Premier Flooring Retailer Premier Flooring Retailer Magazine - Covid-19 Busi | Page 20
IT’S YOUR UP
It’s What He Costs You that Counts
W
Tom Jennings
Retail Training Expert
Tom Jennings is a lifelong
member of the flooring
business. Since selling his
family’s retail business in
2006, he has served the
industry as an educator
and speaker. He is a past
board chairman of the
WFCA and is currently the
board chairman of WFCA
Services, Inc. He may
be reached at
[email protected]
hile the flooring business has certainly been more robust the past few
years, it still seems that no flooring business seems to be flush with money
today. Competition is fierce, and margins are squeezed. As with every budget in
the business world, the need to watch expenses is very real. I get it! It’s just that
there are some areas of your business which may be poor places to attempt to save
money. In fact, in order to actually grow your clientele, you may want to consider
just the opposite.
What I don’t get is why so many flooring retailers that I encounter seem to think
that installation can often be identified as an area of cost containment or reduction.
Not only is service the only element of a sale that really differentiates us from our
competition, it is most often where both profitability and customer are either max-
imized, or jeopardized. Too many retailers maintain that it is product that differen-
tiates them from the competition in the customer’s eyes. I could not disagree more.
To illustrate, allow me to make a comparison to the restaurant business. Every
morning a food supplier makes the round to the various restaurants in a trade area.
Whether it’s a carton of eggs or a sack of flour, essentially the same ingredients are
available to all establishments.
What we all realize is that while the deliveries into the kitchen are very similar, the
deliveries from the kitchen to the customer’s table vary greatly. The ultimate success
of the restaurant relies heavily upon both the chef’s abilities and the recipes used. A
great chef using inspired recipes will create a wait for a table at which to be seated.
However, a mediocre cook using bland recipes will eventually create a “for rent” sign
in the front window. Similar ingredients can produce very different results!
Isn’t this scenario in many ways very similar to our own? Our “food service”
trucks carry names such as Shaw and Mohawk on their sides. They essentially deliver
the same ingredients to the dock of all flooring stores. It is only the efforts of those
who can craft a beautiful bathroom from boxes of tile, for example, that differentiate
a great place from which to buy flooring from a mediocre one.
For illustration, let’s say that an entrée had a price of fifteen dollars. Ask yourself,
if a restaurant added one dollar to the price of every item on its menu, then consis-
tently delivered a great meal using more skilled cooks, what do you think that the net
results in their amount of business would be?
Now, now ask the same question, but reduce the prices by one dollar and use a
less skilled kitchen staff. Do you really think that they would prosper by being a little
cheaper at the expense of delivering a better meal? I sure don’t!
The only difference between these industries that I see, is that as a whole chefs
have successfully placed a high value on their trade. There are ample schools for them
18 Premier Flooring Retailer | Q1 2020