The Steel CodCast

Linear vs Traditional Compressors: The Appliance Debate Salespeople Oversimplify

12 min · 20. maj 2026
episode Linear vs Traditional Compressors: The Appliance Debate Salespeople Oversimplify cover

Beskrivelse

Linear compressors are supposed to be the future. Fewer moving parts. Better efficiency. Quieter operation. Longer life. So why is there still hesitation? In this episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon break down one of the biggest technical conversations happening in refrigeration today: linear compressors vs traditional compressors. At first glance, linear compressors sound like an obvious upgrade. The technology promises smoother operation, improved efficiency, and better long-term food preservation through more stable temperature management. But this episode explains why the conversation isn’t that simple. They break down: * what actually makes a linear compressor different * how traditional compressors operate by comparison * and why “better on paper” doesn’t always mean “better in every real-world condition” The discussion also explores: * how customer usage patterns impact performance * what happens when environmental conditions aren’t ideal * why technical explanations often confuse customers * and how salespeople accidentally oversell the technology instead of positioning it correctly Most importantly, they explain the cleanest way to frame the conversation: this is not about “good vs bad.” It’s about understanding optimization vs tolerance. If you’re shopping for refrigeration or selling appliances professionally, this episode gives you a much clearer understanding of how these systems actually differ. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, appliance enthusiasts, and homeowners comparing linear compressors vs traditional refrigerator compressors. Follow the Show New episodes of The Steel CodCast drop every day of the week, including weekends. Follow, rate, and subscribe wherever you listen so you never miss an episode. Chapters 0:00 Linear vs Traditional Compressors Setup 0:27 Why Linear Compressors Sound So Exciting 0:41 Why There’s Still Hesitation 1:49 What Makes Linear Compressors Different 2:43 If It’s Better… What’s the Catch? 3:37 Where Traditional Compressors Fight Back 4:19 What Customers Aren’t Thinking About 5:27 What Happens in Real-World Conditions 6:12 How Salespeople Mess This Up 7:16 How This Should Actually Be Explained 9:47 The Cleanest Way to Compare the Two 11:41 Final Verdict #refrigerator #compressor #linearcompressor #applianceindustry #appliancesales #appliancesalestraining #applianceprofessionals #homeappliances #refrigeration #applianceindustrypodcast

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episode Dale Seiden of Qoldfusion — The Residential Walk-In Cold Storage Brand Redefining Where Refrigeration Lives cover

Dale Seiden of Qoldfusion — The Residential Walk-In Cold Storage Brand Redefining Where Refrigeration Lives

Dale Seiden, CEO and co-founder of Qoldfusion, joins Jon Beresford and Anthony Fors for a conversation that covers a lot of ground — how to sell to a luxury buyer who's already stopped caring about features, why this product has to enter the conversation before a single plan is drawn, and why the retailers who move on Qoldfusion now are not taking a risk but making a long-term positioning decision. Jon opens with the luxury buyer framework: the moment a customer decides to spend at a luxury level, features stop mattering. What they're actually buying is what their life feels like after the purchase — day after day. The appliance that becomes invisible because it works perfectly and fits seamlessly into how they live. Qoldfusion's product and the ownership experience around it are built around exactly that idea. But it requires a different approach than anything else on the floor. Jon identifies the most expensive education a retail partner can get with this product: the customer is completely sold, excited, ready — and then the kitchen plans come out. The cabinetry is already spec'd, the walls are already placed, and there's nowhere for a walk-in cold pantry to go. Qoldfusion has to be in the conversation before a single line is drawn. That makes the designer and architect relationship not a nice-to-have — it's the entire strategy. He breaks down the technology conversation the right way: not through engineering, but through what every customer already knows — produce that dries out too fast, texture that's off, something that should last a week lasting two days. Connect the dots between how air moves inside a fridge and what the customer experiences every time they open it. That's the conversation. And once you get the customer inside one? Open the door, step back, and follow their lead. Jon says it must be the easiest product in the world to sell once you get to that moment. The observation that reframes everything: for 100 years, a refrigerator has lived in the kitchen because nobody ever asked where the family actually lives. Qoldfusion asked that question. Now the salesperson isn't selling a refrigerator anymore — they're helping a customer decide how their entire home functions. And the retailers who build around that conversation now, the way Sub-Zero's early believers built around that brand before it was dominant, are building something their competitors will spend years trying to catch up on. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen. Referenced this episode: → Qoldfusion Episode (without Dale) — https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-uhxzq-1aec6e4 [https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-uhxzq-1aec6e4]

12. juli 20261 h 8 min
episode What "Luxury" Actually Means in Appliances — And Why the Word Has Been Completely Stripped of Meaning cover

What "Luxury" Actually Means in Appliances — And Why the Word Has Been Completely Stripped of Meaning

Walk into any appliance showroom today and you'll find the word "luxury" on products at $800, at $2,000, at $5,000, and at $15,000. Every one of them carrying the same language — premium, professional, elevated, sophisticated. Jon Beresford opens this Saturday deep dive by saying that confusion is costing the independent channel something significant — and that the independent dealer is the only person in the market positioned to actually fix it. He traces exactly how luxury lost its meaning through what he calls price point creep: manufacturers with a successful premium line that starts building tiers below it, borrowing the aesthetic while compromising the engineering, calling it luxury because it looks luxury and sits on the same floor. Every manufacturer starts making the same calculation. The word ends up spanning such a vast range of products and price points that it stops functioning as a meaningful descriptor at all. At this point, Jon says, luxury basically means anything above entry level — which means almost nothing. Steel Cod's definition of genuine luxury comes down to three components. The first is longevity — not warranty language, but actual field performance in year 12 the way it performed in year one. The second is ownership experience — not just how the product feels to use, but the entire relationship with the brand after the sale: how easy service is, how available parts are, how the brand treats a customer when something goes wrong. A product that costs $10,000 and delivers a $500 service experience when something breaks isn't a luxury product — it's just a price point. The third is performance ceiling — genuine luxury products have a ceiling a customer can grow and learn into for years. A product built to a lower standard hits that ceiling fast. The customer files the experience under "I paid a lot of money and I'm not sure it was worth it." That feeling is the opposite of what luxury is supposed to deliver. Jon names both versions of the problem: the brand that earned luxury decades ago but whose standards didn't survive acquisitions and cost reduction cycles, and the brand that positioned itself in the luxury tier without ever earning it. He calls "affordable luxury" an oxymoron — affordable doesn't describe a price point, it describes where corners were cut. He closes with the structural argument for why the independent dealer is the only person in the entire ecosystem capable of having this conversation honestly — and why the dealer who commits to it is building a reputation that compounds in referrals, repeat customers, and trust in ways that no competitor can replicate. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

I går27 min
episode Steel Cod Retail Council | Earned Loyalty vs Brand Loyalty, Miele's Edge, and the Buying Group Reckoning cover

Steel Cod Retail Council | Earned Loyalty vs Brand Loyalty, Miele's Edge, and the Buying Group Reckoning

The Steel Cod Retail Council is back with results from four questions that cut right to the core of how independent appliance retail actually works. Anthony Fors and Jon Beresford break down whether true brand loyalty exists in luxury appliances, what manufacturer support really costs dealers when you run the full equation, how the floor is currently grading SKS, Miele, and Fisher & Paykel, and where buying groups still have real leverage versus where sophisticated dealers have outgrown them. The brand loyalty conversation alone reframes how you should think about selling luxury. The council described two completely different customers and called it the same thing — one built on earned loyalty through actual ownership experience, one built on brand aspiration that fades when the budget gets real. Sub-Zero and Wolf are holding while everyone else loosens, and the reasons why should change how every salesperson on the floor approaches a luxury introduction. The manufacturer support math section is the most direct the council has been on this topic. Margin is one number. The full equation includes service escalations, concealed damage claims, returns friction, and every hour a dealer's team spends managing a brand instead of selling it. The dealers who understand that equation make very different decisions about floor space. New episode every day. Subscribe wherever you listen. #SteelCodRetailCouncil #LuxuryAppliances #SubZeroWolf #MieleAppliances #ApplianceRetail #ApplianceSales #BuyingGroups #SteelCodCast #ApplianceIndustry

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Panel Ready vs. Stainless Built-In — The Hidden Costs and Project Realities Nobody Fully Explains

Panel-ready vs. stainless sounds like a finish preference conversation. Jon Beresford says that's exactly the problem. When a salesperson treats this as a simple either-or — you like the integrated look or you don't, pick one — they're leaving their customer to discover the full picture on their own, usually mid-project, usually at the worst possible time. This isn't a comparison between two appliances. It's a comparison between two completely different project scopes. The panel-ready appliance might sit at a lower price point than its stainless counterpart, and in the middle of a project where every single line item has been sticker shock, that feels like finally catching a break. But that price doesn't include the custom cabinet panels, the handles, or the installation labor. And it definitely doesn't account for the fact that when installation day comes, the cabinet shop, the general contractor, and the appliance installer all tend to have a version of "that's not our responsibility" when it comes to actually mounting those panels and attaching those handles. Jon walks through the installation reality, the hidden costs that don't show up in the appliance price, and the replacement conversation that almost never gets had. Because if a customer plans to live in that home long-term, they need to understand what happens when the appliance eventually needs to be replaced — matching panels from years earlier isn't always possible, and what was a beautiful integrated kitchen can turn into a serious renovation decision. He closes with how this conversation should actually be handled on the floor. Not as a lengthy detour through the showroom, but as a more complete version of a conversation most salespeople are currently cutting too short. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

9. juli 202622 min
episode Steam Washer vs. No Steam — Why the Feature Gets Dismissed and How to Explain It Properly cover

Steam Washer vs. No Steam — Why the Feature Gets Dismissed and How to Explain It Properly

The question comes up on every laundry floor: the washer has steam — so what? It already has water in it. Jon Beresford says it's one of the fairest questions a customer can ask. And the problem isn't the feature — it's that almost nobody in the industry has ever given it a proper answer. Steam in dryers is an easy sell. The outcomes are tangible and immediate: fewer wrinkles, fresher clothes, quicker refresh, less ironing. Customers can picture it. Steam in washers runs into a completely different wall, because the machine is already mentally associated with water and soaking and saturation. So when a salesperson says "this one has steam," the customer's brain asks what steam is doing that the water isn't already handling — and "it helps with cleaning" doesn't cut it. Jon breaks down both sides of the failure. The first is the vague feature problem — if a customer can't quickly connect a feature to something real in their life, it sounds like marketing, and abstract features collapse during the buying decision, not after it. The second is the expectation gap problem — steam has such a strong reputation in dryers and steam ovens that customers fill in the blanks themselves, imagining deep sanitization and transformative results that steam in a washer doesn't actually deliver. Over-promise and under-deliver is just as damaging as not explaining it at all. He's clear that steam in a washing machine is genuinely valuable — for the right household. Allergy-sensitive homes, heavy laundry lifestyles, gym clothes, kids' clothes, certain stain situations — for those customers it's a real quality-of-life improvement. But it's assistive, not revolutionary. Some households use it constantly. Others don't notice it exists after six months. The only path to selling it well is asking the right questions, qualifying a little deeper, and translating the feature into actual ownership relevance for the specific person you're talking to. Jon closes with where he puts most of the blame: not on the salespeople, but on manufacturers who never went deep enough on who this feature is actually for. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen. Referenced this episode: → Steam Oven Hierarchy Episode — https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/8sd722yab3texsy7/Steam_Oven_Hierarchy7zggt.mp3

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