't show. But the state of Vermont, for one market,
happened to rent a space for these different Vermont manufacturers. And we happened upon those people
about that same time we were going into that space. And that became our initial connection.
So the design pieces from Vermont, what did those look like? I mean, did that, how would you
describe that look? Because I think you were going for a very different kind of look than a
Gabberts or a store-like, and probably most furniture stores in America, were like
Gabberts? Yes. It was very different look. The focus was really on the wood itself.
So it was like classic, simple designs that really focused on the beauty of the solid wood.
They have a reference to arts and crafts. They have a reference to some Japanese design.
There's been periods of time where there's been a reaction against overindulgence and too much decoration.
And it's more about the simplicity.
And that's what this product was about.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting because it's hard to describe, like, you know, people will say, well, what, how did you know what to pick?
And your answer probably is going to be something like, I picked what I liked, right?
Is that true?
True.
Yeah, it's very true.
And here you are.
And not, and please don't take this the wrong way.
you grew up in, you know, the suburbs of Minneapolis in the 50s and 60s. You know, you had a shop in Edina, Minnesota. And yet you had developed, I think, a pretty sophisticated design sensibility. Yes. I think that's true.
So how did that come about? What influenced that? I think something that influenced it as much as anything else, even though it's not direct, is the Walker Art Center.
Ah, interesting, yes.
A significant museum.
Significant museum with a very modernistic point of view.
Yes.
I mean, I think it's considered the third best contemporary modern museum in the country behind New York and San Francisco.
They were in the forefront of doing all kinds of amazing things, especially as artists were developing and coming along.
So it was just, it was exposure to a pretty.
sophisticated point of view of design that was be unusual for Minneapolis.
Do you remember any particular artist that struck you?
Oh, my favorite of all time is Martin Purrier, who's a sculptor.
I actually have several pieces and have given a couple to the Walker.
And he does a lot of stuff in wood, right?
He does a lot of stuff in wood, but also in metal and bronze.
You know, simple little things like, I don't remember the art itself, but I remember the framing.
Some of the pieces was just raw steel.
Simple steel that was welded.
You can see the weld marks.
And I looked at that and hit me, oh, how perfect for furniture.
That's really interesting.
That makes a lot of sense because anyone who knows room and board furniture will know that a lot of your iconic pieces are steel, basically steel framed.
Exactly.
Like tables or kitchen sort of island.
lens or, you know, how...
Right.
It's, and you see the steel, like on the credenza, like, you see the steel legs.
Yes.
So that's, that was the, I think that was the single biggest influence that came from Minneapolis.
John, I'm curious about the storytelling side, because I remember the first time going into a room and board store and seeing little signs like, this is, this is the guy in Vermont who makes this or this is the person who designed this.
Now you see this everywhere, right?
You even see it at IKEA.
Right.
And tell me about how that started.
I mean, did it start because you felt like you wanted people to understand why these pieces were more expensive and why they and what the reasoning behind it was?
Like, I guess to sort of telegraph the idea was that this is high quality and artisanally made and designed in the U.S.
I don't know.
What was the sort of the spark that had you guys start to tell stuff?
stories around the pieces of furniture.
I think the spark was information from our design associates in the stores kind of referring
how much people like to know what they just spent a fair amount of money for, what the story
is behind it.
They like to know that piece of furniture in their home and where it was made and why it was
made that way and what the materials are.
That's not everybody, but a certain percentage really want to understand that.
That's a connection to what they purchased.
Okay.
So you are, you're working with these designers or manufacturers.
You get these pieces in.
And again, like you're picking stuff out that you like, but with the idea that it was going to be purchased by people around your age, let's say professionals between 30 and 50.
Correct.
So you open this look.
up and how does it do?
I think that was, it was a moment that's really room and board.
It gave me confidence to take room and board to a different spot.
These things that you would not think our customers would be interested in,
at the price point seemed too high, and it sold really well.
And it just told me, oh, this is the time to change.
This is the time to move on to the next phase of what it can be.
When we come back in just a moment, John starts getting calls from investors looking to cash in on his success and why he says no to all of them.
Stay with us, I'm Guy Raz, and you're listening to How I Built This.
Hey, welcome back to How I Built This. I'm Guy Raz.
So it's the early 1990s, and John is starting to develop a distinctive room and board style.
And he's making the furniture in just the way he'd imagined years earlier when he made that very first trip to high.
IKEA. The way we did that was a process of finding people that could make the product and seal
was actually one of the first great examples. So what we would, we found actually a security gate
manufacturer, had a tiny little factory and said, how about making some furniture?
They made security gates.
Security gates. And you said make furniture.
And we said make furniture. And it would be, it would be the frame of a sofa or
or it would literally be, what would it look like?
The initial pieces were a dining table.
Uh-huh.
Right?
And you just take two inch by two-inch steel.
Okay.
And you make a classic Parsons frame that you have different levels of tops that sit on it,
different kinds of tops that sit on it.
Okay, these Parsons tables, I don't know if everyone knows them,
but it's a very simple minimalist table.
It's a long table.
It's got four thin tables.
steel legs, very strong.
And then on the top, you can put wood, you can put marble, you can put...
Wood tops, marble tops, glass tops.
It's one of our best-selling products today.
To this day.
Today, that same product, same manufacturer.
Yeah, they're the second largest manufacturer today, as a matter of fact.
The same company that you worked, that was making Secure Gates is now mainly making your steel frames for your tables?
Yes.
And how did you come up?
I mean, who even thought of, let's go to these guys you're making steel gates and have them make furniture for us and make a, was there, what inspired that design, which would become this best selling product that you would have?
I mean, I think that's what I brought to the business then, not so much now, is that inspiration for design just because I'm so interested in it.
Pretty soon you find the right partner and then it gets pretty easy and you do one.
and then you do more.
And first he did tables, and then he does beds.
And the way I describe it often, if you buy a table and chairs from us,
it probably is coming from four different manufacturers.
Because the person that makes the chair well is not the same person that makes a wood top well.
The person that does the upholstery seat is very different than the person that makes the wood chair.
So the unique thing we bring to the process is we bring the design,
and then we have these different manufacturers
make the components,
which actually reduces the cost of the piece,
because we've got these specialists doing what they do really well.
And it has the bonus advantage of now you've got lots of choice.
So now instead of having just two choices for the table,
you've got 20 choices for the table
because you can have these different tops.
So it's almost like a supply chain for cars, right?
You know, components come to a factory,
and somewhere in Michigan.
And then that's what was happening.
You're getting different pieces from different places.
And then you guys could put it together.
And that ultimately would save you money.
That will ultimately save us money.
And it gives the customer considerably more choice.
Interesting.
Okay.
So you've got this, you've got these pieces coming in into your shops.
And you've got three stores.
And then you open, I believe the fourth store was in Chicago.
Yes.
It's around 1993.
And Chicago is a design city.
It's one of the centers of design in the world.
Yes, yes.
I think that the whole transition to what room and board is today started with a point of view about design and value.
And a lot of that came from what the manufacturer's capabilities were.
I mean, obviously one of the big questions we had in the beginning was furniture was not being made in America.
By the time we got to this point in our career, imports were the primary way product was made.
If you must go anywhere and you buy furniture in America, it's made overseas.
Yeah.
And we actually went through a really thoughtful question about can we make product in America?
That's completely competitive.
And we determined that the only advantage you have making it in China is wages, right?
It's about a 30% advantage and cost of product.
Well, we felt like between freight and quality and a series of other things,
we could make up that difference.
So we could totally make competitive product in America,
given the design of the product that we focus on,
where it's really more about material.
The cost is, you know, there's a ratio always in making something
between the material and the labor.
So if you're making a simple, classic something out of solid wood,
the labor cost is a fairly small percentage of the cost.
If you're making something very elaborate,
the labor cost gets to be a pretty high percentage,
and the advantage of making it overseas becomes pretty significant.
So our design and approach allowed us to compete really effectively with imported product.
Yeah, and you had a very strict approach at that time.
I think there would be no sales.
no volume discounts,
no discounts for like interior designers,
which they get a lot of people to know this,
they get them.
I think some of those rules have changed,
but this was really a hard and fast rule
for those first several years, right?
Yeah, yep.
And why was that?
Why no sales or no discounts?
You know, it comes from a basic philosophy
of personal philosophy.
Say, I want to treat each customer.
They're like my best friend.
Yeah.
Right?
That's just like a core,
approach to think about how do you answer these questions. And what would you do that to your best friend?
You say, oh, you know, if you came in the last week, it was going to be 20% lower in price.
So everybody's buying product at different price. It just didn't seem like a fair thing to do to customers.
So we just said, we're not going to have sales. It's one fair price. And it just makes it simple and
easy to have a consistent offer for your customers. It has a side benefit of it. Evens your business
pretty, if you have a sale, you're creating peaks in your business. So you've got the
back end of the business, which is handling the product and delivering the customers. Now you're
dealing with these ups and downs because of the sales. Without sales, you've got a pretty
steady, steady line of business going through. And you became a logistics business as well.
You're not just a retailer. You're not just having furniture made to your specifications now.
you're also taking over the logistics part of it,
like even the delivery to the customer part of it.
Oh, absolutely.
Yes, we do that all ourselves.
I mean, that's a really critical part of the business,
and it's often treated as a very secondary way.
And it's interesting we talked about,
we opened in Chicago,
and the surprise in Chicago was Chicago gets a lot of visitors
from all over the country.
And that store opened and did quite well,
And pretty soon we were having to figure out deliveries for all over the country because the visitors came to the store and bought product.
In Chicago, but they might live in San Francisco and you don't have a shop there.
Exactly.
Okay.
So normally a business would just have a third party, you know, logistics company handle it.
You know, you go to go to Penske or whatever.
Right, right.
And then you get lousy service, damaged product, you know, if they don't take it into the home for the customer.
It depends, but that was your fear.
You thought, hey, we know how to deliver our stuff and how to put it together.
So we're going to actually employ the drivers and own the trucks?
Yep.
That seems like really, of course, we know how it turned out, but that seems like really risky.
Like that's where businesses really can unravel because you're pouring money into something that may actually not be that efficient.
Yes.
Well, we actually did a partnership with Allied.
Where they do the work for us.
But if you talk to their employees, I think they're room and board employees.
I got you.
Okay.
So that's how we do that.
It's that part of Allied is dedicated entirely to room and board.
Yes.
And then how did you, now you're, you know, we're getting into the mid-90s and what room and board is might have been totally unique.
And, you know, maybe there was crate and barrel.
But now you've got designer within REIT.
You've got some other high-end design-focused furniture stores, Blue Dot, coming online.
And I wonder how you thought about differentiating and staying, you know, different from those other also high-end, high-quality brands.
You know, I don't think we thought a lot about comparing ourselves to them.
We kind of knew what we wanted to be.
we knew which kind of product we wanted to sell.
We knew how we wanted to sell it.
So we didn't really stop and compare.
We just said what we're doing is working.
It's who we are.
And we're not going to adjust that based upon competition.
But I would think some of these brands would see the cool things you're selling
and just go to those same manufacturers and have them make a variation of that.
So did you ever start to go to some of your manufacturers and say, hey,
Let's do an exclusive deal where you only make furniture for us.
We haven't, but we know that some of those people have gone to some of our manufacturers,
like our steel manufacturers, a good example.
Which you don't own.
It's their, they own it.
Yeah, they can do what they want.
But they're generally really happy with our relationship.
I mean, we are truly a vertically integrated company through partnership.
That's how I think about it.
I mean, we care a lot about that seal manufacturer, about how they grow, about are they profitable, about how we balance their business.
It's effective for them.
We work together a new product.
I mean, it's virtually as if we own that business, but we don't.
So, okay, so here's, I'm curious because, you know, now we're getting into the, you know, into the 2000s, right?
The 90s you're growing steadily.
And I think by, I don't know, 2004 or something.
thing. I think that year, maybe 2005, you opened a store in New York and San Francisco. And now you're
talking about two of the most important sort of retail spaces in the country, right? Yes.
And competitive and certainly New York. And they just did really well in those places. Did you start
to feel like, okay, we need to become a billion dollar business. Like once you hit 100, 150 million
dollars in sales, are you thinking, how do we get this to be a billion dollar business?
No.
No.
We never talked about growth that way.
We never had a plan for specific growth in terms of what kind of volume it should be,
or how many stores we should add.
Why not?
Because I think you make a bunch of bad decisions when you start doing that.
Through organic growth, you're able to evaluate what your natural growth is,
and then you're able to take advantage.
If it makes sense, you're able to take advantage of opportunities as they come along, rather than forcing yourself to say, oh, we've got to add a store this year and you make bad decisions.
Before we opened in New York and San Francisco, one of the big decisions we made was there was a location in Los Angeles that I fell in love with.
And we sat down as a group and said, okay, can we do this?
You know, the furthest we'd gone to Chicago, we didn't know what to do.
And we just said, no, we're not ready.
And to me, it's an interesting point of view because people remember the decisions that they made where they did something?
Sometimes the decisions you made where you did nothing is the most important decision in the business.
And so we said no.
But three years later, we said, yeah, we can do San Francisco and New York within six months of each other.
All right.
So clearly, you're growing.
And at this point, you're still entirely.
privately owned, right? Like, you had not taken on any outside investors.
Yeah, exactly. But were you starting to get calls? Like, were private equity groups saying,
hey, you know, listen, you've got something good going on here, John. We can really scale this.
You can keep a chunk of it. You know, we'll put in 30 percent. You'll get a big, you know,
a chunk of cash, but we'll really grow this thing. Did you start to get approached?
Oh, we've got tons of approaches. It was the most common call.
got from outside of the business. What would people say to you? Just what you said. You've got something
that works. It makes sense. We can make it grow. None of those were interesting. Conversations are
attractive? No. Not a single one. No. Why? One, if you looked at their performance generally,
they've ruined more businesses that they've grown. They just don't, one, they think they're
smarter than the owners of people that created the business the first place. Second, they think they
and over leverage this thing, take a lot of cash out first, put debt against it, and make it grow
faster than it wants to grow.
So they generally cause failures, is my general, that might take on it.
But you could have got, I mean, I imagine by this point you're making a nice salary and even getting a nice
distribution, but, I mean, all of a sudden somebody is like, hey, you can get $50, $75 million
right now in your bank account, and we'll.
just take 30% of this thing.
And, you know, that can be kind of attractive,
especially when you've been working on something
and now you're in your 50s and I don't know.
I just had no interest in that.
I really didn't.
I knew they would ruin whatever it is we'd built.
I knew they would ruin it.
And you just said, no, I don't even want to have a conversation.
You didn't even.
Exactly.
Yep.
So you felt like growth was just going to happen if it happened,
but you wanted to make sure that it was sustainable.
Yes.
Yes.
and that we were profitable the whole way.
I mean, early on, we just said no bank debt.
We're going to operate with no debt.
And we did have for years and years and years.
You know, it's a part of our story that I think is important
is that we develop a online web business
early, early on in the process.
Yeah, in like 2000, right?
Yeah, sorry, in the 90s.
Yes, exactly.
So it's a huge part of our business.
And I say this because as we go to look at other markets, we say, oh, you know, Bozeman, Montana, we're doing, I don't know, $5 million right now, today.
We say, oh, at a store, what's the potential?
The potential is $9 million.
Right.
It makes no sense.
Yeah.
So you don't need stores in every city.
We do not need stores.
Okay, now we're into the 2000s and you're, you know, you're hitting like over $200 million in sales.
Right.
And then you've got the financial crisis, 2008.
And you're not selling lipstick.
You're not selling cigarettes, right?
These are things that are, you're not like inelastic products.
Like you're selling really expensive, high-end furniture for people who are buying homes.
All of a sudden there's a financial crisis and a real estate crisis.
a mortgage crisis, the collapse in value of homes. I mean, Americans, you know, their net worth drops by trillions of dollars.
This is not good for the construction business. This is not good for the furniture business.
No, no, we took a big dip in sales. Okay, so you have to understand, the economy drops 2%. Yeah.
The furniture business will probably drop 20 or 25%. That's just been the history of a lot.
as I think through the years because it's such a discretionary purchase.
It gets put off first thing.
That's what happened back then.
But part of our original philosophy was that our goal is a generator, an 8% profit.
Every year you want 8%.
8%.
Which is pretty modest, right?
Well, it's great.
But that's not, that's a nice profit, but not crazy.
No, exactly, exactly.
But part of this is saying that if we generate 8% profit when times are good, sales drop 20%.
That basically takes us down to break even, right?
No profit at that point.
But we didn't have to cut things.
We didn't have a profitable year, but we didn't have a loss.
So now we're able to move forward, open new stores.
A lot of our store openings are related to downturns in the economy.
What about your inventory?
Were you finding that you had pieces that just,
were not moving that were weighing you down?
No, I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I think the decrease in sales is just across the board.
It wasn't a specific product that didn't work.
And do you think that you deliberately work to get products that had that sort of timeless
look that you could sell today or in five years or in 10 years from now?
Oh, completely.
We don't think of our business as a fashion business at all.
And much of the industry thinks they're in the fashion business.
And I think it's a big mistake.
We think we're in the business of good design.
So you'll be happy with it five years from now, 20 years from now.
But we're definitely not in the fashion business from our point of view.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you get through the financial crisis.
And room and board once again gets into growth mode.
You step down officially as CEO in 2017.
You stayed down as chairman.
So you weren't involved in sort of the operation.
challenges of COVID, but I know that affected everyone, including, you know, furniture stores.
Yes.
Because people were not going to visit them and buying furniture necessarily.
People were buying furniture for remote office space and stuff like that.
Right.
So there was some, but it was challenging.
One of the things that happened in the last few years is that because we talked about
how you never brought in outside funding, right?
Like you, for most of the history of room and board, it was 100% owned by you, right?
Yes. Yep. Yep. I have two daughters and they had some ownership, but it was mostly 100% by me.
Okay. At some point, the business started to get transitioned to being an ESOP.
This is employee stock ownership plan. Companies like Cliff Bar did this.
I believe that King Arthur Flower is an ESOP. New Belgium was in ESOP.
This is a program that essentially transitions ownership of the company to employees over time.
They essentially buy it.
Yes.
I mean, I was getting to the age where the question is, what's next, right?
Right.
Who's the owner going to be?
Right.
And we looked at all of the options.
We looked at going public briefly.
We looked at all of the private equity options, as we talked about earlier.
and the complications and the opportunities within that.
And we kept going back to ESOP.
And once we came to the acceptance that the way that makes sense for us to do it is have a 100% owner finance.
So there's no bank loan involved.
We just, we gave a loan to the employees, basically, the ESOP, to buy the shares from the owners at an established price.
And once I got comfortable with that option, that there's no guaranteed payout, right?
You just sold your business, but you don't know if you're going to get paid or not because you finance the whole thing yourself.
So basically, in other words, for the time being, you're giving away your shares over time with the promise that you're going to be paid in the future for those shares.
Yes, exactly.
And so when you join room and board as an employee over time, your ownership increases, presumably.
Oh, substantially.
Yes, exactly.
And now they have a stake in keeping it going and keeping it successful because then they'll make more money.
Yep.
It's a really interesting model.
It's a great model that probably isn't used as often as it should be used.
Yeah.
So we touched on this earlier, more than touched on it, which is when you left Gabberts, there was a falling out in the family.
And that's one of the challenges and perils of a family business they can often lead to
you know, internal dissension and it's hard.
I'm assuming you eventually were able to reconcile
with everyone in the family or not?
Yeah, it was.
Was it formal?
Was it like a formal kind of sit down?
Or did it, I don't know?
It was not formal, and it was probably different
with different members of the family.
Because your brothers took over, Gabberts.
My brother took over,
and that's probably been the most difficult reconciliation.
and it was made more complicated because he struggled running gabberts, to be honest.
Yeah.
He sold it for almost nothing in 2008.
And rumor board continued to grow and be successful.
Yeah.
So that's the most complicated one.
How about your dad?
Did you were able to reconcile with him?
I think so in certain ways.
He wasn't someone that would necessarily reconcile his.
differences with people, whether it be his children or his brother or whatever. It kind of goes
away, but you don't sit down and really define it. He was a man of his generation. Yes, exactly.
Exactly. The closest thing he came, actually, was this was like the day before he died. Last
thing he said to me. No, not the last thing he said to me. Second, the last thing he said to me,
my mom said, okay, Don, what's going to happen with Gabbards? Because they were struggling.
And my dad said, oh, don't worry, John will buy it.
So that was as close as he came to kind of saying, oh, okay, maybe this was a mistake in the whole process.
Hmm.
It was his way of kind of acknowledging your success.
Yes, he was acknowledging, yeah, my success, exactly.
Yeah.
When you think about the journey you took and all the things that happened along the way and the success that this became,
How much of it do you attribute to the work you put in and the grind?
And how much do you think it had to do with luck, being lucky, being at the right place at the right time?
I mean, I think anybody that's successful, you have to say it was timing, luck, circumstances, that'll fit into it.
It's not just what you do.
And I must say, I believe a lot in that hardship creates opportunity.
Yeah.
Life's not about how fast you run or how high you jump, but how well you bounce.
That's John Gabbard, founder of Room and Board.
By the way, as John mentioned, the original family furniture business was acquired in 2008 by a larger brand.
And today, Gabbard still has two stores in the Minneapolis area, just a short drive, in fact, from Room and Board's headquarters.
Hey, thanks so much for listening to the show this week.
please make sure to click the follow button on your podcast app
so you never miss a new episode of the show.
And as always, it's totally free.
And if you're interested in insights, ideas, and lessons
from some of the world's greatest entrepreneurs,
please sign up for my newsletter at gairozz.com or on Substack.
This episode was produced by Chris Messini with music composed by Rompore.
It was edited by Neva Grant with research help from Rommel Wood.
Our audio engineers were Patrick Murray and Kwayzee Lee.
Our production staff also includes Alex Chum.
Carla Estevez, Casey Herman, J.C. Howard, Sam Paulson, Catherine Seifer, Carrie Thompson, John Isabella, and Elaine Coates.
I'm Guy Raz, and you've been listening to How I Built This.
