Friday, November 21st 2008

Services and area cover Options Fitted Furniture supplies and installs made to measure, bespoke fitted furniture for bedrooms, home offices, studies, home cinemas, alcoves and living rooms throughout the south east of England including the home counties of Surrey, East Sussex, West Sussex, Kent, Essex, Hertfordshire (Herts), Buckinghamshire (Bucks), Bedfordshire, (Beds), Middlesex Hampshire and Greater London including south London, south west (SW) London, east London, north London, north west (NW) London, west London and central London. Also, by appointment Dorset, Wiltshire (Wilts), Warwickshire, Suffolk, Oxfordshire (Oxon) and Cambridgeshire (Cambs)

Copyright © 2008 Options Furniture (UK) Ltd. blog design by e-Alpha1

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Who says you can’t take it with you?

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Options installed a fitted office/study about three years ago for a Mr.W who works from home. He was delighted but, due to a growing family, decided to move house.

The study should have been an asset to the new owners but they needed the ground floor room as a bedroom for an elderly parent. The new owner sought our advice regarding removal of the study furniture and at the same time Mr. W asked us to quote for a fitted study in his new house. We suggested that we uplift the old furniture and design a new installation, partly from the old but incorporating a new bespoke dresser/radiator cover and a wardrobe for his motor cycle gear, neatly solving the problem for the new owner at the same time.

Mr. W’s new study cost less than half what it would have cost had we not recycled the old furniture. We could have sold Mr. W an all new study and doubled our order value but by taking the course we did, we achieved a very satisfied customer who has now ordered two sets of fitted wardrobes for the bedrooms in the new house.

Everyone’s a winner: the new house owner had the furniture removed for free, Mr.W saved around £2k on his new study, Options have a very satisfied customer and a new bedroom furniture order and the environment gets the benefit of some major recycling!

The first installation

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Testimonials, how do you value them?

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Just returned from a break and the first task is to produce a new ad for a life-style magazine.

A quick conference establishes that we will go with lots of images of fitted furniture to establish the fantastic breadth of the range, three shots of bedroom wardrobes (including sliding doors), two study/offices and a home cinema wall unit, roughly proportionate to our sales mix. Include a flash about our current “buy now, pay later” promotion and a few testimonials.

What about testimonials? Do they work? Do people believe them? Snake-oil salesmen always had a long list of “unsolicited testimonials”; can this make us look like a snake-oil salesman?

We do have hundreds, possibly thousands, of testimonials if you include the comments on our customer satisfaction questionnaires (are they by definition ’solicited’ rather than unsolicited?).  The vast majority are positive, the runaway favourite multiple choice questions are “Very Good” and “Excellent”, but it’s the “Any Other Comments” section that produces the real glow.

Yes, we do get some negative response (any company that tells you that they never have a dissatisfied client is telling porkies) and no, we don’t use those in our advertising.  However, as they happy customers outnumber the less than contented ones by about 100 to 1, we would need to show over a hundred testimonials to include one negative one in fair proportion.

We are certainly more honest than theatre and cinema promoters who often take the one or two positive words in a generally bad review and plaster them all over the bill boards.

All  the mix of testimonials, unsolicited letters and customer satisfaction questionnaires, unedited, are available in our offices for viewing.  And, I will include four or five of the best in my advert.  Will prospective customers comparing us with our competitors, like Hammonds and Neville Johnson, believe them? We all sell basically the same product, fitted furniture, and although we believe that ours is the only product that is truly bespoke; how is the client to judge who is likely to give them the highest level of satisfaction?

We all use testimonials and none of us cries “stinking fish” but how can I establish that our feedback is more reliable than others’? I guess that an invitation for anybody to come and see the originals is the only option.  Will any other fitted furniture manufacturer do the same?