The Steel CodCast

Luxury Induction Cooktop Market Shifts: Analyzing the JennAir and Viking Surge vs. Thermador and Fisher & Paykel Slump

13 min · 25. mai 2026
episode Luxury Induction Cooktop Market Shifts: Analyzing the JennAir and Viking Surge vs. Thermador and Fisher & Paykel Slump cover

Beskrivelse

The premium induction landscape is shifting under the feet of luxury appliance dealers. On this weekend edition of The Steel CodCast, Anthony Force and Sean Beresford dive deep into the latest proprietary Power Index data to expose which luxury induction cooktop brands are gaining market velocity and which ones are losing their grip on showroom floors. The raw data uncovers an unexpected reality: household staples JennAir and Viking are actively climbing the ranks, capturing vital market share in the premium cooking segment. Meanwhile, previous category darlings Thermador and Fisher & Paykel are experiencing a distinct downward trend. This isn't just a story of product features; it is a reflection of shifting consumer psychology, changing dealer incentives, and the widening expectation gap between what buyers assume a luxury brand delivers versus the operational reality of the current product lines. Anthony and Sean zoom out to identify the macro patterns driving these brand trajectories. They break down the underlying sales process dynamics, explaining exactly why luxury buyers are shifting their allegiances at the checkout counter. For retail sales professionals, this episode provides the high-level market synthesis needed to guide clients through friction-heavy decision-making and capitalize on the brands that possess real momentum right now. Who This Episode Is For *   Luxury Appliance Sales Professionals who need objective market intelligence to steer high-end cooking conversations and overcome modern client objections. * Showroom Buyers and Inventory Managers looking to align their floor displays with actual market data and velocity trends rather than legacy brand reputations. * Kitchen Designers and Specifiers wanting to understand which premium induction platforms are currently delivering the highest consumer satisfaction and reliability. Follow the Show The Steel CodCast releases episodes every day of the week including weekends. Keep your market knowledge sharp by subscribing and rating the show on your favorite podcast platform. Chapters 00:00 Analyzing the Luxury Induction Power Index Data 02:08 The JennAir Surge: What is Driving the Market Climb? 03:28 Viking Rebounds: Overcoming Legacy Perceptions in Premium Cooking 05:27 Thermador Stock Down: Deconstructing the Premium Slump 07:48 Fisher & Paykel Declines: Identifying Friction in the Sales Process 10:22 Zooming Out: The Macro Patterns Reshaping Luxury Kitchens 11:23 Sales Action Plan: How to Leverage Brand Velocity on the Floor 12:54 Closing Out: Daily Operational Strategies for Appliance Retailers #LuxuryAppliances #InductionCooking #ApplianceSales #JennAir #VikingAppliances #Thermador #FisherPaykel #ShowroomStrategy #PowerIndex #TheSteelCodCast

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episode Power Index: Which Luxury Grill Brands Are Losing Showroom Conversations Right Now cover

Power Index: Which Luxury Grill Brands Are Losing Showroom Conversations Right Now

The Power Index measures showroom consideration activity — not sales data, but what customers are actively discussing on the floor right now. And in the luxury outdoor grill category, something is shifting. In this episode, Jon Beresford walks through which brands are gaining ground, which ones are cooling off, and what the psychology underneath it all means for independent retailers. The core theme: outdoor luxury doesn't carry the same emotional weight as indoor luxury. Customers will stretch their budget for a luxury range without blinking — the kitchen is tied to their identity, their dream home, who they are. But outdoors, that emotional gravity weakens. And when it does, customers start asking hard practical questions they'd never ask on the indoor floor. "What am I actually getting for the extra money?" That question is starting to reshape the entire category. Exo is rising — presenting well, landing where customers expect aesthetically, and easier to justify financially as outdoor project totals climb. Artisan is benefiting from an Al Fresco halo effect, picking up customers who want the experience without the price. Wolf outdoor is taking heat — not because the product is bad, but because the badge that does all the work indoors isn't translating the same way outdoors. A new lineup is reportedly coming and sounds strong, but the current story isn't closing the gap. And Lynx is showing the most concerning signal: broad lineup cooling across the whole category, which points to positioning pressure, not a product problem. Jon's takeaway: luxury outdoor brands survive difficult markets when customers clearly understand why they're different. Right now, the badge alone may no longer be enough. 👉 Al Fresco vs. Artisan episode: https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-h58w7-1abb7a8 🎙️ Hosted by Anthony Force and Jon Beresford | The Steel Codcast 🔔 New episode every day of the week. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

1. juli 202616 min
episode How to Sell a French Top to Someone Who Has No Idea What It Is cover

How to Sell a French Top to Someone Who Has No Idea What It Is

French tops are one of the most skipped products on the appliance floor. Salespeople find them intimidating. Customers don't know what they're looking at. And the result is a product that almost never gets the conversation it deserves. In this episode, Shannon and Jon break down what a French top actually is, where it came from, and how to make the sale to a customer who walked in with zero frame of reference for it. Jon makes the case that most home cooks are already doing French top behavior without realizing it — moving pots around, adjusting heat zones mid-cook, trying to keep things warm without overcooking. The French top doesn't ask them to cook differently. It just does what they're already doing, better. He also covers where salespeople consistently lose the customer in this conversation, what the correct entry point looks like, and why the assumption that French tops are only for serious chefs is exactly the kind of thinking that keeps a great sale from happening. Which brand is easiest to sell a French top with? Drop a comment or email Anthony — Jon will get back to you. 🎙️ Hosted by Shannon O'Hara and Jon Beresford | The Steel Codcast 🔔 New episode every day of the week. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

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episode How to Sell Refrigerator Food Preservation Without Sounding Like a Brochure cover

How to Sell Refrigerator Food Preservation Without Sounding Like a Brochure

FreshFlow. HydroFresh. FreshSeal. ProduceSaver. If you've ever tried to explain produce preservation to a customer and ended up just reciting a branded name — this episode is for you. Jon Beresford breaks down the actual hierarchy of refrigerator food preservation: what matters, in what order, and how to tell the difference between a refrigerator that's genuinely engineered to protect produce and one with a shiny sticker on a leaky plastic drawer. The conversation starts where it should — the drawer itself. Does it seal? Does it have gasket material? Does it create a controlled environment or leak air like a storage bin? If you can't check that box, nothing else in the preservation story holds up. From there, Jon works through humidity balance (not just trapping moisture — managing the exchange), temperature stability (why inverter and variable speed compressors produce fundamentally different environments), produce separation from disruptive airflow (what dual evaporators actually do), and finally — only after all of that — the enhancement layers: ethylene absorption, air purification, and the branded filtration systems that brands love to lead with. Those enhancement layers are real when they're built on strong fundamentals. Sub-Zero didn't build their food preservation reputation on a cartridge. But when the fundamentals are weak, those features are just expensive distractions. Jon also calls out why this category has become a mess — manufacturers realized "keeps food fresher longer" sounds premium, created a thousand different names for it, and let salespeople use the chaos as cover for not actually understanding what they're selling. 👉 Our full air purification episode: https://www.podbean.com/eas/pb-hpiay-1aced2c 🎙️ Hosted by Shannon O'Hara and Jon Beresford | The Steel Codcast 🔔 New episode every day of the week. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

29. juni 202624 min
episode Julie Burns, Executive Director of Monogram, on What's Actually Driving the Brand's Rise cover

Julie Burns, Executive Director of Monogram, on What's Actually Driving the Brand's Rise

The Power Index has been tracking a shift — Monogram is showing up in showroom conversations in places it historically hasn't. In this episode, we sit down with Julie Burns, Executive Director of Monogram, to hear what's driving it straight from the source. Julie came into the appliance industry from a luxury background outside of appliances, which gave her a perspective that long-time industry insiders often don't have. She walks through what she's built over the past six-plus years at Monogram, what's resonating with the design and trade community that's increasingly specifying the brand, and what the path forward looks like as new lines come to market. For the salespeople listening: this episode gets directly into how to position Monogram in a showroom full of luxury brands, how to separate it from the GE/Café/Profile family in the customer's mind, and how to anchor it in a single, clear statement when a luxury buyer is standing in front of you. Jon also gets into the support structure — Monogram has its own dedicated sales team and service operation separate from other GE brands, which matters enormously on high-end projects where post-sale friction can cost you a relationship. Learn more at monogram.com 🎙️ Hosted by Anthony Fors and Jon Beresford | The Steel Codcast 🔔 New episode every day of the week. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

28. juni 202636 min
episode Bigger Kitchen Doesn't Mean Better Kitchen — And Nobody In the Room Will Tell You That cover

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The bigger the kitchen, the better. That's the assumption. Jon Beresford disagrees — and he has a very specific reason why. In this episode, Jon and Shannon break down why massive luxury kitchens are often the most poorly designed spaces in any home, and why almost nobody involved in building them has any financial reason to tell the homeowner to pump the brakes. The case starts with constraint. Smaller kitchens force trade-offs. Trade-offs force clarity. Clarity is what separates a kitchen that functions brilliantly from one that just looks expensive in the photograph. Big kitchens remove all of that pressure — and what fills the void is accumulation. More appliances, more zones, more everything, designed around an imagined version of how the family plans to live rather than how they actually do. Jon walks through what that looks like in practice: oversize ranges, refrigeration walls for couples who barely stock milk, secondary dishwashers that run a few times a year, steam ovens nobody learned to use, warming drawers storing cookie sheets. None of those products are the problem. The problem is that nobody in the design chain — not the designer, not the builder, not the salesperson — is rewarded for saying "do you actually need this?" The only person who pays that long-term cost is the homeowner. And they're almost always the least informed person in the room during the design phase. Jon also gets into the trap salespeople fall into on large projects — the moment they accept the customer's pre-built vision and become a coordinator instead of an advisor — and what the best salespeople do instead. 🎙️ Hosted by Shannon O'Hara and Jon Beresford | The Steel Codcast 🔔 New episode every day of the week. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

27. juni 202627 min