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$4M Integrator Rises from Ashes of Circuit City Firedog

Crown Audio Video in Dallas uses solid SEO tactics to attract Millennials and a new showroom relying on brands like MSE Audio to flourish.

$4M Integrator Rises from Ashes of Circuit City Firedog

From the worst of circumstances can sometimes arise the best of situations. That might be a good way to describe the formation and ascendance of Crown Audio Video in Dallas. The company was created by a group of former employees from Circuit City Firedog, the now-bankrupt former retailer’s custom installation service.

Eight years later, Crown AV is the “king” so to speak of using effective Search Engine Optimization (SEO) tactics and a trendy, design-laden new 7,700-square-foot showroom to attract the huge Millennials crowd based in the Dallas area.

The company’s website innovations, along with the showroom replete with equipment from companies like MSE AudioPhase Technology, Control4, Crestron, Screen Innovations, Beale Street Audio and others, has led it to $4 million in revenues and growing. The company works in multiple markets, earning about 60 percent of its revenues from the residential market and 40 percent commercial. About 10 percent of the resi business comes from homebuilders, a market the team learned how to tap from its Firedog days.

“A lot of our crew were regional and district managers for the Firedog team. We were all either ex-Best Buy, Magnolia Hi-Fi or Circuit City. So we came from the Big Box store backgrounds,” recalls Buddy Hughes, president. “We dealt with the Circuit City builder program on the East Coast working with Centex Homes on 7,500-square-foot homes. We were popping in central vacs, audio systems, TVs, brackets and literally rolling them into the mortgages.

“Based all that experience and when we saw Circuit City going under, which we foresaw coming, we decided we were going to do our own thing. Four or five of us all got together and we already had some clientele. We started by building a website based on photos of projects we had done. Then, we started growing the business from there,” says Hughes.

According to Hughes, Circuit City was very aggressive and successful forging relationships with builders, even small builders, using sales designers in the field. But it was after the sale where the Firedog service failed.

“They didn't really know what they were doing,” he comments. Crown AV was based initially on “fixing everything Circuit City messed up” with those builder clients. The company has some lucrative programs set up for builders using Control4 and Crestron Pyng. The problem right now, according the Hughes, is the home construction market in Texas is so hot that builders are falling back into their pre-housing-bubble habit of cutting back their spending on amenities because the house is going to sell no matter what.

“It’s not that the builders don't want quality, but their quality is focused in other areas,” he says.

SEO Optimization: Why Having 27 Websites Was a Mistake Today, Crown AV credits much of its success to its SEO online marketing.

“SEO is getting us where we are today,” says Hughes, who learned some valuable lessons along the way. Initially, Crown Audio Video got advice to launch 27 different websites under names like HomeTheaterDallasTexas.com, MediaRoomsDallasTexas.com, AudioVideoDallasTexas.com, and so on.

“It's not something we wanted to do but we had no knowledge of SEO so we hired a consultant. We happened to select the wrong guy with the wrong information [to develop our web strategy],” he admits. “It was a bad decision and it was focused on the wrong SEO. We thought we needed to have 27 websites each with their own unique URL.”

Today, those 27 different websites are gone and the company has a new website built by OneFirefly.

“In the past eight months, the quality of our customers has changed. It's not all quantity like we had before with 27 websites, and trust me, the quantity that came in from the 28 websites you don't want. Someone that argues over a $50 antenna install is not what you want,” he notes.

The new website has a “vibe,” according to Hughes that says “if you call us you are going to pay for exactly what you are asking for.”

“That's the vibe we wanted from the website. We know what we're doing. If you're going to call it it's going to cost money. It's definitely made the quality of customers jump up,” says Hughes. The new website has ramped up content that changes every few weeks using some of the key terms that consumers use to find the company. Keywords like “motorized drapes, blinds, shades” have been added because many customers don't know what they're looking so let’s make sure we cover all the options.

“There are hundreds of keywords that have been added since the build of the website that are new. Some of the most frequent keywords customers use to find us are ‘custom audio video’ or ‘audio video store.’ In my mind, I would think customers are going to type “home theater” when they want home theater. So why are they typing in ‘audio video’? Those are industry-based terms. But the younger generation sees us as audio/video technicians, not home theater guys. They're typing in ‘audio video,’ so a lot of audio/video related terms like ‘audio video technician,’ ‘audio video installation,’ or ‘audio video programming’ have worked.”

Crown AV does no cold calling, does not use outside sales, and does no print advertising. It has grown from $150,000 in its first year to $4 million in 2015.

New Showroom, Custom Woodwork 

Besides SEO tactics, another piece of the company’s success is its new 7,770-square-foot showroom that includes multiple vignettes and a full custom woodworking shop.

The showroom atmosphere is also aimed at Millennials. It’s an open-ceiling warehouse environment with an ornate conference room and theater. Hughes says the open concept office is what Millennial entrepreneurs want. He says new restaurants and small offices are opening up every day in the area.

The showroom also includes a demo wall for speakers using Beale Street Audio and MSE Audio’s Phase Technology. “We absolutely love those brands. Phase Technology has been around forever. They are the inventor of the soft dome tweeter. We're using the Phase Tech dARTs (digital Audio Reference Theater System) in our media room. Also, MSE Audio opens up a whole other avenue of commercial opportunities for us via its SoundTube brand,” he says.

Hughes says the company does not have a structured demo technique, but one thing the team likes to show off is its custom woodwork. In the shop area adjoining the showroom, there is a full woodworking toolshop for building cabinetry and even special signs for above a client’s media room door. Hughes says that extra touch is important.

“It blows them away,” he says.

On some projects Crown AV is able to add an additional $2,000 to $3,000 dollars in cabinetry or signage. “You'd be surprised when you give customers the option to see what you really can do in the room. Can you take those towers and build them into the wall and make the frame and grille cloth in the front? It goes a long ways in our book. We try to separate ourselves as we are the true custom A/V guy. We do not just come into the home and cut square and round holes in the walls.”

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