Tile Files - June 2009

By Stephanie Samulski

When it comes to selling consumers ceramic tile floors, retailers have two options—they can sell all the pieces and setting materials and focus on the price, or they can sell an installed floor and focus on peace of mind. History has shown that retailers who do the latter are much more successful. By selling a complete package that includes top notch installation, they add value to the project. The customer can feel confident that the job will be done professionally and the job will go smoothly. That focus also has the side benefit of resulting in more referrals.

Seasoned showroom designers and salespeople are those who help a customer narrow an overwhelming array of sizes, colors, textures and patterns down to an obvious final selection. The best salespeople take that a step further to minimize trepidation and confusion in the installation process as well. To make customers feel confident purchasing from you, they need assurance that the design, the product, and ultimately the installation of the materials will meet their expectations. 

Because shoppers can find similar tile products at the home centers, on the Internet or at many other places, aggressively selling quality installation can be the key to potential customers buying from you instead of from the shop across the street. This also lets you sell job quality instead of product price and speaks directly to the customer’s needs. Following through and satisfying customers’ expectations for a painless installation will bring them back for their next project and have them sending friends and family your way. 

If you are a flooring retailer, it’s really not an option to just sell material. Even distributors and dealers who don’t install have to provide some guidance for customers who haven’t already found a tile contractor. 

A showroom can’t leave customers stranded after selection if it wants to be trusted and perceived as the go-to place for tile projects, says James Dean, a regional sales manager for Virginia Tile Company, a ceramic tile and stone distributor with showrooms in Illinois, Ohio and Michigan. “We know who the better contractors in our area are, and because of the Virginia Tile name, our customers feel secure with the list of about 30 contractors we give them.” 

To further help the customer secure a professional installer, Virginia Tile has been heavily involved in the Ceramic Tile Education Foundation’s installer certification program, a national testing and evaluation service that gives consumers a basis of reference for selecting a tile contractor. Virginia Tile refers customers to the foundation’s website to learn what they should be asking prospective contractors. 

At the other end of the spectrum is Welch Tile and Marble, a Grand Rapids, Michigan retailer that directly employs installers. “For residential projects where the installer will interact with the homeowner, we match their skills and their personalities,” says President Dan Welch. He advises making a point of soliciting feedback on installers because they can make or break your reputation. 

“The higher end the customer and the more complicated the installation, the more it matters,” Welch says. For example, choose an installer with unwavering attention to detail when the job requires a lot of cutting and fitting. 

It’s obvious even in the showroom that Welch’s installers are top notch. Professionally designed banners and posters promote the company’s apprenticeship training and installation awards, and one wall is dedicated to displaying the ever increasing number of certified installer certificates held by Welch employees. 

Welch said his showroom designer can also speak authoritatively about the installers’ qualifications and why that’s important. “We sell ourselves on the fact that our installers specialize in tile and we can take you through the whole process,” says Welch. “Showroom customers just need to be made aware of all the nuances of tile installation to know that they need to come to us because of our installers…our designer is very good at bringing that into the conversation, so we can sell anyone that walks in.” 

To increase company exposure, Welch exhibited at the Cottage and Lakefront Living Home Show in Grand Rapids in April. Although samples were displayed, the majority of the booth showcased Welch installers. Throughout the show, attendees could stroll through the booth to watch eight installers as they tiled intricately designed vignettes. Show visitors returned periodically to check on their progress and to bring others by. “We encouraged them to interact with the installers when they had questions,” says Welch. “Our installers’ work was on display and their personalities were, too.” 

Not far away from Welch headquarters is Migala Carpet One, which has a similar approach. Owner Lori Ruimveld invited the foundation to Kalamazoo, Michigan, to evaluate the area subcontractors that her shop uses. Of the 16 installers tested, nine earned certification. After seeing their work side by side, Migala made significant changes to the types of projects the various subcontractors would be assigned in the future.

For now, Migala Carpet One is the only shop in Kalamazoo that offers certified installers, a strong selling point. In addition, Ruimveld’s shop can now better match a project to an installer to avoid customer dissatisfaction. 

Welch says shops have to be diligent about soliciting feedback from customers. “There are a lot of little things a guy might do that the customer isn’t necessarily going to call you about,” he says. “But if you ask them point blank if your crew showed up on time every day or if they are 100% satisfied with the installation, you will get valuable, honest feedback.” The key to effective feedback is asking specific questions, he says, and this can be done in person or over the phone. The feedback can then be used for training or establishing guidelines, so that the shop can begin promoting positive factors.

Another powerful selling tool is testimonials, so it’s worth the effort to gather them and make sure they’re in a place where the customer will stumble across them. They definitely belong on your website. Some dealers have mini portfolios of installers’ work available for reviewing, and this would be an appropriate place for testimonials to be compiled.

The magic of selling your installers in these ways is rooted in their ability to deliver what you promise and what the customer wants. Seek out and build sales relationships with the quality contractors and installers in your area, whether they’re contractors or work for you directly. Good installers will be most open to working with the shops that focus on quality rather than price. In this fashion, the showroom and installer partner together to make every job unique, delivering a finished job that satisfies the customer. 

Copyright 2009 Floor Focus 



Other Archived Articles

Analysts See Higher Consumer Spending Soon   Full Article
New York, NY, Oct. 25, 2010 -- Analysts are predicting that the American consumer is about to start shopping again and will lift the economy, according to a story by Bloomberg News.

NAR Says Housing Sales Recovery Has Begun   Full Article
Washington, DC, Oct. 25, 2010 -- House resales rose again in September, affirming that a sales recovery has begun, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Armstrong Building Ceiling Tile Plant in W. Va.   Full Article
Charleston, WVA, Oct. 25, 2010 -- Armstrong World Industries is investing about $35 million to build a new plant in Jackson for the production of ceiling tiles.

Oil Climbs Back Near $83   Full Article
New York, NY, Oct. 25, 2010--Oil prices jumped to near $83 a barrel Monday in Asia.

NABE Sees Slower Growing Economy   Full Article
Washington, DC, Oct. 25, 2010 -- Business economists say the U.S. economy should continue to grow this year but at a slower pace than they initially thought.

Godfrey Hirst Project To Save 250M Liters of Water   Full Article
Victoria, Australia, October 22, 2010 -- Carpet manufacturer Godfrey Hirst has completed a $3.5 million upgrade that is designed to save up to 250 million liters of water each year.

Harvard Researchers See Big Pick-Up in Remodeling   Full Article
Cambridge, MA, Oct. 22, 2010 -- Spending on home remodeling will increase by double-digits next year, according to a prediction by Harvard University researchers.

DriTac Adhesive Gets CRI Certification   Full Article
Clifton, NJ, Oct. 22, 2010--DriTac Flooring Products said that its DriTac 7700 Easy Clean MS Polymer Wood Flooring Adhesive has been certified by the Carpet and Rug Institute’s (CRI) Green Label Plus Program.

Philly Manufacturing Turns Positive in October   Full Article
Philadelphia, PA, Oct. 22, 2010 -- Manufacturing activity in Philadelphia turned positive for the first time in three months in October, according to a report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

Shaw Names Two Residential Business Executives   Full Article
Dalton, GA, Oct. 22, 2010 -- Shaw Industries has appointed Steve Sieracki to vice president of residential marketing and product management and Kathy Young to director of residential marketing.

U.S. Hardwood Mfgrs Petition Chinese Imports   Full Article
Washington, DC, Oct. 21, 2010 -- U.S. engineered hardwood flooring manufacturers have charged China with unfair trade practices.

Johnson Hardwood Names Schollmeyer CEO   Full Article
City of Industry, CA, Oct. 21, 2010 -- Johnson Premium Hardwood Floors said it has named Bill Schollmeyer CEO.

Illinois Rug Cleaning Business on NBC Show   Full Article
Naperville, IL, Oct. 21, 2010 -- Koshgarian Rug Cleaners Inc. of Naperville since 1906, was selected by NBC producers to help with their renovation show, “George to the Rescue,” according to the LisleSun.

Chinese Log Prices Rising on Tight Supply   Full Article
Beijing, China, Oct. 21, 2010 -- Increasing demand for wood raw material from sawmills, plywood plants and pulp mills in China has pushed Chinese domestic log prices higher

Leading Indicators Index Rises in September   Full Article
New York, NY, Oct. 21, 2010 -- The Conference Board's leading economic index rose 0.3% in September.

Merida's Pure Products Get CRI Certification   Full Article
Boston, MA, Oct. 21, 2010 --Merida's new Pure wool rugs were awarded the Carpet and Rug Institutes' (CRI) Green Label Plus Certification, the company said.

Initial Jobless Claims Decline   Full Article
Washington, DC, Oct. 21, 2010 -- Initial jobless claims fell 23,000 to 452,000 in the week ended Oct. 16, the U.S. Labor Department reported Thursday.

MeisteWerke To Use Valinge Powder Technology   Full Article
Viken, Sweden, Oct. 21, 2010 -- Valinge has signed MeisteWerke as a licensee for new powder technology for flooring and wall panels.

USFContract Names Sales and Specs Reps   Full Article
Dalton, GA, Oct. 21, 2010 -- USFContract, the commercial flooring division of USFloors Inc., said it has agreements with EcoBuild, Red 8 Interior Products and Spartan Surfaces as commercial sales and specifications representatives.

Size of New Homes Continues To Shrink   Full Article
Washington, DC, Oct. 21, 2010 -- New single family homes are continuing to shrink in size and the trend is likely to continue beyond a future economic rebound.