Clearview National August 2015 - Issue 165 | Page 4
FROMTHEEDITOR
Stephanie,
Clearview Editor
We are seeing more and more
manufacturers and suppliers
offering additional support to
help promote their products
and services to installers.
»»Installer support schemes are
not a new invention, I recall as a junior marketing
assistant (many moons ago) assisting in the creation
and launch of the ‘Saracen Secure Guarantee’,
an initiative lead by the Laird Group to support
fabricators and installers sell a complete package
of windows and doors in to a home, which would
be financially safeguarded in the event of a break-in
through the fault of the company’s hardware. The
scheme paid out to the homeowner, but assisted
towards the sale and installation.
The financial commitment and resource it took to
convince installers that the scheme was not a scam,
but a genuine offer was immense. Nowadays, installers
are a lot less sceptical of such campaigns and news
reports are showing that impetus is gathering towards
the uptake to join and be accredited by the schemes
on offer, adding kudos to a company and its product
offering.
Network Veka is a classic success story in this
category, showing how, through continuous imagination
to reinvigorate the scheme’s offering to members; the
scheme is proving to be a great success. Its current
initiative has opened up the scheme to other Group
members, seeing sister company Halo allowing its
customers to also benefit from the scheme.
However, not all installer support may come in the
form of a scheme. Read how Vita hardware is also
looking at ways of how they can support installers
with the introduction of Document Q: Security in
October this year. The hardware supplier tells how
they are looking to cascade the information required
to support customers needing to abide by the new
build and refurbishment projects rule and supply
vital information regarding the changes to PAS24
certification.
Have a great month
Stephanie
4 » AUG 2015 » CL EARVI E W- UK . C O M
A New Deal
The Chancellor George Osborne was
accused of ‘giving with one hand and
taking away with the other’ in July’s
budget. Emplas Mike Crewdson discusses
what it holds for the window industry.
»»The decision to
increase the national minimum
wage, now rebranded as the new
living wage to more than £9
an hour by 2020, does create a
challenge for business and for our
industry in particular.
That people will have a little
more money in their pockets is
a good thing but timing as they
say, is everything. We are now
in recovery but while in general
things are up, the trajectory of
economic growth has been pitted
with the occasional trough – not
least in the first half of this year.
We are also not immune
as an industry from more far
reaching issues of productivity,
which combined with increased
costs could slow growth in the
construction sector.
It also means that those
manufacturers, who have
relied on cheap labour as the
foundation of recovery without
any accompanying investment in
processes and equipment, may
be forced to pass on costs to their
customers.
At Emplas, we took a
decision to continue to invest
in our systems and factory floor
equipment throughout the
downturn. This has included
increased automation, investment
in new machinery plus our bar
code factory management system.
This has improved product quality
and the service that we are able to
offer to our customers but has also
given us an element of immunity
from the launch of a living wage.
So to conclude, on balance, this
is a mixed budget for business and
for our industry. The gamble is
whether the Chancellor’s measures
continue to drive growth. If they
do, the tax breaks for individuals
and the creation of the living wage,
means that we should all have a
little more in our back pockets and
if consumer confidence is higher,
we may be more inclined to invest
in home improvements.
For more information visit
www.emplas.co.uk,
email [email protected] or
call 01933 674880