We have often spoken of the need 'to adapt, even in our country, to strict standards of Germany and northern Europe in general, where no one can 'enter a trade without having attended a specific school, passed exams, got a diploma, completed an apprenticeship. We have always openly criticized the layers DIY "posing indifferently everything from flooring to tiles maybe doing some work on plumbing or electrical systems. The trucks you see running with slogans such as "electrician, plumber, tiler, plasterer, carpenter" We have always been a bit 'surprised' cause we believe that a trade so 'complex, such as the layer of wood floors, deserves an education more 'appropriate. The proliferation of companies laying improvised has brought great harm to the image of the parquet with a consequent increase in cases and legal disputes that, while they did the joy of the various expert witnesses, from 'more likely to give to the parquet reputation as a floor difficult. Fortunately, the growth data across Europe for the production and sale of wood floors belie this reputation, but it 's important not to rest on our laurels. The situation may even deteriorate thanks to the campaign of unbridled liberalization of the government, on the other hand transposing EU directives. Even the austere Germany, a stronghold for hundreds of years the schools of range areas, must 'review, at least in part, in its strictest setting, how else could, for example, a Polish tiler to work in Germany - which is a precise law - No training required by the Germans? So by winning the final consumer will ' Always quality 'of service and installation specialist. The future of flooring should not consist in a struggle to fall on those who offer a product (perhaps poor) to just put money into an opera by incompetent installers and underpaid as a policy that emphasizes quality 'product and service offered at a fair price.
0 comments:
Post a Comment