The Steel CodCast

The “I Won’t Use That” Objection: Why Modern Appliance Selling Is Changing

18 min · 5. juni 2026
episode The “I Won’t Use That” Objection: Why Modern Appliance Selling Is Changing cover

Beskrivelse

A customer hears about a feature. And almost immediately responds: “I won't use that.” For many salespeople, that single sentence can completely derail a conversation. But this episode argues that the objection isn't really about the feature at all. In this episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon break down one of the fastest-growing objections on appliance sales floors today and why it reveals a much bigger shift happening in customer behavior. The conversation explores how appliance shopping has fundamentally changed. Years ago, customers often walked into showrooms hoping to be impressed. Today? They're walking in hoping to avoid making a mistake. That shift changes everything. The discussion dives into: * why feature-rich products often create resistance * how customers filter information differently than they used to * why "I won't use that" is more dangerous than a price objection * and how relevance has replaced aspiration as the primary sales challenge They also unpack: * why feature dumping creates pressure * how customers emotionally reject features before explanations are finished * why ownership imagination matters more than specifications * and how manufacturers and retailers unintentionally contribute to feature overload One of the biggest takeaways: Customers don't buy impressive features. They buy relief from frustrations they already recognize in their lives. Most importantly, the episode explains how great salespeople avoid this trap by starting with customer frustrations first and introducing features only after the problem is clearly identified. If you work in appliance sales, retail leadership, or customer experience, this episode provides one of the clearest explanations of how modern buying behavior continues to evolve. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, retail managers, trainers, and anyone interested in customer psychology, sales objections, and modern buying behavior. 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 The “I Won’t Use That” Objection 0:41 Why Customers Shop Differently Today 1:23 From Being Impressed to Avoiding Mistakes 2:16 Why This Objection Is More Dangerous Than Price 3:09 When Customers Disconnect Emotionally 3:55 Why Features Die on Contact 5:02 The Panic Response Salespeople Fall Into 5:55 Why Customers Retreat From Conversations 6:30 The Industry’s Feature Overload Problem 7:27 When Features Start Feeling Like Homework 8:10 Why Customers Are Already Exhausted 8:23 The Internal Filter Every Customer Uses 9:06 Customers Buy Relief, Not Features 10:16 How Great Salespeople Handle This 11:07 Why Frustrations Must Come First 12:15 Solving Problems Before Selling Features 13:02 The Industry Is Still Selling Like It’s 2008 13:58 Why Simplicity Keeps Winning 14:52 The Salesperson’s Real Responsibility 16:14 Why Most Customers Don’t Want Every Detail 17:11 Let Customers Ask for More 17:57 Final Takeaways #salespsychology #customerbehavior #appliancesales #salestraining #retailsales #customerexperience #applianceindustry #salesstrategy #leadership #thesteelcodcast

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episode Samsung’s Trust Problem: Why Attention Isn’t Creating Confidence cover

Samsung’s Trust Problem: Why Attention Isn’t Creating Confidence

Few appliance brands create stronger reactions than Samsung. Some customers love them. Some salespeople avoid them. And almost everyone has an opinion. In this episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon tackle one of the most fascinating dynamics in the appliance industry: how Samsung became one of the most recognized appliance brands in the world while still struggling to earn complete trust from many retailers, salespeople, and customers. The conversation starts with a simple question: How can a company generate so much attention and still face so much skepticism? They break down: * why Samsung continues to dominate awareness * how innovation helps the brand stand out * why customers are naturally drawn to technology-forward products * and what Samsung consistently does better than many competitors when it comes to attracting attention But attention is only part of the story. The discussion dives into: * where confidence begins to break down * why salespeople often attach qualifiers when discussing Samsung * how online narratives shape buying behavior * and why service experiences can linger in the industry for years One of the biggest themes throughout the episode: The appliance industry has a very long memory. And trust is much harder to build than visibility. They also explore: * the risks of innovation moving faster than customer confidence * why highly connected products create both excitement and anxiety * how retailer perception influences customer perception * and why Samsung has become a symbol of a larger industry challenge Most importantly, the episode asks a bigger question: As appliances become smarter, more connected, and more feature-heavy... Are customers actually asking for more technology? Or are they looking for something simpler? If you work in appliance retail, manufacturing, service, or customer experience, this episode offers one of the most thoughtful discussions you'll hear about trust, innovation, and the future of appliance buying. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, retailers, manufacturers, and anyone interested in Samsung appliances, customer trust, innovation, and appliance industry trends. 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 Why Samsung Creates So Much Debate 0:25 Attention vs Confidence 1:06 The Question Retailers Keep Asking 3:10 What Samsung Gets Right 5:40 Why Attention Isn't Enough 7:23 The “Yeah, But...” Problem 8:54 How Online Reputation Shapes Buying Decisions 10:44 Innovation as a Double-Edged Sword 12:41 Why Service Still Dominates the Conversation 14:54 The Real Trust Challenge 16:29 What Samsung Represents for the Industry 18:56 Is More Technology What Customers Want? 19:11 How Salespeople Should Think About Samsung Today 22:35 Final Thoughts #samsung #appliances #applianceindustry #customertrust #innovation #appliancesales #retailsales #customerbehavior #salespsychology #thesteelcodcast

8. juni 202622 min
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Most people think appliance sales is about memorizing products. George Kandathil learned very quickly that it isn't. In this special guest episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon sit down with George Kandathil, Sales Specialist at Goeman's Appliances, to discuss what modern appliance sales actually looks like from the perspective of someone who entered the industry recently. Because today's appliance customers are very different from the customers salespeople dealt with even a few years ago. They arrive with: * online research * AI-generated information * product comparisons * Reddit opinions * YouTube reviews * and often a very specific idea of what they think they want The challenge? What customers think they need and what actually fits their lifestyle are often two completely different things. Together, they explore: * what surprises new salespeople most * why relationship-building matters more than memorizing specifications * how support teams influence sales success * and why appliance sales has become far more consultative than transactional The conversation also dives into: * customer qualification * handling preconceived product preferences * smart home technology * manufacturer training * and the growing gap between marketing messages and real customer priorities One of the strongest themes throughout the episode: The best appliance salespeople aren't product experts first. They're problem-solvers first. George also shares valuable insight into: * how modern customers shop * what information they arrive with * where manufacturer training could improve * and why understanding ownership experience often matters more than understanding specifications Most importantly, this episode provides a fresh perspective from someone experiencing today's appliance industry in real time rather than looking back through decades-old habits. If you work in appliance retail, sales, training, or customer experience, this episode offers a valuable look at how the next generation of appliance professionals views the industry. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, retail managers, trainers, manufacturers, and anyone interested in modern appliance sales and customer buying behavior. 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 Introducing George Kandathil 0:26 How George Got Into Appliances 1:38 Why New Appliance Salespeople Struggle 3:35 Expectations vs Reality on the Sales Floor 4:22 What Finally Started Clicking 5:29 Why Support Teams Matter So Much 6:24 Building Relationships Beyond the Sales Floor 9:21 Advice for New Appliance Salespeople 11:01 Balancing Product Knowledge and Customer Rapport 12:29 When Customers Think They Know What They Want 13:42 Guiding Customers Toward Better Decisions 15:30 How Great Salespeople Handle Product Mismatches 15:58 What Customers Think Matters vs What Actually Matters 17:22 The Modern Customer Has Changed 17:38 AI, Research, and Today's Appliance Shopper 19:53 Features Customers Ignore 20:08 What Manufacturers Push That Doesn't Move Sales 24:33 Smart Features Customers Actually Love 25:48 The Smart Features Salespeople Shouldn't Ignore 28:01 The Biggest Opportunity Manufacturers Are Missing 29:24 John's Advice to Manufacturers 30:54 How Better Training Could Improve Sales 31:57 Final Thoughts with George Kandathil 32:27 About Goldman's Appliances 33:16 Where to Connect with George #georgekandathil #goldmansappliances #appliancesales #salestraining #customerbehavior #retailsales #applianceindustry #salespsychology #smartappliances #thesteelcodcast

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episode The Good-Better-Best Ladder Trap: Why Salespeople Lose Customer Trust cover

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Most appliance sales follow the same formula: Good. Better. Best. The assumption is simple: customers start at "good" and work their way up. But what if that entire framework is creating more confusion than clarity? In this episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon break down one of the most common sales structures in appliances: the Good-Better-Best Ladder. At first glance, it seems logical. Give customers options. Show them upgrades. Help them understand value. But this episode explores why the ladder often creates unintended consequences. The conversation dives into: * why customers don't naturally think in product tiers * how "best" often becomes emotionally overloaded * why salespeople accidentally force comparisons that don't matter * and how feature escalation can distract from the customer's actual problem They also unpack: * why more expensive doesn't always mean better for the customer * how customers experience decision fatigue * where trust gets lost during the sales process * and why the best sales conversations start with outcomes instead of product rankings One of the biggest takeaways: Customers are not trying to buy the "best" appliance. They're trying to buy the appliance that best solves their problem. Most importantly, this episode explains how salespeople can move away from ladder-based presentations and toward solution-based conversations that create more confidence, less friction, and stronger long-term customer satisfaction. If you sell appliances, manage a showroom, or simply want to understand how buying decisions actually happen, this episode offers a fresh perspective on one of retail's oldest habits. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, retail leaders, and anyone interested in customer decision-making, sales psychology, and appliance buying behavior. 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 What Is the Good-Better-Best Ladder? 1:42 Why Customers Don’t Think in Product Tiers 3:27 How “Best” Creates Unnecessary Pressure 5:11 The Decision Fatigue Problem 7:04 Why More Features Don’t Solve More Problems 9:22 When the Ladder Helps 11:05 When the Ladder Hurts 13:08 The Trust Gap Salespeople Create 15:24 Outcome-Based Selling Explained 17:43 Helping Customers Buy With Confidence 19:38 The Better Way to Guide Decisions 21:00 Final Takeaways   #salespsychology #appliancesales #customerbehavior #retailsales #salestraining #applianceindustry #decisionmaking #customerexperience #salesstrategy #thesteelcodcast

6. juni 202622 min
episode The “I Won’t Use That” Objection: Why Modern Appliance Selling Is Changing cover

The “I Won’t Use That” Objection: Why Modern Appliance Selling Is Changing

A customer hears about a feature. And almost immediately responds: “I won't use that.” For many salespeople, that single sentence can completely derail a conversation. But this episode argues that the objection isn't really about the feature at all. In this episode of The Steel CodCast, Anthony and Jon break down one of the fastest-growing objections on appliance sales floors today and why it reveals a much bigger shift happening in customer behavior. The conversation explores how appliance shopping has fundamentally changed. Years ago, customers often walked into showrooms hoping to be impressed. Today? They're walking in hoping to avoid making a mistake. That shift changes everything. The discussion dives into: * why feature-rich products often create resistance * how customers filter information differently than they used to * why "I won't use that" is more dangerous than a price objection * and how relevance has replaced aspiration as the primary sales challenge They also unpack: * why feature dumping creates pressure * how customers emotionally reject features before explanations are finished * why ownership imagination matters more than specifications * and how manufacturers and retailers unintentionally contribute to feature overload One of the biggest takeaways: Customers don't buy impressive features. They buy relief from frustrations they already recognize in their lives. Most importantly, the episode explains how great salespeople avoid this trap by starting with customer frustrations first and introducing features only after the problem is clearly identified. If you work in appliance sales, retail leadership, or customer experience, this episode provides one of the clearest explanations of how modern buying behavior continues to evolve. Who This Episode Is For Appliance sales professionals, retail managers, trainers, and anyone interested in customer psychology, sales objections, and modern buying behavior. 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 The “I Won’t Use That” Objection 0:41 Why Customers Shop Differently Today 1:23 From Being Impressed to Avoiding Mistakes 2:16 Why This Objection Is More Dangerous Than Price 3:09 When Customers Disconnect Emotionally 3:55 Why Features Die on Contact 5:02 The Panic Response Salespeople Fall Into 5:55 Why Customers Retreat From Conversations 6:30 The Industry’s Feature Overload Problem 7:27 When Features Start Feeling Like Homework 8:10 Why Customers Are Already Exhausted 8:23 The Internal Filter Every Customer Uses 9:06 Customers Buy Relief, Not Features 10:16 How Great Salespeople Handle This 11:07 Why Frustrations Must Come First 12:15 Solving Problems Before Selling Features 13:02 The Industry Is Still Selling Like It’s 2008 13:58 Why Simplicity Keeps Winning 14:52 The Salesperson’s Real Responsibility 16:14 Why Most Customers Don’t Want Every Detail 17:11 Let Customers Ask for More 17:57 Final Takeaways #salespsychology #customerbehavior #appliancesales #salestraining #retailsales #customerexperience #applianceindustry #salesstrategy #leadership #thesteelcodcast

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episode Gas Range Knob Control: The Cooking Experience Salespeople Forget to Demonstrate cover

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