The Steel CodCast

Pellet Grill vs. Gas Grill — Why They're Not Competitors and How to Know Which One You Actually Need

13 min · 16. juli 2026
episode Pellet Grill vs. Gas Grill — Why They're Not Competitors and How to Know Which One You Actually Need cover

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The pellet grill vs. gas grill debate has been framed as a war. Jon Beresford says it never was one — and the industry's insistence on treating it like one has been creating customer confusion and ownership mismatch for over a decade. His position is simple: for the vast majority of households, gas is the primary outdoor cooking platform and pellet is secondary. Not because pellet grills are bad — some of them are genuinely phenomenal — but because the two things serve fundamentally different cooking behaviors that shouldn't be competing for the same job. Jon explains why pellet grills took off in the first place: they solved an emotional problem. Offset smoking had always required fire management, wood management, temperature babysitting, and a steep learning curve. Pellet grills lowered the intimidation barrier so far that anyone could smoke a brisket without becoming a pit master first. The internet celebrated that, long-form smoking content performed incredibly well, and the hype snowballed. But the internet's version of outdoor cooking and the reality of how most people actually use a grill aren't the same thing. The aspirational trap is real and common. People see the advertising, convince themselves they'll smoke everything, and buy in. Then Tuesday night comes and dinner needs to be on the table in ten minutes — and nobody is starting a pellet grill. That's the moment gas separates itself. Anthony speaks to this from product training days: he had to bribe salespeople not to smirk during pellet hamburger demonstrations while everyone waited 27 minutes and counting for the grill to come to temperature. The actual comparison that makes sense, Jon says, is a cast iron pan vs. a gas burner. Nobody argues that one replaces the other — they solve different cooking experiences entirely. Gas and pellet should be thought about the same way. Gas for speed, flexibility, high heat, and quick recovery. Pellet for low and slow, smoke, and long-form cooking. The salesperson who separates those lanes clearly — and helps the right customer see that they could have both — is doing better work than the one still pretending these two platforms belong in the same conversation. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

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episode Pellet Grill vs. Gas Grill — Why They're Not Competitors and How to Know Which One You Actually Need artwork

Pellet Grill vs. Gas Grill — Why They're Not Competitors and How to Know Which One You Actually Need

The pellet grill vs. gas grill debate has been framed as a war. Jon Beresford says it never was one — and the industry's insistence on treating it like one has been creating customer confusion and ownership mismatch for over a decade. His position is simple: for the vast majority of households, gas is the primary outdoor cooking platform and pellet is secondary. Not because pellet grills are bad — some of them are genuinely phenomenal — but because the two things serve fundamentally different cooking behaviors that shouldn't be competing for the same job. Jon explains why pellet grills took off in the first place: they solved an emotional problem. Offset smoking had always required fire management, wood management, temperature babysitting, and a steep learning curve. Pellet grills lowered the intimidation barrier so far that anyone could smoke a brisket without becoming a pit master first. The internet celebrated that, long-form smoking content performed incredibly well, and the hype snowballed. But the internet's version of outdoor cooking and the reality of how most people actually use a grill aren't the same thing. The aspirational trap is real and common. People see the advertising, convince themselves they'll smoke everything, and buy in. Then Tuesday night comes and dinner needs to be on the table in ten minutes — and nobody is starting a pellet grill. That's the moment gas separates itself. Anthony speaks to this from product training days: he had to bribe salespeople not to smirk during pellet hamburger demonstrations while everyone waited 27 minutes and counting for the grill to come to temperature. The actual comparison that makes sense, Jon says, is a cast iron pan vs. a gas burner. Nobody argues that one replaces the other — they solve different cooking experiences entirely. Gas and pellet should be thought about the same way. Gas for speed, flexibility, high heat, and quick recovery. Pellet for low and slow, smoke, and long-form cooking. The salesperson who separates those lanes clearly — and helps the right customer see that they could have both — is doing better work than the one still pretending these two platforms belong in the same conversation. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

16. juli 202613 min
episode Built-In vs. Freestanding Refrigeration — The Real Comparison, the Price Conversation, and When Freestanding Actually Wins artwork

Built-In vs. Freestanding Refrigeration — The Real Comparison, the Price Conversation, and When Freestanding Actually Wins

Built-in refrigeration versus freestanding is not a fair product fight. Jon Beresford says that from the jump — and Shannon agrees. But the point of this episode isn't to declare a winner. It's to lay out the conversation that needs to happen before any customer makes a decision on refrigeration they'll have to live with for the next decade or more. Jon covers what built-in actually delivers beyond the look — the longevity, the construction, the food preservation story, the ownership experience — and clears up what he identifies as one of the most persistent and costly customer confusions in the category: counter depth and built-in are not the same thing. Treating them as though they are is a setup for disappointment on both sides of the transaction. The price conversation is unavoidable here. Built-in refrigeration can run anywhere from two to ten times the cost of freestanding, depending on what you're looking at. Jon walks through how to have that conversation honestly without either overselling or underselling the value. The fence-sitter conversation is where things get interesting. Shannon assumed the line between built-in buyers and freestanding buyers was firm — you're on one side or the other, and crossing is nearly impossible. Jon pushes back. More customers ride the fence than salespeople realize. And the salesperson who steers a fence-sitter toward freestanding to save them money isn't doing them a favor — they're defaulting on the conversation in a way that tends to produce a customer who's quietly unhappy about it later. Refrigerator drawers also enter the conversation, and the case is made that built-in refrigeration without a drawer discussion is a missed opportunity almost every time. The capacity trade-off in built-in is real, and drawers solve for exactly that while opening a broader conversation about how the whole kitchen functions. Shannon's closer from her time in builder sales: open the bottom drawer, step back, and watch what happens. That was always the sale. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

Yesterday24 min
episode Third Rack vs. No Third Rack — The Trade-Offs, the Qualifying Questions, and Who Should Actually Get One artwork

Third Rack vs. No Third Rack — The Trade-Offs, the Qualifying Questions, and Who Should Actually Get One

Third rack dishwashers have become the default — brands lead with it, salespeople sell it, and customers expect it. But Jon Beresford says the real conversation isn't whether the third rack exists on a dishwasher. It's whether the third rack is actually the right fit for the specific household standing in front of you. This episode covers what the third rack was actually designed to do, what the genuine trade-offs are, why some customers are better served without one, and why brand quality matters enormously here — because not all third racks perform the same way, and the difference between a well-engineered third rack and a mediocre one shows up in daily use pretty quickly. The trade-off that rarely gets named on the floor: third racks reduce clearance in the second rack, which matters for some households more than others. They also require a specific loading approach — a system-minded user who thinks about what goes where. Shannon's mom has a third rack dishwasher and treats every load like a magazine shoot, perfectly placing every item. Not everyone wants that kind of relationship with their dishwasher. Jon's wife doesn't use theirs at all, though the option to remove it is its own kind of solution. The qualifying question makes it simple: does this household run a lot of awkward-shaped items? Tall utensils, spatulas, serving pieces, oversized items that would normally hijack real estate in the main basket? Then the third rack changes the whole equation. Shannon puts it directly — the Forces are third rack people. They have Fisher & Paykel now, miss the third rack from their previous dishwasher, and the difference it made for oddly shaped items was real enough to feel the absence. The honest answer isn't one size fits all. And that's the conversation worth having before anyone makes a decision. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

14. juli 202616 min
episode Mailbag #2: Attracting Next Gen Talent, Qualifying Like a Pro, and Why Independent Dealers Have an Advantage Nobody Can Replicate artwork

Mailbag #2: Attracting Next Gen Talent, Qualifying Like a Pro, and Why Independent Dealers Have an Advantage Nobody Can Replicate

Six audience questions, one mailbag, and some of the most direct answers Jon Beresford has given on the show. The opening question came from a sales manager watching the craft lose its appeal among younger people. Jon's response doesn't let the industry off the hook. The next generation isn't avoiding appliance sales because they lack ambition. They're avoiding it because nobody has given them a compelling reason to choose it. The pitch — boring product category, slow-building compensation, spec-sheet training, no clear career path — isn't a compelling one for someone with real options. The fix isn't finding better candidates. It's building a better case. On practical sales strategies, Jon directs listeners to the Saturday deep dives for depth and then gives the short version of where most salespeople actually break down: the first two minutes. The customer says refrigerator and the salesperson starts walking. They skip the part that makes everything else easier — understanding what the specific person in front of them is actually trying to solve for. Real qualification asks about the life the appliance is going to live in, and when that foundation is right, the price conversation stops being a defense and becomes a connection between a number and an outcome the customer already asked for. On Steel Cod, Jon makes the case that the podcast itself is a fluency builder — and fluency is worth more than any feature training because features inform while fluency convinces. Steel Cod University takes the same philosophy into 3-5 minute classes built specifically around positioning moments and real objections. He also teases an upcoming tool the entire team is more excited about than anything they've ever built — one that will change the selling conversation permanently. The episode closes with Jon's case for the independent dealer — structured, direct, and one of the most compelling arguments for the channel you'll hear anywhere. The independent dealer is the only person in the entire appliance buying landscape with no structural reason to mislead. Big box has inventory targets. Manufacturers have one product to sell. Online retail has affiliate revenue and no context. The independent dealer has one job: the right answer for the right customer. That advantage compounds. It builds through referrals and repeat business in ways competitors can never replicate — and it gets more valuable every single year. Oh, and the audience asked Jon what luxury brand he doesn't like. He almost answered. New episodes every day. Rate and subscribe wherever you listen.

13. juli 202641 min
episode Dale Seiden of Qoldfusion — The Residential Walk-In Cold Storage Brand Redefining Where Refrigeration Lives artwork

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