Godfreys

Godfreys is an Australian and New Zealand-based retailer in the domestic and commercial floorcare & cleaning industry. The company was founded by Godfrey Cohen in 1931, and has since grown to approximately 200[1] company and franchise-owned stores combined across Australia and New Zealand.

Godfreys Group Limited
Private
IndustryFloorcare & Cleaning
Founded1931
FounderGodfrey Cohen
Headquarters,
Australia
Area served
Australia, New Zealand
Key people
John Johnston
ProductsVacuum cleaners, steam mops, carpet cleaners, stick vacuums, robot vacuums, commercial cleaners
Number of employees
Approx. 500
Websitewww.godfreys.com.au

History

Godfrey Cohen founded the first Godfreys store in 1931 in the Prahran Market, Melbourne[2], simultaneously revolutionising the vacuum cleaner business in Australia. It wasn’t long before John Johnston came across Godfrey Cohen’s business, and the two quickly became business partners over a simple handshake that lasted for over 70 years. Over this period the business rapidly expanded within Australia as demand from customers increased after World War Two, and the product range grew from solely bagged vacuum cleaners to include steam mops, carpet shampooers, robotic vacuums, handstick vacuums, wet & dry vacuums, handheld vacuums, hard floor cleaners, garment steamers, backpack vacuums, floor polishers, carpet blowers, bagless vacuums, cleaning consumables and more including a range of anti-allergy, asthma and pet hair vacuum cleaners recognised by the National Asthma Council Australia as Sensitive Choice approved.

Godfrey Cohen died in 2004 and Godfreys was sold to private equity companies Pacific Equity Partners and CCMP Capital Asia for $350 million in 2006.[3][4] The company was relisted on the Australian Securities Exchange in 2014 at $2.75 per share, but was subsequently removed from the ASX in July 2018 after John Johnston, who first joined Godfreys in 1936 as a partner, proposed a private takeover of the company[5]. His family company already owned 28% of the shares prior to this takeover.

Company Overview

Godfreys consists of a combination of approximately 200 company and franchise stores in Australia and New Zealand.[6] Together with their retail stores, Godfreys operates multiple service and repair centres across the two countries.[7]

Brands

Godfreys currently holds the licence to distribute Hoover brand vacuum cleaners in Australia and New Zealand. In addition to the Hoover brand, Godfreys also owns the exclusive distribution rights to Wertheim, Vorwerk floorcare range, Pullman and Sauber cleaning products.

Godfreys also supplies Nilfisk, Vax, Miele, Electrolux, Bissell, Black & Decker, Numatic and more cleaning machines for the domestic and commercial cleaning market.

Financing Partnerships

Godfreys provides customers, both online and in store, with alternative payment options from Humm (since April, 2019)[8], Afterpay[9] & Openpay[10] to bring more affordability to customers in the floorcare market.

Advertising

Godfreys has obtained brand awareness in Australia and New Zealand through many years of similar television advertisements featuring John Hardy.[11][12]

Awards

The company has won the following awards:

  • Power Retail's Top 100 Online Retailers of 2020, at rank 65.
gollark: Can you not have a *sophont* paperclip maximizer in this universe then?
gollark: Are you just meant to act *as if* they are? Because that doesn't sound very... accurate to reality.
gollark: I remember reading about the AI box thing, but I don't know how it's meant to actually work as an experiment, given that the people are presumably aware that the other person is *not* a superintelligent AI and cannot do much to them.
gollark: Or do you mean they wouldn't be *obviously* perversions?
gollark: What? You can totally have "rational" in the sense of "really good at achieving its goals" or something, and still have goals very misaligned with what people want.

References

  1. "Company Overview". www.godfreys.com.au. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  2. "Godfreys – Company History". Godfreys Australia. Godfreys. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  3. "Godfrey's sold for over $300m". The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 May 2006. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  4. "Iconic Godfreys sold for $350m". Current.com.au. Archived from the original on 27 July 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  5. "Godfreys owner celebrates 100th birthday by mopping up takeover holdouts". Australian Financial Review. 29 July 2018. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  6. "Godfreys Store Locator". Godfreys.
  7. "Godfreys Service and Repairs Service". Godfreys. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  8. "Buy Now and Pay Later with Humm". www.godfreys.com.au. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  9. "AfterPay". www.godfreys.com.au. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  10. "OpenPay". www.godfreys.com.au. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  11. "Godfreys TV advertisement 1990". Retrieved 7 November 2013 via YouTube.
  12. "Godfreys TV advertisement 2010". Retrieved 7 November 2013 via YouTube.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.