Inspire KBB

Inspire KBB The UK’s kitchen sales & marketing specialists - we bring success to independent kitchen retailers, through effective marketing and sales development.

Many kitchen project pages miss the opportunity to really sell the project and the expertise.People don’t just want insp...
05/06/2026

Many kitchen project pages miss the opportunity to really sell the project and the expertise.

People don’t just want inspiration. They want context, reassurance, and proof that you understand how they live.

Here are the 5 essentials of a great project page:

1. A clear project title
Help people quickly understand the style, space, or type of project they’re looking at.

2. The story behind the project
What was the client trying to achieve? More storage? Better flow or layout? This is also where you can explain how challenges were solved.

3. High-quality photography
Finished photography matters most - but before photos are always a bonus.

4. Product and finish details
Cabinetry, worktops, handles, appliances, paint colours. People want specifics.

5. Testimonials or client feedback
Trust matters. A few genuine words from the client go a long way.

A strong project page doesn’t just showcase a kitchen. It helps future clients picture themselves in it.

https://www.inspirekbb.com/?utm_name=sked&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=sked_6a18310e312f8bede295b507

Customers don’t just want inspiration anymore. They want reassurance.That’s why real projects matter so much.Not polishe...
29/05/2026

Customers don’t just want inspiration anymore. They want reassurance.

That’s why real projects matter so much.

Not polished renders.
Not generic stock imagery.
Real kitchens, real homes, real outcomes.

Showing completed projects helps potential customers understand:
✔️ The standard of your work
✔️ Your design style
✔️ The kinds of challenges you solve
✔️ What it’s actually like to work with you

A strong project portfolio builds trust long before the first conversation happens.

https://www.inspirekbb.com/?utm_name=sked&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=sked_6a18302b0a851ee01e965f08

Last week, we were reviewing a kitchen retailer’s Google Business Profile during a conversation when we clicked into Str...
14/05/2026

Last week, we were reviewing a kitchen retailer’s Google Business Profile during a conversation when we clicked into Street View.

And all of us had exactly the same reaction.

“Oh, dear…”

The retailer was genuinely shocked!

The rubbish and skip outside had only been there for a few days while work was being done at the property. But what really alarmed him was realising the image itself was two years old, based on renovation work visible in the background.

Yet there it was. Still sitting on Google as a first impression of the business.

And it raises an interesting question.

In the world of property, people often talk about kerb appeal. For independent kitchen retailers, that matters enormously too - not just online through Google Street View, but in the real world every single day.

Have you really considered what your business looks like to somebody driving past or walking by on a completely ordinary Thursday afternoon?

Not after the windows have been cleaned. Not before an event. Not when everyone knows a photographer is coming.

Just… normally.

Because prospective customers are making assumptions long before they ever step into your showroom, the exterior of the business sets expectations. It gives people a feel for the level of care, attention and aspiration they can expect inside.

And often, it is not major problems that weaken kerb appeal. It is the everyday things that slowly become invisible over time - tired signage, old window graphics, clutter, packaging, overflowing bins or parked vans blocking the frontage.

But there’s something else at stake here.

Your Google Business Profile is increasingly becoming an extension of the showroom experience itself.

Customers not only read the reviews, they study the imagery too. They scroll through photos, check out the frontage, tour the showroom, and use Street View to get a feel for the business before deciding whether it feels worth visiting.

Which raises another question: How much of that experience can you actually control?

Probably more than you think.

Read the full blog to discover a few simple ways kitchen retailers can improve both their physical and digital kerb appeal.

https://www.inspirekbb.com/blog/2026/5/14/google-street-view?utm_name=sked&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=sked_6a05df44368efca3415f958d

A thoughtful and generous review from Christelle at Ridgeway Interiors - and one we really value.Working closely with ou...
08/05/2026

A thoughtful and generous review from Christelle at Ridgeway Interiors - and one we really value.

Working closely with our clients is a big part of what we do. Understanding how each business operates, how customers make decisions, and what drives the right kind of enquiry isn’t something you can take a one-size-fits-all approach to.

Thank you to Christelle for the trust, the collaboration, and the kind words!

A good-looking website doesn’t guarantee enquiries.Most kitchen websites look the part, but many don’t actually guide th...
24/04/2026

A good-looking website doesn’t guarantee enquiries.

Most kitchen websites look the part, but many don’t actually guide the customer.

If you want your website to work harder, check three things:

• Clarity - is it obvious what you do, who you do it for, and what you stand for within seconds?
• Proof - are you showing real projects, reviews, and outcomes?
• Next step - is it clear what the customer should do next?

If any of those are missing, people don’t enquire - they leave.

Design matters. But direction matters more.

👉 If you're not sure how your website stacks up, let's have a chat!

https://www.inspirekbb.com/contact

Something we’ve long suspected about social media is becoming much clearer. For years, there’s been an underlying sense ...
16/04/2026

Something we’ve long suspected about social media is becoming much clearer.

For years, there’s been an underlying sense that content performs better when it feels human. After all, these platforms were built for people to share themselves, not for businesses to broadcast polished marketing.

But more recently, as we’ve looked more closely at performance across both organic content and paid advertising campaigns, the gap has become far more visible.

Content featuring real people is consistently outperforming content that doesn’t. And not just slightly.

By enough that it’s now hard to ignore, whether it’s something you’re posting organically or putting budget behind.

Part of the reason is context.

When someone is scrolling, they’re surrounded by people - faces, expressions, everyday moments. So, when a brand appears with something overly polished or purely product-led, it can feel slightly out of place.

Whereas content with real people in it blends in naturally and feels like it belongs.

There’s also another layer to this that’s becoming more relevant.

AI-generated content is now everywhere, and people are getting very good at spotting it. Which means the more ‘perfect’ something looks, the more it can create a sense of scepticism.

In contrast, content featuring real people and real moments feels more genuine, more transparent, and ultimately more trustworthy.

There’s even a biological element to it.

We’re hardwired to notice faces first - before a product, before a headline, before anything else. So, quite literally, content that includes people is more likely to stop the scroll.

And then there’s the emotional side.

A designer talking through a decision. A customer reacting to their finished kitchen. A quick piece to camera.

These moments create connection far faster than a static image ever could, which is why we’re seeing stronger engagement and better performance when people are placed at the centre of the content - not just in what you post, but in what you choose to promote.

This doesn’t mean abandoning product-led posts and advertising altogether, but it does mean rebalancing.

Bringing your designers, your team, and your customers into the foreground more often.

Because in a space that’s becoming increasingly artificial, the most effective thing you can show is something real.

And right now, nothing communicates that better than a real person.

Most kitchen enquiries are won - or lost - within the first 24 hours.Not because of price. Not because of design. But be...
10/04/2026

Most kitchen enquiries are won - or lost - within the first 24 hours.

Not because of price. Not because of design. But because of the response time.

When someone enquires, they’re already comparing options and deciding who to speak to.

A simple check:
• Are new enquiries contacted within a few hours?
• Is there a clear follow-up process, or are leads slipping through?

If not, that’s where to start.

The first business to respond - and respond well - often sets the direction and gets the conversation.

Speed isn’t about pressure. It’s about being there at the right moment.

Feedback like this matters because it reflects the outcomes we focus on every day - visibility, conversion, and sustaina...
27/03/2026

Feedback like this matters because it reflects the outcomes we focus on every day - visibility, conversion, and sustainable growth.🌟

From stronger SEO and local search presence to websites that convert and marketing that adapts as a business grows, this is exactly how we support premium independent kitchen retailers.

A big thanks to Matt at Andrew Osborne Kitchens in Southampton for the trust - and for backing what can happen when marketing is built specifically for the KBB sector.

What if more of your ‘referrals’ were influenced by your marketing than you realise?Most kitchen retailers separate refe...
19/03/2026

What if more of your ‘referrals’ were influenced by your marketing than you realise?

Most kitchen retailers separate referrals from marketing. Referrals feel personal, earned, and independent of anything you’ve put out into the world.

But the reality is more interesting than that.

There’s a part of the brain called the Reticular Activating System. Its role is to filter the millions of pieces of information we’re exposed to every day and decide what gets our attention.

Instead, the brain prioritises what feels familiar, recent, or relevant.

You’ve experienced this yourself. Think about when you decide what your next car will be. You’ve made a choice, and suddenly you start seeing that car everywhere.

But they haven’t appeared out of nowhere. You’re simply noticing what was always there.

People don’t notice everything. They notice what they’ve been primed to notice, often quietly, over time.

Now bring that into a kitchen retail context.

A past customer hasn’t thought about you in a long time, and a past enquiry never progressed. In both cases, you’ve slipped out of awareness.

Then they begin to see you again - a recent project, a display, a message. Nothing overwhelming, just consistent presence.

You’re being re-stored in memory as a familiar, trusted option.

Then later, something triggers a conversation, and your name comes to mind. From the outside, that looks like a referral.

But why you?

In many cases, it’s because your marketing has already done its work - refreshing memory, rebuilding familiarity, and making you the easiest name to recall when it mattered.

The conversation feels spontaneous, but the cause rarely is.

So rather than seeing referrals and marketing as separate, it’s more useful to see how closely they work together.



https://www.inspirekbb.com/blog/kitchen-referrals-arent-what-you-think?utm_content=sked_69bc03acdf30882fb6217373&utm_medium=social&utm_name=sked&utm_source=facebook

Most independent kitchen retailers know they’re different from the big chains.The challenge is making that difference cl...
13/03/2026

Most independent kitchen retailers know they’re different from the big chains.

The challenge is making that difference clear to the customer.

Here’s a practical way to think about positioning as we head into 2026:

1️⃣ Start with process, not promises. Explain how you work. How designs evolve. How decisions are made. How projects are managed from the first conversation to the final fit.

2️⃣ Then show evidence, not adjectives. Real projects. Real constraints. Real outcomes. Your case studies beat your claims every time.

3️⃣ Finally, be clear about who you’re best suited to help. The right customers don’t want endless choices or the cheapest option. They want confidence, clarity, and a kitchen that genuinely fits how they live.

Strong positioning isn’t about shouting louder.

It’s about helping the right people recognise you - quickly and confidently.

Address

1310 Solihull Parkway
Birmingham
B377YB

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 5:30pm

Telephone

+441217965340

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