Do you advertise when times are good or only when times are bad?
In this episode of The kbbreview Podcast, Andy Davies and David Barker talk about what marketing you should be doing even when demand is high and there arenât enough hours in the day.
Website Development vs. Website Design
I donât mean to brag, but when I look at a kitchen website, I can tell who designed it in under 10 seconds flat.
(Thatâs about the same the time it takes to make a first impression, btw.)
I wonât know who exactly put it together, but what I can immediately work out, is whether itâs been created by a Website Designer ⊠or a Website Developer.
The Kitchen Retailerâs Lockdown Opportunity
So here we are, living through Lockdown 2.0 - the national event as welcome as, well, a cough in an elevator.
Granted, this lockdownâs not the same as the last one: the world hasnât stopped turning, and people are doing their best to get on with life.
But regardless, our freedoms are temporarily reduced, and â just like last time â weâve got some additional time at our disposal.
The question is: How are you going to use your lockdown this time?
Company Matters in Kitchens & Bathrooms News
Staying Afloat or Missing the Boat?
Itâs happening again.
After a few months of relative calm from the media, weâre back in the place where lockdown is upon us, and bad news is being propagated on a daily basis.
And if you read my recent comments, youâll know just how vital it is not to get bogged down in the hysteria.
What history tells us, quite plainly, is that fortune favours the brave in times of recession and economic uncertainty.
The Opportunity of a Generation
Independent Kitchen Retailers â A Sea of Voices?
Klopp in the Kitchen
Iâm in Denmark this week, working with the Radio ABC Group, helping many of their local advertisers to create the right marketing message.
Itâs become a bit of an annual thing, and when I was here last year, the other main presenter was a guy called Thomas Gronnemark.
The name probably doesnât mean anything to you, but if youâre a football fan, thereâs a chance youâve read something about him.
Here's Why Kitchen Prospects Won't Call You
Here's a question you've probably asked yourself on many an occasion:
In a world full of media spin, fake news, rogue traders, scams and spam, how do you get your prospects to TRUST you?
It's a vital question.
You see, trust is perhaps the most vital commodity in 21st-century commerce. And in the KBB world where there's big money at stake, it's even more critical.
There's no one answer to the question, but one thing that's definitely a part of the solutionâŠ
Beating Bogus Bargains in the KBB industry
We had a question in a month ago from a really decent guy who runs a kitchen design company with his wife.
Sheâs an expert designer, with two decades of experience, loads of integrity, and a steady stream of glowing testimonials.
But they have a problem:
Theyâre losing business to ârespectedâ companies in their local market, promising the world, but delivering precious little.
When kitchen marketing hands to sales
I had back-to-back client calls with two kitchen retailers last Thursday.
Both smart and switched on, and both getting some great marketing out of the door (which weâll take at least some credit for!).
It just so happened that in both calls, the same question came up:
âAt what point do you follow up with a prospect after theyâve given you their data?â
Thatâs where the similarities ended because their responses were wildly different.
Good Data and Marketing Effectiveness
Weâre in the market for a new kitchen
Itâs arguably long overdue, but weâre in the market for a new kitchen.
And already, itâs been a fascinating experience.
The most recent Bank Holiday heralded a conversation that continues to replay in my head. It was the day that my wife went from dreaming about a new kitchen to planning for one.
We're hiring!
More valuable than oil
It was back in 2017 that The Economist declared that the world's most valuable resource was no longer oil.
Data had overtaken it.
Of course, thanks to the pandemic, oil is currently much less valuable than it was three years ago, but there's absolutely no question about it that data has gone in the other direction.
Data is more powerful and more valuable than ever before, and its power is only increasing.
Marketing Matters
Developing a virtual sales experience
Like it or not, we're entering into a new era.
A new world. A new order of things.
The coronavirus crisis has changed pretty much everything in the short term.
But its effects will impact both the medium and long term.
It'll change the way we live.
With social distancing measures likely to be in place for a while, and plenty of time for people to acclimatise to doing more online, the way we buy stuff will change.
The Biggest Threat to KBB Retailers Right Now
KBB retailers have approached this crisis in several different ways.
And for at least 50% of them, their 'plan' has been painfully obvious.
Retreat. Batten down the hatches. Conserve cash at all costs. Cut everything.
And while, for some, this might have been an essential plan for the past four weeks, it's a truly terrible plan for the next four months.
Your most important asset has changed
Just a few weeks ago, if youâd asked KBB retailers what their most important asset was, many of them would have been unequivocal in their answer:
âOur showroom. When we get people in there, they fall in love with our products and end up buying a kitchen.â
Fair enough. But what about right now?
The showroom is currently pretty redundant. (Although some smart retailers have managed to offer showroom visits online.) Something else has claimed the place as the most important asset.
Marketing Strategy for KBB Retailers in this Crisis â Part 3
The coronavirus crisis isn't over. Not by a long chalk.
But, based on what we're seeing, hearing and reading from the Government and the global press, what we do know is that light is beginning to develop at the end of the tunnel.
While the situation plateaus in the UK, some countries further on from us are starting to loosen their lockdown. This week, Denmark, Austria, Spain and even Italy are â to varying degrees - gradually starting to reopen 'non-essential' businesses and organisations.
Sure, it's likely to be May before non-essential businesses can start to reopen their doors here, and in an ideal world, you'd never have had to close your doors in the first place.


















