1800Mattress.com

1800Mattress.com (formerly known as 1-800-Mattress, Dial-A-Mattress and Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corps) is an American bedding retailer headquartered in Hicksville, New York and famous for its ads that used the slogan "leave off the last S for savings" (since the word "mattress" has 8 letters and only 7 are necessary for the phoneword).[1][2][2]

1800Mattress.com
Subsidiary
IndustryRetail
Founded1976
FounderNapoleon and Kay Barragan
Headquarters,
USA
ProductsBedding
ParentSteinhoff International (Mattress Firm)
Website1800mattress.com

History

1800mattress.com was founded as Dial-A-Mattress in 1976 by furniture store employee Napoleon Barragan. His idea for the business was inspired by an advertisement for Dial-A-Steak, a business that sold meat over the telephone.[2][3] [4] From its beginnings as a basement operation, 1979 saw the first Dial-A-Mattress ads on television[2] and in October 1988, Dial-A-Mattress started promoting their toll-free 800 number in broadcast ads. Having quickly eclipsed the furniture store where Barragan originally worked,[5] the company went national in 1994 and later the name was changed to 1-800-Mattress corresponding with the familiar "1-800-Mattress" jingle written by Andy Vallario, the President and chief creative officer of Media Results, Inc. Part of the company's growth was spurred by referrals and a familiarity with the brand, largely due to the catchy jingle and brand awareness.[6]

In 2005, near the company's peak when it was the leading bedding telemarketing company in the US, 1800mattress had more than 300 employees with annual sales in excess of $100 million. It had nearly 50 showrooms and 250 distributors nationwide.[2] On March 23, 2009, 1-800-Mattress filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection pending a proposed merger with former rival, Sleepy's[7] and later that year the merger was completed and 1-800-Mattress officially became 1800Mattress.com. In 2015, Sleepy's was acquired from Mattress Firm for $780 million. While Sleepy's retail stores became Mattress Firm, 1800Mattress.com still exists to this day.[8] In 2019, Mattress Firm appointed John Eck as its new CEO.[9][10]

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gollark: Of course, UTF-16 bad.
gollark: osmarks.tk has Unicode support and it's used by about 20.
gollark: Many things don't even *need* to deal with it directly and can happily get away with just treating strings as opaque.
gollark: I mean, some operations are ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ but mostly all you need is... indexing/substrings/uppercase/lowercase, which are not too horrible.

See also

References

  1. "1-800 Mattress". New York Magazine. 1996-01-01. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  2. How 1-800-Mattress Turned zzzz's into $$$$!. The New York Enterprise Report. Retrieved 2011-08-11.
  3. Because a Guy from Ecuador Can Sell Soda Off the Back of a Donkey, Then Come Here and Build a $120 Million Business—All It Takes Is a Few Mattresses and an 800 Number New York Magazine. Retrieved 2011-08-11.
  4. Sleep on it: an Ecuadoran finds a novel way to sell mattresses, and builds on empire along the way. BNET, The CBS Interactive Business Network. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  5. Lebhar-Friedman (1999). "Chain Store Age". Chain Store Age. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  6. Floor, Ko (2006). Branding a Store: How to Build Successful Retail Brands in a Changing Marketplace. Kogan Page Publishers. p. 184.
  7. Bankrupt 1-800-Mattress plans merger with Sleepy’s. Crain’s NY Report. Retrieved 2011-08-11.
  8. Beckerman, Josh (December 1, 2015). "Mattress Firm to Buy Sleepy's for $780 Million". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  9. Stynes, Tess (2016-03-21). "Mattress Firm Names New CEO". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  10. Pulsinelli, Olivia (21 March 2016). "Mattress Firm names new CEO". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
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