The Steel CodCast
Shannon O'Hara and Jon Beresford are back with the latest from the Steel Cod Retail Council — anonymous responses from the owners, managers, and top salespeople on the retail side who you'd actually want to hear from if you could. Three questions this week, and all three have something worth sitting with. The TC5 vs. TR7 conversation came back pro-TC5 from the council, and Anthony is clear on why that happens — there's a very specific kind of conviction behind the classic agitation story and he genuinely respects it. But his camp is the TR7, and the reason he keeps landing there isn't about preference or aesthetics. The TR7 service call frequency is running significantly lower than the TC5 series. Once you have that data in your hands, the debate stops being emotional and becomes an engineering argument. He walks through who the TC5 is genuinely right for — it's a real answer for a real customer — and how to use the service data to have the honest conversation with a customer who has already sold themselves on the TC5 but maybe shouldn't be there. The word "stagnant" came up more than any other word when the council described DCS, and Anthony wants to spend a minute on it because it's probably the most important word in the whole episode. Stagnant doesn't mean bad product. It means the floor ran out of a reason to talk about you. The energy shifts, the enthusiasm shifts, and eventually the recommendation follows — toward the brands that keep giving something new to say. Alfresco winning the question isn't the headline. The reason is the headline. And there's a lesson in there for every outdoor brand with floor presence right now, including some that probably feel comfortable enough that they shouldn't have to worry. And then the pizza oven result — most of the council isn't displaying, selling, or seriously thinking about outdoor pizza ovens. Anthony uses that answer to say something he's clearly been wanting to say for a while. A floor's job is not to display what sells. It's to inspire. The products doing the most important work in a showroom are often the ones that never move the most volume. They're the products that open a door in a customer's mind — that make them start imagining a version of their outdoor space or their kitchen or their home that they'd never allowed themselves to fully picture before. And when that happens, the ceiling on what they're willing to invest becomes a completely different number. The dealer who builds that floor isn't just selling appliances. They're building something their competitors cannot replicate, no matter how similar their product selection looks. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen. 🔗 Referenced this episode: → Julie Burns / Monogram episode: https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-nsimf-1af9d49
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