Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Probably the last thing the trade needed was a hard winter. Just as we sought to kickstart our New Year and emerge from the recent recession, the snow fell……and fell.

Our start to 2010 has been a little slow to say the least, but in fairness to all of our suppliers, no delivery has failed to show so far, which is more than can be said for Tesco who failed to deliver my shopping and promptly cancelled the entire order with 30 minutes notice!

Hopefully when/if the thaw comes, the public will emerge and the tills will begin to ring once more. One plus is that a lot of people will probably be looking to carpet over their cold and wet laminate floors now. If there’s one thing that destroys laminate quickly it’s a pair of defrosting wellies left lying overnight in the hallway.

In other news, Youfloors much vaunted promise to add fitting and underlay to our websites during December did not happen once again. I think they promised it on three separate occassions last year beginning in the Spring. Is it really so difficult to do?

Read Full Post »

I’m not going to bombard you with pointless stats to back up my point here, but I would just like to say that our pre-Christmas sales have been nothing startling, but they have been a little better than last year’s.

When this year began, most people in the trade felt we would need to batten down the hatches and the year would be very bleak indeed. In the end I think the year has been grey rather than black. Sales have picked up a little in the second half of the year for us and we do seem to have picked up some newbuilds lately and loft conversion after loft conversion (don’t you just love all those winding stairs!).

If you look at Headlam Group’s share price then it has recovered from its earlier malaise in the first half of the year and Carpet Right have reported better than expected results.

The much hoped for shot in the arm for independent retailers from Yourfloors has not really materialised yet, but I think this is not something that will happen in a year – it’s an ongoing project and it will grow steadily over time.

Sadly another disappointing raft of price rises hit us on 1st November and with the VAT increase in 2010, we are under a lot of pressure on price. No matter what manufacturers say about ‘not selling on price’, ticket prices on carpets must be kept in line with customers’ expectations. The problem is that most other things they buy are not increasing in price and in many cases are actually falling in price. Floorcoverings have risen dramatically in the past 18 months and it could not have happened at a worse time for the trade.

The Euro and the Dollar and the price of oil are blamed, but why the latest increase? I don’t buy a lot of the excuses made and retailers have been squeezed hard this year, that’s for sure.

My hopes for 2010 are that a gradual and slow upward curve will continue. I’m hopeful that the housing market will pick up and we will begin to get people on that property merry-go-round again.

Read Full Post »

A lot of carpet retailers up and down the country are part of ‘buying groups.’ The theory is that these shops band together as part of a greater whole and negotiate better deals and sometimes exclusive ranges for their group. It’s not a bad idea in some ways, but we have always preferred to plough our field alone. Monthly subscriptions often make it a case of weighing up the pros and cons rather than just adopting a ‘count me in, I’d love 5% off’ attitude.

Not being part of a group seems to make some manufacturers jittery if you are an independent store. For example Cormar Carpets (we sell a lot of their carpets but buy them via a wholesaler rather than direct) didn’t even bother to dignify our inquiry with a reply and that’s shocking really Mr. Cormar Carpets – you should be ashamed. Add to that Associated Weavers promised us all sorts of incentives, then promptly lost their rep and totallty reneged on the deal. The contempt shown to us by Associated Weavers and Cormar Carpets is nothing short of disgraceful and unprofessional given that we do sell a lot of their carpet and were just looking for a way to sell more and buy some nice display stands! Fair enough if you don’t want to open any more accounts in our area or whatever but have the decency and guts to say that to us.

Which is why Kersaint Cobb, the manufacturer of wonderful natural carpets came as a pleasant surprise. We don’t specialise in Coir, Sisal and so forth but we do jobs here and there with it and our fitters are fully experienced with it.

Their rep showed up promptly, listened to what we had to say and was happy to open an account and sell us a lectern with their top sellers nicely displayed – he even threw in a pretty rug stand. He recommended we see how that went before parting with hundreds for their super duper stand.

Kersaint Cobb always seem like a class act and their product, merchandising and professionalism are a breath of fresh air in this trade. They even have superb colour catalogues that make you want to buy their products, which I blogged about only recently on here.

Displays from Kersaint Cobb

Displays from Kersaint Cobb

Read Full Post »

Gerflor make a lot of their ‘polyester textile backing’ on their range of vinyl flooring. They claim that, among other things, it can be laid on top of virtually any kind of subfloor without the need for the usual preparation. That’s a bold claim and I must confess that we do sell it where the subfloor is a little awry and the customer does not want the hassle and the expense of screeding or plywooding beforehand. However, I do think that it is important to explain to the customer that the job may well not be ‘perfect’.

The latest range I have come across is ‘Ceramitex’. As the name suggests, it is a tile based selection available either 2m, 3m or 4m wide and with GripX slip-resistance, felt-backing and comes 2.0mm thick with a wear layer of 0.20mm.

CEramitex Borie Dark Design

CEramitex Borie Dark Design

I do think that the designs stand up quite well and as seen below, they offer a good range of contemporary designs. We are certainly selling more tile than wood design now in vinyl and this is probably borne out by the amount of new tile ranges we are seeing.

Ceramitex Designs in Full

Ceramitex Designs in Full

This should be a steady seller and while it is not at the top end of vinyl as regards quality, the felt-backing may well get you out of a hole, so it’s worth considering if your subfloor is slightly uneven. If it’s more than slightly dodgy then please rectify that before wasting your money on a vinyl floor.

This should go out at between £12 and £16 per square metre. Sadly not available as of yet on yourfloors, but your local supplier who deals with The Headlam Group will be able to supply it easily enough.

Read Full Post »

Ideal Carpets have launched a new range in bedroom and bathroom versions (bathroom version is 2m wide, bedroom is 4m wide).

There has been a real shortage of bathroom carpet in recent times and nothing has come close to Cormar’s old favourite, ‘Four Star’, which sold large amounts for years. Of course nowadays bathroom carpet is well out of fashion and sales have all but died, however in recent months I have been asked more and more regularly for it and if truth be told, my selection to show customers was fairly poor.

In general shops will not put a lot of effort into bathroom carpet as you only ever sell a small amount and cannot sell accessories with it as it is not fitted with underlay.

This one is a ‘shaggy’ range in some excellent colours. The magenta seems bold and vibrant:

New Bathroom Carpet - New Dimension

New Bathroom Carpet - New Dimension

Aside from that there is a black, a silver and some nice pastel shades in green, blue and lilac. Add the natural colours in and you have a decent colour bank.

It should sell between £13 and £17 per square metre and although it does not have much ‘body’ to it, it is perfectly adequate for the job. Bathroom carpet should not be seen as a long term solution, more usually it is a short term one. If you are looking for something long-lasting then just fit ordinary broadloom stuff on underlay. Bathroom carpet is pretty much disposable.

Having said that, many elderly customers like it and prefer a softer feeling underfoot. You gain comfort and warmth and you lose hygene and long-term wear – swings and roundabouts I guess. Elderly people also often worry about slipping on smooth floors so this can give added peace of mind.

Bathroom Carpet from Ideal

Bathroom Carpet from Ideal

Read Full Post »

A lot of consumers have had bad experiences with carpet and flooring retailers. I know, I hear their tales of woe every day. Sometimes, it must be said, the customer themselves has contributed to their own downfall, but it is clear to me that the trade as a whole needs a good shake up and needs to take a good, long look at itself.

So, what upsets so many people? I think I’d probably need to break this down into categories first:

Problems with Pricing: If ever an issue was a hot potato to the trade then this one is it. A relatively minor annoyance to upstanding retailers is that some of their competitors still choose to label their prices in square yards rather than square metres as they are meant to by law. The trick is that the square yard price is lower than the square metre price (a square yard is smaller), so the unususpecting customer who has seen a carpet elsewhere for £9.99 per square metre and now finds one in the unscrupulous shop for just £8.99 per square yard, is actually going to be charged £10.75 per square metre and end up paying more to a dishonest retailer. Some shops claim they are making some kind of metric martyr  stance but in reality they are doing it to fool you, the customer. Avoid ‘square yard’ shops in the UK like the plague.

A more contentious issue regarding the pricing of floorcoverings though is the ‘60% off’ labels that are so common within this trade. I am not going to name and shame any retailers here, but the idea that you can cut 60% or more from the price of a carpet is nonsense. Nobody makes those sorts of margins and you can bet that if they did then there would be a carpet shop on every street corner.

This issue needs a thorough investigation by the Office of Fair Trading. Many shops claim that carpets were once priced over £30 per square metre and yet now, magically they can let you have them for just £20 per square metre! How can they possibly discount so massively? Easy – the original price is purely used by them prior to the reduction as a means of ensuring they can claim such big discounts. In reality no other shops than them ever had the carpet anywhere near £30 per square metre and usually the shops that offer such ‘generous’ discounts end up with a final price that is simply around the average going rate for the product. I could name the larger retailers that do this, but I won’t. The practice is not exclusive to the big boys though, I’ve even seen small retailers try it.

In fact one of the largest carpet manufacturers told us (about 6 or 7 years back) to deliberately inflate our prices in early December (carpet shops have fewer customers coming in the shop then as they are all booked up for Christmas), so that we could discount their products in January. They even had pre-printed posters ready for us! The January price was actually just our normal retail price. Needless to say we told them where to go — disgraceful.

Fitters: The fitter is the last person the customer sees. A good fitter is worth his weight in gold to any shop and good fitters often mean repeat business. We are lucky in that we trust all of our fitters implicitly and know that their work is spot on at all times. That hasn’t always been the case – we’ve managed, unwittingly,  to employ some awful ones, but luckily rooted them out before too much damage was done. Lots of shops do not realise the importance of good fitters and to my mind there are two equally important aspects to fitting. Too many shops pay little or no attention to who they employ or subcontract fitting work to – make sure you ask about who will be fitting your flooring when you buy it and an answer like “they all fit correctly to British Standards” is not what you need to hear – that should be a given!

Obviously the standard of the work must be professional and consistent and the fitter must be reliable and honest. The most overlooked aspect though is that the fitter should have people skills. They should be personable, friendly and polite at all times. There are scores of surly, stroppy and downright rude floor fitters around I’m sorry to say and many of them should simply never be unleashed on the public!

Qualifications for fitters are relatively new and many of the very best fitters have no formal qualifications. Certainly NVQs are beginning to surface now, but to my mind and my own experience of NVQs, they are not worth much at all. There is no substitute for experience, ability and personality in my view. Sure, if a fitter has been on many courses then at the very least he is eager to learn and taking his occupation seriously, so it’s good to see, but it’s not going to mean that he is a better fitter per se. As with so many other trades now these new qualifications are being levered into the trade for one main reason – that’s to earn money for the course providers.

The biggest concern with fitting though is shops who will take no responsibility whatsoever for their fitters’ work. Now I don’t care if the fitter was paid separately or in the shop at the time of sale (a thorny issue with fitters, shops and HMRC), the shop must take action when a customer is not happy. Legally they don’t need to if a fitter was paid separately, but surely they have a moral obligation to sort out any problems. Sure, not all complaints are legitimate or reasonable, but if a shop simply says ‘not my problem, phone the fitter,’ then they are not providing any kind of customer service. Ask the question at the time of purchase , “what do I do if I have a problem with the fitting?” Regardless of whether we used an employed or a subcontracted fitter, I would always seek to resolve the problem with the fitter rather than referring the customer to him directly. A good shop wants to discover any shortcomings or problems to ensure that everything is as it should be.

Salesmen: Generally speaking, salesmen are not impartial. They are there to make money for themselves by selling add-ons, hitting their targets and earning commission. This is where smaller shops have the edge. In my shop I will only ever try to sell something I am confident of and I don’t earn commission, so I am looking to give you a good deal so that you will come back to me next time. Many small shops operate like this – they need your business and they have to convince you to recommend them and to be happy with your purchase. Larger retailers very often could not care less. The TV ad, or full page press ad will bring another boat load of customers in tomorrow.

Ask the salesman specific questions about what you are buying. Don’t be fooled by ‘heavy domestic’ labels – you will struggle to find carpets without that on them! Also make sure that whatever the salesman promises is on your invoice – removal of furniture etc. Ignore the warranties – mostly meaningless and read reviews of carpets and flooring on here as I add them. You can even email me for my opinion on any carpet or floorcovering.

Most salesmen receive little training and fail to understand the whole process. All salesmen should go out with fitters to understand what’s involved, yet very few do. Most fitters curse the ‘idiot’ salesman who has promised the customer the earth without thinking of talking it through with the fitter first.

One question I am often asked is why don’t shops tell you how much carpet you need when they come out and measure? Simple – it is because they have come out and (usually for no charge) measured and planned the job and if they hand you a plan then you may well have no intention of buying a carpet from them and may simply have been taking advantage of the system. Most shops are wise to this and therefore will refuse to give you your sizes until after purchase. A lot of cheap and nasty shops don’t provide this service so reputable shops are often taken advantage of and it is very annoying I can tell you! I can usually smell a rat from the off though -people who are looking to use and abuse this system tend to say very similar things and act in a very similar way. If a shop or fitter thinks you definitely won’t buy from them then there is also the possibility that they will deliberatley give the wrong sizes – I’ve seen this many times when we have got to the job and the poor customer’s carpets have all been too small because some irritated estimator elsewhere was sulking he didn’t get that job. Always ask the shop who you are going to buy from to come out and measure.

Presentation: Very often this is woeful. To be fair to all and sundry in the trade, things are now improving slowly but many shops look like something from Steptoe and Son. Pattern books piled up and strewn all over the floor, display stands falling to bits and unclear or non-existent pricing on the products. We’ve had our fingers burnt several times by spending a fair amount of money on stands that turn out to be disastrous for us. I remember that our Abingdon/Carpets International stands cost us several thousand pounds and we were supposed to be on better terms than non stand holders because of that, but we found out that we just weren’t – lovely.

A fair amount of blame can be passed squarely to the manufacturers who seem to think we ought to pay premium prices for their super duper display stands. They have a lot to learn. Vinyl manufacturers have it sussed – Rhinofloor, Leolan, Nairn, Tarkett, Polystyl etc all provide lovely FREE stands to show off their wares, yet carpet manufacturers almost always ask for vast sums (allegedly rebatable on sales) for theirs. They provide little or no point of sale – few posters, NO catalogues, little advertising etc – a note to all carpet manufacturers: please please please print a catalogue of your products! A nice colourful, glossy catalogue would do wonders and I can’t help wondering why this is rarely done. Even a CD-Rom with PDFs on it would be a start or else a decent website – Associated Weavers, Domo, Beaulieu , I’m looking at you.

Another problem is that the samples we receive are all different sizes and many just will not fit on the display racks we have. Is it too much to ask for an industry standard carpet sample size? I suggest 9″/18″ and 27″ and nothing else.

That’ll do for now – I’m sure there are more though.

Read Full Post »

Balta carpets had promised more colour into the UK market and are delivering on their part in funonthefloor with several new ranges.

The latest of these I got hold of today is Fusion Twist. Coming in a whopping colour palette featuring 30 shades to cover any taste.

30 Colours

30 Colours

Technically it is not a top of the range product, far from it in fact. It comes with a 5 year wear and stainfree warranty though and weighs in at 20oz (Dublin is 13oz, Bali is 15oz), so it’s not as bad as some and for a budget twist, it is pretty good value. It is only available felt-backed and 4m wide.

I’d reckon it will go out between £6 and £10 per metre and it will sell very well with landlords and for cheap kids’ bedrooms. It seems like it could well be the new version of Fiesta Twist, which was once a top seller at this kind of price.

Read Full Post »

Fantazy: This is very much Leolan’s ‘fun’ vinyl. It comes with a paltry 5 year warranty, easily Leolan’s shortest! but this is a range that sells on its designs. Having said that, there is nothing wrong with the product. It is 3mm thick and, unusually these days, comes without an R10 slip-resistant badge.

To the designs, not all are funky and quirky by any means. They have the ‘chessboard’ Alicante design as well as the plain marble Avalon design to cater for the more mainstream customer, but if you are looking for something a little different then Fantazy is a good bet. We’ve seen people use it in kids’ playrooms, bedrooms and home offices.

The ultimate in little boys’ flooring choice has to be this:

Route 66?

Route 66?

 There is also a cracking ‘jigsaw puzzle’ design in there and a very ‘girl-friendly’ design called ‘Flower’:

Flower Power

Flower Power

 On top of that, the ‘Drops’ and ‘Gobi’ designs are very usable in bathrooms and ensuites, regardless of their lack of slip-resistance. It might be preferable to avoid them for anyone who has mobility issues though. Anyway , all are available on Yourfloors and you will probably pay £15-£20 per square metre for them.

Steps: A lower-end vinyl – this one from Leolan once again comes without slip-resistance, but I think I am right in saying that only this and Fantazy are the only ones within their ranges that do not feature this.

I do find Steps useful though. Technically it is 2.5mm thick and has a wear layer of 0.2mm, so it’s not going to compete as far as wear goes with Leolan’s higher spec (and price) products. Having said that though, it does not feel or look cheap and nasty and I have no qualms about supplying and fitting it. Like all Leolan’s products, it is a long time since we had any kind of problem with them.

The reason I often show Steps to customers is that they offer a large green and blue simple square tile, and that is hard to find these days. Once this kind of design was commonplace, but now Leolan’s Vigo design is one of very few:

VIgo 025 Design

VIgo 025 DesignVigo 075

Once we get past that the designs are nothing out of the ordinary, but are all steady and solid sellers. You can view them here, but a word of warning in that not all of those designs will be distributed in the UK within that range at least. Some of the designs will be available in other ranges though.
You can expect to pay £12-£15 per square metre for this product.

THIS POST WILL BE UPDATED WITH MORE INFORMATION VERY SOON!

Luxury Touch:

Quartzgrip:

Optigrip:

Read Full Post »