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Dave Neiman and his son, Brad, in front of the new Arrow Ace Hardware store in Mankato in the Belle Mar Mall. This is the family’s ninth store in southern Minnesota.
Pat Christman


The 76-foot section of nuts, bolts and screws is one of the features that the Ace store owners say will keep customers coming back.
Pat Christman


Published August 29, 2008 11:34 pm - A new Ace Hardware, recently opened in the Belle Mar Mall, is owned by a family steeped in the business.

New hardware store challenges big boxes
Focus is on customer service

By Tim Krohn
Free Press Staff Writer

MANKATO

For Dave Neiman, the comment from a customer who came into his new store in Mankato this week was exactly what he’d hoped to hear.

“There was a guy in here who said it’s just like an old fashioned hardware store without the creaking floor,” said Neiman, owner of Ace Hardware in the Belle Mar Mall.

“We pack a lot of merchandise into a small area.”

Dave’s son, Brad, manages the new 12,500-square-foot store. He said some see it as counterintuitive to open a family owned hardware store in a land of giant home improvement stores.

“People say this is a mistake, going into a town with three big boxes. But we’ve been in towns where all three big boxes came in and our business always went up,” Brad said.

This is the ninth Ace hardware store opened by the family in southern Minnesota, and one of its largest. Dave started in St. Peter with the Ace Arrow Hardware store.

Brad, 26, has been in the business since he was 14. “The rule for us kids was you had to be as tall as mom to start working in the store.”

Brad said there is one area where the big stores can’t keep up. “It’s customer service. They can’t compete. We know where everything is and how to use it. We can have you in and out in 15 minutes.”

Dave said they compete on prices as well, thanks to the Ace buying power. “Nationally, the number of small hardware stores has declined, but a new Ace opened every two days last year. They’re the largest hardware wholesaler in the world. They had $12 billion in sales in America last year.”

Over the years, Dave found what items to stock to fill customers’ needs:

The store has a 76-foot-long nut and bolt section where customers can buy single bolts or screws.

People can buy rope, electrical wire and copper pipe by the foot.

The store is a repair buff’s dreamland. “If you bought ready-to-assemble furniture and you’re missing a unique piece, we have that part. If you have a crib you haven’t used for years and it’s missing a part, we have it. If you need the little knob on a lamp, we have it,” Dave said.

The store also boasts a broad plumbing selection. “In our Rochester store, we have plumbers come to us rather than the wholesalers because we have what they’re looking for.”

Special services, such as building a new window frame for someone or a key center that includes the ability to make discounted auto keys with chips in them, also make for a loyal customer base, Dave said.



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