Monday 19 December 2011

Canadian Diamond Conflict and Confusion

The current debate over the CDCC amounts to conflict and confusion.  If you take the 7 minutes to read the following article it will leave most in this industry scratching their heads in bewilderment.

http://www.jewellerybusiness.com/2/newsletters/272-december-19-2011/1183-exclusive-industry-groups-disagree-over-changes-to-canadian-diamond-code

Here's my take on it all:

Companies that proudly purchase Canadian diamonds and pay high wages and benefits to cutters in Canada want a marketing advantage over those who cut Canadian diamonds over-seas.  Now that didn't take 7 minutes did it???  Diamonds mined and cut in Canada should be a good thing for our economy, right?

If the XL Pipeline project gets shot-down by Obama, more Canadian companies will have opportunity to upgrade bitumen from the oil-sands and it will create more "value-added processing" for Canadas economy.  Why aren't we doing everything we can to support value-added processing in diamond cutting?  Mostly because the largest manufacturer and seller of Canadian cut and mined diamonds is a villain in our diamond industry.  Remember "Snidely Whiplash" from the Dudley Dooright cartoons?  He had a black cape, black top-hat, crooked smile and a curly black moustache?  That's who is lobbying to gain a marketing advantage for their diamonds which are mined and cut in Canada.  They have never tied poor Nel to the railroad tracks, but they are highly criticized for gaining an unfair and unlawful advantage by overinflating their diamond quality through bogus grading certificates.

Many Canadian diamond dealers and manufacturers lose business to Snidely Whiplash already because his G/SI2 diamonds are 20% less expensive than others.  Well, okay, they're actually J/I1s with a really low cut-grade, and they're worth 22% less, but that's besides the point.  I think Snidely has masterfully taken the spotlight off of their biggest crime by pushing their "Made in Canada" agenda.  It's the classic "bate and switch" ploy.

My wish for 2012 is that Snidely will come clean and begin selling honestly graded diamonds.  Ya, right, and that development will be celebrated by a troop of tap-dancing snowmen.

By the way, CDCC, no matter how you define a Canadian diamond, it won't matter.  The jewellery industry buys $Millions worth of bogusly graded diamonds every month.  What makes you think they're going to accurately promote Canadian diamonds with those added 122 words to define their origin?

Wednesday 2 November 2011

Embrace your inner "Diamond Monger"


A recent CBC radio article focused on lax standards in Canadian food labeling.  With lax requirements and deceptive practices, up to 40% of the fish you buy could be different than what you thought you were getting.  According to the experts involved, a variety of fish species can be substituted for “sole” and marketed as such.  It is also easy to substitute farmed fish where consumers might be expecting natural ocean caught varieties.  Once the head is off the fish, it might take an expert and/or DNA testing to catch the substitution of a $4/lb fish for a $16/lb fish.

While it would be natural at this point for me to go-on about misrepresented diamonds, I’ve got another take on this issue.

Grocers could send samples of the fish they buy to DNA labs to ensure that they’re offering accurately labeled product (and not getting ripped-off themselves.)  CBC’s Anna Maria Tremonte made the point that traditional “fish mongers” were much better able to identify and accurately represent what they sell.  While fish can pass through up to 7 different hands before reaching the consumer, fish mongers deal more directly with fishermen and direct suppliers. 

An expert fish monger would not be fooled by inaccurately labeled fish because they know their product.  They can tell the difference between varieties by their smell, their texture and because they control their supply-chain more closely than larger retailers.

You who I write to and serve are independent jewellery stores.  You are the modern-day fish mongers… in fact… that would makey you… you’re DIAMOND MONGERS.  You know your product, you control your supply-chain more closely than the chain stores.  The larger the operation, the harder it is to keep up quality.  How do you compete against the big boys???  Your quality has to be better, and you need to know your product more intimately.

Are you intimidated by the buying power of the big chain stores?  You shouldn’t be, because you’re a diamond monger.  You buy from smaller manufacturers like Customgold who hand-select each gemstone they sell, and who know a good and fresh cert from a stinky-one.

When I hear comments like “Wow, I thought we couldn’t get nice diamonds like these because the Asian buyers were buying-up all of the good stuff,” it tells me that this retailer has only seen product from the big institutional manufacturers. 

You have options.  Think small in order to think big.  Embrace your inner diamond monger.  Keep your supply chain tight and know your stuff.  Anybody that sells you a carp in place of a halibut should be eliminated from your supply chain.  Enjoy the current climate where people who have money want the good stuff.  Give it to them; or else your competition will.

Thursday 22 September 2011

Black and White


I had a great visit with two young gentlemen in the retail jewellery trade this week.  Both work in high-end stores, and both are concerned about the pesky competition we face from on-line diamond sales. 

Both Andrew and Matt have been in the industry long enough to have seen the client you dread.  The one who already bought the diamond or the ring on-line and now wants you to set their diamond or make a matching wedding band.  Once that ship has sailed, you can try to earn their long-term business, but there’s always that “burr in your craw” about the bigger sale that you didn’t get.

The answer to this problem does not lie in what you do with this customer now, but how to keep them from buying online in the first place.  It’s not necessarily the younger generation buying on-line; rather it’s just a whole new paradigm that has taken hold of modern individuals of all ages.

The new paradigm is all about Freedom of Information.  Don’t forget that most people have come through your store before deciding to buy on-line.  You had your chance, and blew it.  They felt that they might be missing out on something after leaving your store.

At one time, we elected officials and trusted that they would act earnestly on our behalf.  At one time, you’d visit a doctor and hang on his or her every word.  At one time, you would seek council from a sage car salesman for explanations of features and benefits of the car brands you were loyal to.

In today’s paradigm, we exercise our right to Freedom of Information.  It’s all there at our fingertips: the Kelly Blue Book (used car values), patient ratings of doctors, online medical self-diagnostic tools, parliamentary meeting minutes, Wiki-lieaks, and all kinds of consumer information websites.   These give your clients just enough information to be dangerous.

One way to combat this new paradigm is to fight fire with fire!  Almost 20 years ago now, we decided to increase our repair prices.  It felt risky because a sizing had been $12 for so long, and jumping it to $20 seemed drastic.  What did I do?  I took a really nice binder, and printed on fancy paper a shiny new repair price list.  When a client asked how much for 4 tips and a new half-shank, I just opened up the binder, ran my finger down the page and read-off the prices.  It was right there in black and white.  I didn’t REALLY have to look it up; I knew what exactly what the pricing was.  But, we never had a challenge to our newly raised pricing because it was in BLACK AND WHITE.

Consumers are mistaking information on the internet as accurate; even though only some of it is.  If you're open and concise with your information; show a good selection of diamonds and jewellery; and they can see, touch and feel your jewellery, how can you miss?

Suggested content for your very own information binder:
  • ·      Repair price list
  • ·      Diamond price lists with retail pricing
  • ·      Four C’s (I suggest you write your own with an emphasis on the rarity of higher quality and size levels)
  • ·      Gold and platinum information; including alloy content, nickel allergies and rhodium plating
  • ·      Jewellery care and maintenance
  • ·      Warranty policy
  • ·      Return / exchange policy


Again, even if you know all of this information by heart, reciting it with the open page in front of you will add weight to your assertions.  If you do this well, they might even come to trust you more than the internet.

Thursday 15 September 2011

Carpe Diamond


Okay, I admit it… I sat and watched the Home Shopping Channel for about 20 minutes last night in my “not so fancy but clean, cheap motel room” in Farflung, Saskatchewan.  Now to be fair, I turned there when I saw the listing show “Ammolite”.  Some of you know that “Korite Ken” is my cousin, so I just wanted to watch long enough to have something to bug him about.  The thing I found interesting is that everything they were selling was in silver.  I’m sure they still sell gold, but like all of us, they’re trying to keep price points down to reasonable levels.

Here’s the thing about price points.  Trying to chase them down the scale is what Wallmart does.  Wallmarts’ suppliers have a price-point and a look in mind.  In order to make those two factors happen, they make jewellery cheaper, thinner and with lower and lower quality gemstones in order to fit the price-point.  I’m not equating Korite’s product with Wallmart at all.  I’m simply saying that jewellery is and should be more expensive today than it was 10 years ago.  Vive la difference.

All of this talk about making 6kt and 8kt gold, the silver bead phenomenon, stainless steel, titanium and other alternative metals reflects irrational fear.  What if home-builders decided to make houses out of cardboard in order to keep price points the same as they were 10 years ago?  What if Detroit, Japan and Korea decided to start making cars without airbags, without ABS brakes and with Firestone tires? 

Homes are being built to a higher standard than ever.  Cars have more features than ever.  They’re fetching higher prices than ever.  More money is being spent than ever, so why are we reducing features?

Some aren’t.  We have retailers selling more caraters than ever, more 2ct diamonds than ever and more one-off pieces than ever.  This is the time to not only carpe diem, but it’s time to carpe diamond!  Seize the diamond!

Friday 9 September 2011

Social Networking


Social Media is a new buzzword for our industry.  Everyone wants to be on-board, but few are familiar with “how”; let alone “why”.  I’ve spoken with many jewellers who feel like they’re going to miss-out on something big unless they are involved in “social media.”

I’m starting to use Facebook more, and I now tweet.  I have this blog and have published another one for a mission trip to Haiti.  With such limited experience, I can’t tell you what to do to make your business a success with the use of social media, but I can tell you that if you’ve ever been involved in “direct marketing”, you’re already a step ahead.

When I was in retail, I had a small 10th floor operation in Edmonton.  I spent months gathering old job-bags and receipts to compile a mailing list because I believed it important to prospect from people who have already given you money.  I wrote, photo-copied and stuffed envelopes to get my “GemNotes” newsletter into the hands of friendly faces.  This was “targeted direct mail” using free information to earn loyalty.  When fax-mail became popular, I was on the road with Customgold and used that to distribute “road reflections newsletter.”  Now that email is available, I’ve used email to notify my targeted audience that they can “click-through” to the latest edition of my “Road Reflections Blog”.

The progression from direct mail, to fax-mail to email is all the same thing.  It’s all DIRECT MARKETING.  It’s getting a tailored message to targeted group of people.  The only difference is that we’ve gone from postage stamps to fax machine, to computers for our method of distribution.  Each step makes direct marketing cheaper and easier to do.

Here’s where the rubber meets the chicken --- due to technological advances, direct marketing is becoming easier and cheaper, so everyone can and is doing it.  If everyone can do it cheaply and easily you’ve got more and more competition.  Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. are making it possible for little Becky’s “I’ve got a cold (frowny face)” to push your marketing down into the cyber-basement.  It takes no thought and almost no work to post a message on social networking.

How do you stand-out?  Ask Robert Collier.  He wrote the seminal work on direct marketing, “The Robert Collier Letter Book” in the 1930s.  The late Mr. Collier focuses on amazing headlines and convincing copy to spur consumers to spending.

Direct marketing actually takes three primary elements; a good headline, a compelling message and a great inner reality.  If you don’t have good headlines (the ad for the ad,) then nobody will read what you have to say. 

If your message doesn’t compel people to action, then you are wasting your time.  I’m not saying that they have to storm-on down and buy a 2ct diamond because you Tweeted them into it.  I’m saying in the immortal words of David Ogilvy, “the heart and soul of advertising is a BIG PROMISE.”  You’ve got to have a message that either brings people into your store now, or endears them to patronizing you in the future.  They have to be convinced that you have an offer that will not only be good value, but add value to their lives.  In order to draw people in, you need to promise the fulfillment of their need for love, acceptance, prestige, self-fulfillment or any other your targets’ hot-button “needs.”

Oh, and by the way, if you don’t back-up your boasts with a great reality, you’ll only sell them once if at all.  If you believe as P.T. Barnum did that “there’s a sucker born every minute,” you’ll suffer the downside of social networking.  In a recent discussion about the issue with Dick Jewell of Mitchell & Jewell in Red Deer, he pointed out the dark-side of social networking.  If someone has a beef against you, social networking can rapidly accelerate bad publicity.

If you want excel at social networking, study the masters of direct marketing.  Understand that the easiest most automated ways of direct marketing by far have the lowest response rates.  If you really want to make money from social networking, maybe try a hand-written letter in a hand-addressed snail-mail envelope. 

Your comments.......

Tuesday 30 August 2011

The Fall Season Begins with a Bang


Over the past few weeks, I’ve been to Toronto for the CJG buying show, the Western Canadian Jewellery Expo in Edmonton, and begun my rounds through Western Canada.  So far, so good.  Businesses are reporting acceptable to good sales, and with few exceptions retailers are repeating on fast-sellers and adding a few new designs to replace slower sellers.

While you’d like to hear that we’re in for an amazingly prosperous Fall season, I can’t in good conscience promote that idea.  Since Summer 2008 retail has declined and then leveled-off.  Yes Virginia, there was a recession.  This is not news to most of you.  Customgold however is doing more business than ever in 2011.  Why?  Because the boom years helped remind consumers who have always had money and who continue to have expendable cash that good jewellery is a pleasure to own.

When I began with Customgold in the Spring of 2001, we were trying to find ways to make $1,000 engagement rings because the market was so incredibly tight.  When times are extremely tough, conspicuous consumption becomes unfashionable to those who have the means.  Take a look at the number of newer Mercedes, BMWs, Lexus, Mustang GTs, Camaros and high-end motorcycles on the road.  Those who “have” are feeling good about the freedom to enjoy their wealth. 

Western Canadians who have money aren’t holding back on spreading around their wealth.  This trend has held strong since 2007 – 2008.  Many businesspersons have become wealthier because of the recession, as it gave them the excuse they needed to cut-out the fat from their operations and get costs under control.  The oil and gas sector couldn’t continue to pay the prices they were paying for labor and contractors, but the wells still need to be dug, the upgraders still need to be built and the bitumen still needs to be processed.  As I’ve quoted before from Gordon Pitts book Stampede, “oil companies are more interested in the price of oil 20 year from now.”  A two or three year delay in these expenditures isn’t a big deal to the oil companies who have 10, 20 and 50 year plans.

Those in our society who have seen a real decline in their income and have lost real jobs are getting their jewellery in $50 hits now thanks to those famous bead-lines.  Sterling silver is emerging to replace some of the lower price points abandoned by soaring gold prices.

Look forward to a Fall where your best customers have permission from society to treat themselves to the good-stuff.  CG sales in the West are up 17% over 2010 so far, primarily on the strength of reordered fast-sellers.  We’re not just eye-candy for your feature window; we’ve got designs that are proven to build you a healthy bottom line.  I look forward to seeing many of you very soon.

Post your comments below.  Do you agree that higher-end consumers are still spending???

Monday 20 June 2011

Affluent Consumers


The following appeared in JCK Online today.  Please give it a quick read, and then I have a few reflections...


More Affluent Consumers Shopping at Discounters

By JCK Staff
Posted on June 20, 2011

A survey released by Unity Marketing June 20 showed wealthy consumers were more likely to shop at discounters like Target than at high-end department stores.
According to the survey, more ultra-affluent shoppers, defined as those with incomes of $250,000 and above, said they shopped at Target (39.5 percent), Macy’s (34 percent), and J.C. Penney (22.4 percent), than said they shopped at Neiman Marcus (20.1 percent) or Bloomingdales (19.4 percent). 
Affluent shoppers “are just as eager as shoppers with less disposable income to find good quality at reasonable prices,” said a Unity Marketing statement. “That’s why they shop at discounters like Target, Kohl’s, Costco and Wal-Mart, just like everybody else.”
Unity Marketing president Pam Danziger, said luxury shoppers have embraced a new “value orientation.”
Luxury products today must “deliver a meaningful return as measured in greater pleasure, comfort, superior performance, and longevity of wear and use,” Danziger said. “If the product doesn't measure up, [affluent consumers] won't spend the money; rather they will trade down to a cheaper, yet acceptable alternative.”
Danziger said high-end stores like Neiman Marcus have to understand that discounters are increasingly becoming their competitors.
“With Apple's retail innovator Ron Johnson joining J.C. Penney as CEO later this year, I expect to see exciting changes emerging from Penney's, particularly in the area of the customer's shopping experience,” she added.


This is an important sign of the times. Many retailers I know are focusing on "branding" their store either via the lines they carry; or how they advertise. What is branding? It's what you do to achieve the "X-factor" that makes you the cool place to buy jewellery from.

In mathematical equations "X" is an unknown, and mathematicians do complex work to "solve for X." Jewellers are doing complex work to "solve for X" in the problem what will make consumers choose me over my competitors. While many believe that X = prestige, the JCK article is suggesting that X = the perception of a good deal. Is X a constant or a variable?


The answer is this:


"X" is not a single thing that will trigger a viral response to your products and services; rather it's a number of things done consistently well that make your target audience conclude that "I'd have to be a complete moron to buy from anyone else, no matter what the price."  The value question is not a matter of a discounted price.

Value is the feeling that a person gets from weighing all of the factors and making their best possible decision.  Price is only one small factor for most consumers.  Just because the JCK article says that affluent shoppers are looking for discounts, don't think that price is the only way to earn their business.  

Value is justified and proven through salesmanship.  If you can help your client to answer all of the questions they have about a purchase and identify the key factors that they equate with value, then you're on your way to making the sale.  If you know anything about your product or your competitors product and believe that discounting is the best way to make people buy, then in the words of Donald Trump, "your fired."

If you're building a brand around an amazing client experience and you're increasing your product knowledge and salesmanship, then don't even give this dumb article a second thought.  Keep on that track.

If you want a glorious future in this industry there are two more things you need to do.  One is to focus your current energy on product that has a future.  In other words, enjoy the popularity of current trends, but unless they'll see you retired in a year, you'd better think about how you'll be selling diamond and gold jewellery 5, 10 and 20 years from now.  

The second is to learn how to be relevant to a new breed of consumer who think about material goods differently and who have completely new ways to shop for them.  Keep your eyes on Road Reflections Blog to learn more about these two aspects that are critical to your future.

Friday 3 June 2011

Color in Vegas

As we looked around the Couture show and Luxury show at JCK Las Vegas a comment was made about colored gemstones.  Is that a new trend?  I replied, "not so much in Canada; we're just seeing a lot of designers showing off, and it's really not that strong in our "meat and potatoes" market back home.

Now when I say a lot of color, I'm referring to a lot of these heavily included diamonds in browns and yellows, many different varieties of solid color quartz pieces and large inexpensive gemstones, many accented by medium brown or grey diamonds.  There were also the "big four" sapphire, ruby, emerald and tanzanite.

My reflection on color is this:  If you develop a strategy for selling more color, you can have a bright, shiny, happy future.  If you begin to sew seeds of diversity into a client's jewellery wardrobe, you can sell them all sorts of jewellery for life.  A ruby ring leads to ruby earrings, ruby pendant, ruby bracelet, and "hey, what if I'm wearing green?"  If they only ever buy diamonds from you, they will run into "the wall" at some point and stop desiring more.

Also, don't look at white gold versus yellow gold as a defining trend one-way or another.  They are also components of a jewellery wardrobe.  If you encourage wearing yellow gold with earth-tone gemstones over earth-tone clothing for Fall fund-raisers; and white gold with bright jewel-tones for summer weddings, you're going to become a fashion consultant, rather than a sales clerk.  For inspiration on how to talk to people on these terms, watch "Say Yes to the Dress".  The senior staff (the closers) always relate the appropriateness of the dress to the qualities of the client.

Colored stone jewellery is harder to sell than diamonds or certainly than those soon to be extinct beaded bracelets, but it's worth the effort.  It takes stocking inspiring designs with amazing colored gemstones, highlighting them in your feature cases, including them in your advertising and working with clients to find their favorite colors and expanding on them.  If you don't carry much color, start building an assortment.  When's the best time to plant a tree? -- Ten years ago.  Talk to your staff about colored gems.  Throw the gem guides on the table on your lunch area.  Join the AGTA.

Don't ever, ever, ever, ever, ever forget that when a person walks into your store, you can do what's easy and make a quick-sale today, or you can do what's more challenging and dig deeper into their lives, wants and desires and plant the seeds of future purchases 1,3, 5, 10 and 20 years down the road.

From Las Vegas,


TW :)

I've changed some settings on here, so if you're so inspired, please post a comment by clicking below:

Monday 23 May 2011

A Call for Integrity - Diamond Certs gone Wild


This stinkin’ thinkin’ has got to go.  Our industry needs a check-up from the neck-up.

A few weeks ago, I started on a rant that won’t die.  I personally witnessed several cases of fraudulent diamond certs; which have effectively taken food off of my children’s plates.  I work for a company that seeks to do the right thing and offer properly graded diamonds at fair market pricing.  Apparently that’s not “competitive enough.”  Evidently some have chosen to take a $1000 diamond and pay someone to certify it as a $1500 diamond and then sell it for 33% off the certified value.

That sounds like an old story.  Chances are you either know a retailer who does this or you are one; having certain product like gold chain “40% off” all year long.  Are we really talking about the same thing?

If I go to The Brick furniture store to buy a sofa, would you think me a shrewd consumer to purchase it at full price?  What about going to Stitches and buying a single shirt for $79 instead of buying 3 for $89?  These retailers create pricing and marketing schemes aimed at maximizing bottom-line profits.  It’s not the way I would endorse running a retail operation because it is against all Canadian consumer guidelines and the competition act to inflate prices and create deceptive discounts.

Our government has more important things to do than to monitor these relatively minor sins.  HOWEVER, if Stitches sells a rayon shirt as a “silk” shirt and sells it at a silk price, that fraud grows from a misdemeanor to a felony.  If The Brick sells a naugahyde sofa as a “genuine leather” sofa, that too would be felonious. 

Adam Smith’s invisible hand should allow a savvy consumer to sort-out the best price no matter what the pricing and discount schemes at work; as long as they can compare apples to apples.

Why do we think that buying an I2-N poorly cut diamond as a SI3-I ideal-cut (with a credible-looking certificate) for an I2-N price is justifiable?  That has nothing to do with the discretionary pricing options that a retailer can exercise.  It’s outright fraud.  It’s fraudulent of the diamond distributor to accept the bogus paper from the grading organization, and it is fraudulent of the retailer to play dumb and pass along that misinformation to the retail client.

Let’s face it folks.  Diamond cutters and dealers know what they’ve got.  They send it to grading labs so that they have a second-hand witness to justify the price they want to charge.  In recent years we have discovered that even the supposedly inviolate GIA was subject to issuing false grading.

At the retail level, how do we truly win the battle against the internet?  We do it by offering a better customer experience.  Customer satisfaction is more than price.  It’s great service, it’s high-quality design, it’s the advantage of seeing your product before you buy, it’s expert advice, it’s after-sale service, it’s creativity, it’s personal contact.  It’s about making yourself a “trusted advisor”, and proving to your market that they’d have to be a fool to deal with anyone else but you no matter what the price.  It’s NOT about trying to match the deceptions and pricing schemes employed on-line.

In a recent discussion with newly hired CJA president, David Ritter I asked him about the issue of Burger King certs (have it your way).  Having come from outside the jewellery industry, his response was, “heaven forbid that the media gets ahold of this issue.”  Imagine the headline in the Globe and Mail, “Massive Fraud Among Canadian Jewellers”, or “Diamond Deception Running Rampant”. 

Could that article be written?  Could I go to 10 cities across Canada and buy a diamond ring whose reported quality was massively overstated?  If I took those diamonds to four different grading labs and got differing results each do you think our industry might look really bad?

The big question is not if that article will get written; rather when.  When it does and consumers become even more suspicious of their local retailer, how will we answer their concerns?  Who’s going to write that script?  We’re in deep doo-doo and we don’t know it yet.

If you want to become part of the solution, here’s what you do:

1.     Stop buying from dealers who constantly try to defraud your customers with their grading

2.     If you belong to a buying group or jewellers’ organization, report such dealers to your organization and work towards cutting them off on a larger scale.

3.     Like my friend Matt in Lloydminster, go take some diamond grading courses so that you can authoritatively tell your customers that you can verify the quality of their new diamond.

4.     Don’t sweep anything under the carpet.  If that article is written, everything we do will be scrutinized by the public, so implement new policies to ensure the highest level of professional integrity is in your store.

5.     Make sure to forward this message to other retailers; especially your enemies.  The more people hear this message, the better for our whole industry.

Wednesday 20 April 2011

Diamond Cert Rant #1

“I’ve had all I can stands, and I can’t stands no more!”  (Pass the spinach.)
                        -Popeye-

The level of integrity in this industry that I love has sunk to a new low.  Deceptive diamond certificates are not only annoying; they’re illegal.  We’ve been duped into thinking that a dishonest diamond cert is nothing but a “more generous opinion” and rightly deserves a bit of a discount.  The fact is that while diamond grading is indeed subjective, gem labs should only ever differ by extremely slight margins; and the top ones do.

What do you think would happen to a Chevy dealer who sells brand new 2011 Cameros, based on the claim that they come with a 1000 horsepower?  Anyone can check their website to find-out that new Cameros have 312, 400 or 426hp.  Jewellery clients don’t have that option; they can only rely on the integrity of their retailer. 

While I’m currently a lowly sales-rep, I used to be a retailer.  I know what it’s like to want the best quality diamond for the lowest price.  I still want that for my wholesale clients.  I know what it’s like to receive a diamond that a customer has eagerly awaited; only to recognize that it doesn’t live-up to the reported quality.  Sometimes it’s just easier to make the sale, and hope the truth is never discovered; after-all you’ve got the paperwork in your hand to support the deception.

Whenever clients refer to jewellery that they bought from someone other than me we refer to it as “Brand-X”.  In the past two weeks I’ve been shown diamonds that two retailers have purchased from Brand X.  One dealer had doubts about the reported quality and the other boasted about the spectacular bargain they got.  These diamonds came with “Burger King” certificates (…have it YOUR way – for those of you who are too young to recall the famous ads.)  Having been a Fellow of the Canadian Gemological Association, and having purchased diamonds as a wholesaler and retailer since 1987, I can recognize a diamond whose color is in the latter half of the alphabet, and I know the difference between SI2 and I2.  Some of the diamonds I’ve seen are not a single color or clarity grade out; they’re 4-7 color grades and 1-2 clarity levels below their certs.  These deserve more than a small discount; they deserve a prison sentence.

Have you ever said to a supplier, “Okay, so sometimes Brand-X diamonds don’t live up to the paperwork, but your diamonds are more expensive”?  Huh?  Think about what you just said!  You’ve just said, “these people regularly screw us, but mostly we just put up with it so that our clients can feel that they’re getting a great deal.”  In this case, you are complicit in the fraud.

Here’s the reality.  The people writing these Burger King certs know that what they’re claiming is bogus because they’re being paid to do so.  The diamond producers and/or dealers that pay for these certs know that they’re paying for misinformation – after-all could they be diamond dealers if they didn’t know the difference between an H and an L color?

Guess who has to answer to the consumer if and when the truth is revealed?  It’s the retailer.  If 5 or 6 of retail clients separately discovered that you’ve sold them inferior diamonds, they’ll get together and make sure everyone in your city or town knows what a crook you are.  You’ll be out of business in no time.  Even if you only had a faint inkling that you had sold diamonds inferior to their certs, you’d well-deserve to be black-listed.

Why isn’t this happening on the wholesale side?  There are certain names that come-up over and over and over again.  Why do they still exist?  Because we drink the Kool-aid.  We want to believe their lies.  We eagerly claim the vindication offered by the fraudulent paperwork.

If you have product in your store from someone whose integrity is in question, send a couple of these diamonds to a trusted gem-lab.  Make sure they are micro-engraved so that nobody can say it’s not the same diamond and make sure they are unset.  Tell other jewelers about your results, good, bad or ugly.  Prove me wrong, or prove them fraudulent.  It’s a small price to pay in order to stand-up for your clients, and ensure your clients receive what they pay for.

My hope is that after reading this letter, less retailers will be tempted to fool themselves.  The responsibility is yours to support dealers with integrity and cut-off ones without.  If a company consistently displays a lack of integrity in their grading, what else aren’t they telling you?  Let’s clean up the industry.  A lack of integrity is a lack of integrity.  Period.  Dump them now and forever.