The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Lifestyles

December 25, 2011

Three for all: Store's co-owners focus on strengths

JOPLIN, Mo. — Teddy Steen and Rebecca Courtney watch for it -- the telltale twitch of one of Joanne Eberhart’s eyes that indicates she’s not exactly thrilled with a display.

It’s not meant as an insult -- Eberhart knows that Steen and Courtney have a good eye for displays.

But they know that Eberhart is really good at it. Decoration is her strong point -- it’s something she’s done for years as part of house tours and exhibitions.

So Courtney says that they simply “cracked the code.” She jokes that if they want to get Eberhart into the store they all own together, they tell her that they will work a display themselves, and that will bring Jeanene in faster than anything.

“We’re all very different,” Steen said. “And we appreciate the differences.”

The three women are the co-owners of Blue Moon Market, a clothing and decor store at 613 S. Main St.

The code is just one example of the three women relying on each others’ strengths to make their business a success -- successful enough that they have opened up a second store in Arkansas, and plan to expand the hours of their first store in downtown Joplin.

 

Missing link

The Blue Moon Market has been open since March, but the concept behind it has been working for many years. Courtney and Eberhart used to have a business, named All Decked Out, that they would take to trade shows and other private events.

Eberhart, who also runs a chiropractic business, met Courtney as a patient about 10 years ago. Soon after, they put their efforts to work in the decor business. Even then, the duo knew to focus on each other’s strengths.

“When Jeanene and I did this, we had our specific areas,” Courtney said. “She handled the decoration, I handled the books and we both did the buying. We fell into a groove.”

Courtney is a master of money and business matters, the other two say. She has a knack for buying stuff that, although she may not like it, she knows others will.

Steen, who goes to the same church as Courtney, wanted to enter the same field after retiring from a 23-year career at Cable One.

“I knew she did this, and I got to talking with her in the parking lot,” Steen said. “I told her I wanted to do a store, and to see what they were doing.”

The store idea resonated with Courtney and Eberhart -- it was a way to expand and, even better, gain crucial storage space.

After working together, they realized that Steen’s strength of talking to people and hitting a floor was what they were missing.

“She was the missing link,” Courtney said. “She took what we were doing and brought it to this. Put me behind the register, and I’m happy. But customers look for Teddy.”



Event shopping

A year has 12 full moons, but a lunar year is a tad shorter than a calendar year. That means, every once in a while, a year will have an extra full moon. Different cultures place that extra full moon at different parts of the year, but those traditions generally agree that a blue moon is a rare occurrence.

Though appropriately named, the Blue Moon Market is open more often. Before the holiday season, the market was open for every third Thursday and first weekend of the month. The store also offers parties, where 10 or more can come in for some exclusive shopping time.

The rare hours were to make shopping an event at the market.

“We thought about doing a once-a-month event, to make it like a monthly thing,” Eberhart said.

The store features an eclectic mix of styles, from vintage to glam. A shopper can find custom-designed blue jeans, sparkly jewelry, baby toys, hot sauce and wall decorations, as well as plenty of other oddities.

Pink rhino heads.

Ceramic frogs.

Lighted letters from old signs.

Blinged-out, bejeweled caps in local team colors.

“It takes a while to go through here,” Eberhart said. “It’s not an in-and-out thing. It’s definitely layered. There’s lots to find around every little corner.”



Making it work

Despite all three of the women having full-time jobs -- Eberhart is a chiropractor, Steen is the executive director of Ascent Recovery Services and Courtney works for United Methodist Church’s district administration office -- they have found the time to invest in the store.

“We thought that anyone could run a store three days a month,” Courtney said. “But those days came around quickly, and there was a lot of work between those three days.”

But the talents, strengths and other characteristics of the three quickly meshed, allowing them to get into another groove, Steen said.

“Each of us was so separate and distinct, but we have the right talents to go together and figure it out,” Steen said. “If we weren’t what we were, this wouldn’t be successful. If we were all the same person and agreed on everything, it wouldn’t work.”

There have been disagreements between the three. Opening the new store in Bentonville, Ark., stretched them thin. But extra communication kept the women working well, they said.

“When we were pulled in 10 different directions, that was the only time we started going, ‘Wait,’” Eberhart said. “With the pressure of getting open, everyone had their particular jobs to do.”

Courtney said that a couple of meetings got everyone on track again.

“Having a conversation works everything out,” she said. “We keep the lines of communication open so everyone knows their responsibility. That’s key.”

The bond between them is strong, Steen said. Strong enough to hire additional employees and expand hours -- the market will keep its current holiday hours continuing through the new year.

“I really like these guys,” Steen said. “This is a great bond.”

Text Only
Lifestyles
  • 022012Tortilla3.jpg Webb City restaurant offers homemade tortillas on weekends

    Renteria said the fresh tortillas reminded him of the homemade tortillas his mother used when preparing tacos when he was growing up in Mexico.

    February 22, 2012 1 Photo

  • Cheryle Finley.jpg Cheryle Finley: Mishmash of ideas can help in kitchen

    Today is going to be a mishmash of ideas, and I hope you find at least one that will help you in your kitchen.

    February 22, 2012 1 Photo

  • Heat is on: Hottest pepper found

    There are super-hot chile varieties. And then there’s the sweat-inducing, tear-generating, mouth-on-fire Trinidad Moruga Scorpion.

    February 22, 2012

  • Patty Crane: Criminals’ history takes different path in novel

    Edna Buchanan’s novel “A Dark and Lonely Place” is based on the real-life characters John Ashley and Laura Upthegrove. John and Laura were the Florida version of Bonnie and Clyde. Buchanan, then a reporter for The Miami Herald, was fascinated by the stories she heard of John and Laura’s escapades.

    February 20, 2012

  • Frankie Meyer: Web site helps researchers with Census details

    The search for family history is easy in the beginning. The first phase is to compile information on yourself and your parents and grandparents. After that phase, researchers use many tools to collect information.

    February 20, 2012

  • 021912_rose2.jpg Truth in fiction: Author finds she can’t make up a better history

    Rose, 72, is related to some of the people active in those founding days. She told their story in “No God, No Hell, No Churches, No Saloons,” a historical fiction novel published last year. But instead of sticking to the well-known story about keeping Christians out, Rose deals with the town’s flirtations with spiritualism and speaking to the dead.

    February 20, 2012 1 Photo

  • David Yount: Prayer grows more perceptive with practice

    During World War II, English novelist Aldous Huxley persuaded himself that human behavior could be modified and humankind’s aggressiveness stemmed.

    February 20, 2012

  • 021512-Faith-1.jpg Play takes look at women’s role in last days of Jesus

    With Ash Wednesday coming up next week and the Season of Lent upon us, Stained Glass Theatre, of Joplin, could not have timed its latest play much better.

    February 20, 2012 1 Photo

  • Jermiah-Tucker-020812.jpg Jeremiah Tucker: Relax, Swift didn’t mock Branson at Grammys

    At any rate, it wasn’t until Tuesday when I read the story that some people were upset because they believed Taylor Swift changed the lyrics of her hit single “Mean” to besmirch Branson’s sterling reputation as a star-studded live music destination when she performed the song at the Grammys.

    February 17, 2012 1 Photo

  • images_sizedimage_101184548 Lee Duran: Florid book blurbs still work

    Blurbs are all that gushing praise sometimes printed on the back of the book, or occasionally on the cover, proclaiming the superiority of the contents. Blurbs come from famous authors or celebrities and they’re supposed to make us insanely eager to buy the book.

    February 17, 2012 1 Photo