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  • A Philadelphia original cleans up

    Posted on Tue, Sep. 25, 2007

    A Phila. original cleans up

    The Quickie Manufacturing Corp. is a leader in all manner of cleaning
    tools. It was founded by a mop inventor who wanted his dinner on time.

    By Bob Fernandez

    Inquirer Staff Writer


    Bedros Vosbikian had ironclad rules in his Melrose Park home. Lo and
    behold, one evening in 1950, his wife, Vartanoush, failed to promptly
    serve dinner when he returned from his hardware factory. Vartanoush!

    The floors, Bedros, the floors, she pleaded as she scrubbed. I have to
    finish the floors.

    A year later, Vosbikian introduced one of the unheralded inventions of
    the 20th century: the automatic sponge mop. He patented the
    self-wringing action and designed the mop with chrome-plated parts and
    stainless-steel springs for department stores.

    Vosbikian passed Quickie Manufacturing Corp. to son Peter, who made
    the mop the core of a cleaning-tools company that in 2006 manufactured
    and sold 52 million mops, brooms, hand brushes, buckets, and other
    cleaning-tool products.

    "It's the only one we carry," said Mitchell Cohen, owner of Cohen &
    Co. Hardware, 615 E. Passyunk Ave., who was restocking sponge mops on
    Wednesday. "Quickie's a decent mop. We don't get a lot of
    returns. They don't fall apart."

    This Microsoft of Mops, so to speak, has its headquarters in a
    warehouse-looking building one mile off Route 130 in a commercial
    section of Cinnaminson, Burlington County. The company is privately
    held and does not disclose sales, but it says it controls about 25
    percent of the U.S. cleaning-tools market, estimated at $1.2 billion
    at retail.

    Home-center chains like the Home Depot Inc. and Lowe's Cos. Inc. have
    sections devoted to Quickie and its cleaning tools. Quickie's biggest
    revenue item is the 2-in-1 Bulldozer push broom, and its
    highest-volume product is a toilet brush with container cup.

    The company has begun licensing deals to co-brand new products, and it
    has plans to expand into Europe. This month, Quickie launched a
    scented broom with the British company Reckitt Benckiser P.L.C., which
    owns Air Wick and Lysol.

    The mop business, which generally flies under the radar of the
    financial press, is fragmented with new entrants - everyone seems to
    have an idea for a better one. Two of Quickie's biggest competitors
    are Freudenburg Household Products, which sells the O'Cedar and Vileda
    mop brands, and the Libman Co., of Arcola, Ill., marketer of the
    "Wonder Mop."

    Brian Sowinski, director of marketing at Libman, said that the
    mop-and-broom business was competitive and that "it's sort of hard to
    reinvent the wheel at this point." The products fill "a pretty basic
    need," he said, noting that "people get attached to their mops."

    Mop companies face imports and Procter & Gamble Co.'s Swiffer
    disposable wipes, a new category called quick-clean products, which
    has sponged up some of the traditional growth.

    "This has always been a competitive business, even before
    China. Nothing has changed," said Peter Vosbikian, 66, who is still at
    the company and is Quickie's chairman. There is a 1963 publicity photo
    of Vosbikian dressed in a suit and skinny tie modeling the
    "Ring-A-Mop" in the company archives. "Years ago, people were making
    mops and brooms in their garages."

    Like cheesesteaks and the Mummers, Bedros Vosbikian's automatic sponge
    mop is a Philadelphia original.

    According to an old news clip, he developed a prototype with a broom
    handle, a breadboard, a rubber sponge, an aluminum cookie sheet, wing
    nuts and bolts. He manufactured the mop for years in a two-story
    factory in North Philadelphia near Broad and Lehigh Streets.

    In the mid-1970s, the company relocated to Cinnaminson. Less than two
    years later, Quickie signed a contract to distribute through Kmart
    Corp. and expanded into a former macaroni plant in Delran.

    At its peak in the Philadelphia area, the company had 300 employees in
    South Jersey. Quickie saw a need for more manufacturing capacity and
    opened a plant in North Carolina. It closed the South Jersey plants,
    but kept the headquarters, with about 70 employees, in Cinnaminson.

    Michael Magerman waves a broom that scents the air in Quickie's
    conference room. "Smell that," he said, his nostrils flaring as he
    sucks in the air. "I love this product."

    Magerman joined Quickie as chief executive officer in 2005 after
    Vosbikian sold a majority interest to the New York investment firm
    Centre Partners. Financial details were not disclosed.

    Magerman was raised in Jenkintown, and his father ran a Philadelphia
    trousers-manufacturing plant that closed in the mid-1980s. Magerman
    headed to the West Coast as a young man and cofounded Odyssey Golf
    with his brother and others. Odyssey developed a new-technology putter
    that gained acceptance with pros on tour. Callaway Golf Co. bought
    Odyssey for $130 million in 1997. It was bittersweet for Magerman:
    Callaway fired him.

    "The distinguishing factor is what you do with the end of the stick,"
    Magerman, 45, quips about the difference between a $10 broom and a
    $100 putter.

    Magerman talks about the "compelling value propositions" of Quickie
    brooms and mops. He signed the licensing agreement with Reckitt
    Benckiser that led to the scented broom, which will land in 14,000
    U.S. stores.

    He also signed a licensing agreement with Microban International
    Ltd. for antimicrobial materials for Quickie products, which the
    company hopes will ease concerns that dirty sponges and mops breed
    germs and diseases.

    Peter Vosbikian was 9 years old when his father came home to a late
    dinner. The groundbreaking sponge mop that ensued "has stood the test
    of time," Peter Vosbikian said.

    Bedros Vosbikian, though, is mostly forgotten. "God rest his
    soul. When my dad died, it was in his obituary," Peter Vosbikian
    said. "But that's about it."
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