Monday, November 19, 2007

Thank You ....Tolmolbol



Tolmolbol came up with Diwali Dhamaka as the feature for its first newsletter for all its users who have subscribed to it. Tolmolbol.com is a platform for user generated reviews on local businesses.

We were pleasantly surprised(no wonder its being written so many days after diwali) to see our name for the places to try during the festive season in the New Delhi edition.

This is how they said it:

The fashion-conscious Delhi-wallahs have a superb choice of both fashion and food!

Whether you want to dress up ethnic with Biba and Biba or casual; the options range from the good, the bad, and the ugly. Spykar Jeans, Pepe Jeans, Pantaloons, Unistyle Image, and more. You’ll find classic women’s wear at Bizarre and if you’re looking for something more unique try People Tree. And while you’re shopping for Diwali, why don’t you just pop in to Kathana Jewellers and tell us what you think about it?

No festival is complete without sweets, and the very traditional sounding Gulab Rewari Gajjak Sweets-Rohtak Wala is a great place to stopover for sweets.

Have a great Festive Season!


Thank You! TolMolBol

P.S. BTW Gulab Sweets is bang across the road from us.

Related Posts:
Thank You ....Trendylicious!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

New Pics On The Blog

Monday has been rewarding even though the shutters of our store was down. Finally we managed to add some pictures of the products we have in our store.
We have been working very hard with getting the photographs right and have kept the touch ups to bare minimum. This was just a trial shoot and the results were much better than what we were getting from professional photographers who were charging us a fortune. We hope that you enjoy the pics.

Posted above is the "pendant part of" a diamond necklace. A mix of baguettes and round shaped diamonds have been used to create this necklace. The necklace has an appeal which is expected to strike a chord with modern women. Very classy and elegant.

The picture below (left) shows a craftsmen working on a diamond bangle. Every diamond is manually embedded inside its setting. This particular piece involved over 50 hours of labour from start to finish and has over 7 carats of baguette shaped diamonds. The finished product is presented along.



Next we shot antique-looking bangles(below), which have been quite popular in the market for the last few years. Going by the buying trend looks like its going to find its fair amount of takers this season as well. The bangle in the picture below is one of the classic example of the patterns women in India are fascinated about.

Rubies, polki diamonds (uncut real diamonds), emeralds and other semi precious stone find their home in this bangle . Weighing over a 70 grams of gold, each of these bangle demand almost 60 hours of labor to be done and had to be outsourced to craftsmen in Calcutta.



If you are wanting to get a better view of the products, please click on the pictures. I am sure you would appreciate the detailing of each of these products.



How is Gold Price related to US Dollar?

Note: If you are looking for gold rate please look in the right column under the heading Today's Gold Price.

With gold prices touching the sky and putting a dampener on gold sales. See the poll results on the right. A lot of you must be wondering how the heck in the world is a weakening dollar affecting the price of gold.

Let me come to this in a simple grandmom explanation.

Its all about the hedge against inflation. People invest in assets where they can gain more than inflation.

Consider the dollar starts weakening due to various reasons. Which means the dollar cannot buy as much anymore. People start moving their money to other assets like stocks, land, gold etc. This spurt in gold purchases with supply remaining constant, pushes the gold price up.

I think I got that right. Whoops this does look like a jalebi.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Diamond trade: An Indian perspective.

Trawling the ocean of weblogs I stumbled upon a few "pearls" today. One of the blog post caught my particular attention because of the simplified and yet insightful narration of the Diamond trade with respect to India.

The post by Ajay Shah ( looks like an economist by his other writings) is a little long for the average reader who has limited attention span. The narrative keeps you pinned to your seat though.

In his post Ajay talks about the origins of diamond trade in India and its value add through the process.
Then you get to fly to De Beers in London (or to the market in Antwerp) every five weeks, where you get shown a pile of diamonds sitting on a brightly lit table. The price of the consignment is non-negotiable. The quality of rough diamonds in the pile is heterogeneous. The prospective buyer gets around 15 minutes to make a decision: to take it or leave it.

And finally explains why this business has been a family feifdom.
Second, the need for globally dispersed elements of the family. One brother sits in London, visits De Beers, buys a batch of rough diamonds (which requires making a judgment about whether the batch is a good deal). One brother sits in India and does the polishing (which requires making judgments about optimality of cuts, and handling issues of theft). One brother sits in Antwerp and sells the polished diamonds (which is pure bargaining).

If this has got you curious indeed go visit his blog post here.


Sunday, November 11, 2007

Kathana Finds A Home In Facebook Pages


This weekend was busy gorging Diwali Mithais and meeting near and dear one. But I did find some time to work on the blog a little bit more.

SO now you would notice that the Feeds are up. You can spot the orange button somewhere down the right column. And so is subscribing to the blog through mails.

Another interesting feature I came across was Facebook's introduction of Facebook Pages. Although there has been talks about how social networks allow businesses to reach potential customers. Unless I am really ignorant about the current Web2.0 scene it looks to me that Facebook has cracked it right.

Excited I have now opened a store front for Kathana Jewellers. It is still in the process of being updated. And I am actually waiting to look at some more examples of people doing it right.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Exceptional Customer Service: Every Business Can Implement It.

One of the most indelible memories of US has been its customer service at department stores big and small alike, restaurants, coffeeshops and everywhere else. So naturally when I came back after a 4 year stint there I tried to imbibe this culture at our jewelry store.

I am fortunate to have a family which supported me all along when I wanted to implement ideas I learnt from the west to the jewelry store. But there were voices of dissent among relatives, customers who wished us good and friends who thought Indian customers are too untrustworthy to place the trust on.

The customer service I am talking about ranged from 30-Day Money BAck at Targets,Nordstorm etc, free dessert because we made you wait for it a little too long at Applebees in Salem, Oregon, or dont worry about the wallet you forgot you can pay us next time at Starbucks, Wilsonville, Oregon. I was bound to get infected and bound to give this a try in its own flavor back in India.

Besides Customer satisfaction, there is a business case for it:

Joel Spolsky puts that in words what we had all along known and I quote from his blog
The no-questions-asked 90-day money back guarantee was one of the best decisions we ever made at Fog Creek. Try this: use Fog Creek Copilot for a full 24 hours, call up three months later and say, “hey guys, I need $5 for a cup of coffee. Give me back my money from that Copilot day pass,” and we’ll give it back to you. Try calling on the 91st or 92nd or 203rd day. You’ll still get it back. We really don’t want your money if you’re not satisfied. I’m pretty sure we’re running the only job listing service around that will refund your money just because your ad didn’t work. This is unheard of, but it means we get a lot more ad listings, because there’s nothing to lose.

Over the last six years or so, letting people return software has cost us 2%.

2%.

Similarly, Over the last 11 months since we implemented a '30-Day 100% Money back' in our store we haven't had a single return. And I am not kidding.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Wishing You a Happy Diwali



Wishing all the readers of this blog, A very HAPPY DIWALI.

May this joyous occasion bring peace, prosperity and purity to your family and loved ones.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Making Charges In Gold : A Classic Overhyped Marketing Gimmick!

Seth Godin would have loved to point this in his book All marketers are liars. The case in point is the making charges in jewellery of any kind be it gold, diamond or semi-precious stones.

Making charges are what a consumer pays above the price of gold(on a certain day) for crafting the gold into jewellery. This varies from item(viz. bangles) to item(viz. chains) and from one jeweller to another. Usually the going rate starts upwards of Rs.60/gram.

Somehow for some marketers this parameter is the most important thing to consider when buying/evaluating gold from a retailer. You cant miss this fact especially on different radio channels where every other jeweller is trying to beat the competitor on just this parameter.

Infact so intense is the competition and so unmeasurable the delight of consumers that I recently came across a customer who boasted of Rs.10/gram of making charges from another jeweller.

Why has this parameter stolen the limelight when there are parameters more worthy to consider or highlight?

This stems from the basic instinct in humans: To get a good bargain for the deal at hand.

So whats wrong with that?
This takes me back to what said earlier. There are more than just one parameter to consider when buying gold. FInd out the return policy on your jewellery. You should ideally get a trial period of atleast a month beyond which expect to lose only making charges when you return your jewellery. The diamonds should be certified by reputed houses like GIA,EGL and IGI. The jewellery should be BIS hallmarked. It should indicate all the 5 signs BIS recommends.

On prompting more the customer pointed that his low making charges were on unhallmarked gold jewellery. Here rests my case.

Related Posts:
How to avoid the Low Making Charges Trap in Jewellery

Monday, October 29, 2007

Thank You... Trendylicious!


So the news of our unique offerings and services is reaching places. I want to thank the trendylicious team for doing a wonderful job of covering our offerings and bringing us in front of their readers.

FOr the new readers of this blog, spend some time around on this blog and leave comments on how you like this blog and what you would like to know about jewellery.

Our website is getting revamped,It will sport a new look by the end of this week. So bookmark it to visit again.

For those of you who haven't read the article its here.

Related Posts:
Custom Made Engagement Rings

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Tip # 1: All Gold Is Not Created Equal

I have been thinking of starting jewellery tid-bits in a digestible format for the readers of this blog.

Once I have a decent number of them I will make an e-book out of these.Here's my first one.

Gold used in Diamond jewellery is 18K whereas in Gold sets, Kanthi Sets the gold is 22K pure.

Why so? The reason is pure gold(24K) is very soft and cannot be used in jewellery of any kind as it is. So alloys are mixed in gold to make it stronger.

Prongs used in diamond jewellery to hold the diamonds need to be strong. Hence it is 18K( more alloy). Gold used in necklaces containg semiprecious stones, kanthi necklace sets and antique design gold sets are made in 22K gold(less alloy).