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Why 'The Hartwell Bedside' Can't Be Found on Amazon

Tony Cooper 4 min read ecommerce
Why 'The Hartwell Bedside' Can't Be Found on Amazon

Here’s the problem with selling anything online.

You find a supplier. You list their products. A customer finds your site, likes a handsome bedside table, and does what every sensible person does before spending £350 - they Google it.

They find the same table on six other sites. One of them is £40 cheaper. You lose the sale.

This is the commodity trap, and I’ve watched it kill dropshippers every single day. The only way to compete is on price, and someone is always willing to go lower. It’s a relentless race to the bottom - margins compress until the business dies.

Unless, of course, the customer can’t find your product anywhere else.


The Naming Engine

485
products, each with a unique name nobody else owns

Last week I launched indoorluxury.co.uk - a furniture store with 485 products, sub-second loading, and one feature that changes everything.

I renamed every single product.

The supplier calls it “IN014”. It’s generic, it’s completely searchable, and it’s listed on fifty other sites that are all competing on price.

I call it “The Hartwell Bedside”.

That name exists nowhere else. Not on Amazon. Not on any competitor’s site. The only place in the world to buy The Hartwell Bedside is Indoor Luxury.

That’s not a bug. That’s the entire strategy.

How It Works

How the Naming Engine Works

I built a naming engine that transforms supplier SKUs into branded product names. I use British heritage names - estates, villages, craft terms. Names that feel like they belong to a curated furniture collection, not a warehouse manifest.

The Hovingham Collection. The Furlong Dining Table. The Tinsmith Chest. The Brazier Cabinet.

Each name is unique to my site - I own that search term exclusively. And each one breaks the commodity trap that kills every other dropshipper selling the same supplier’s products.

The supplier approved this. They’re happy for resellers to rebrand - it doesn’t affect their wholesale business, and it means their products appear under dozens of different brand identities instead of one easily-compared commodity.


The Competitor Graveyard

I spent a week researching other furniture dropshippers who use the same supplier, and the pattern was depressingly consistent.

Insolvencies. Broken sites. Desperate “PRICE DROP” banners plastered across every page. One competitor openly lists the supplier’s brand name on every product - which means zero brand protection, completely searchable, competing purely on price against everyone else with the same idea.

They list generic SKUs and wonder why customers buy them cheaper elsewhere.

Shopify made it easy for them to start, but I’ve learned that tools don’t confer skill. These competitors compete on price because they can’t compete on anything else. They have no SEO knowledge, no design capability, no brand building. One of those dreary Shopify stores where every page looks like it was set up in an afternoon - because it was.


What This Actually Looks Like

Open indoorluxury.co.uk on your phone.

Count how fast it loads. Look at The Hovingham Collection. Browse the bedroom furniture. Notice that every product has a name that sounds like it belongs to a heritage brand, not a dropship operation.

That’s the naming engine in action - I gave 485 products each a unique identity, and each one owns a search term that nobody else can compete for.


Why I Built This on Astro (Not Shopify)

Three weeks ago I told you Shopify was better for e-commerce. I still believe that for most businesses.

But Shopify takes 3% of every transaction. On a £500 sofa, that’s £15 gone before I’ve paid the supplier. I multiplied that across thousands of orders and the platform tax becomes a second cost of goods.

Astro has no transaction fees. The checkout is mine. The margin is mine.

The site also loads in under a second - while Shopify furniture stores lumber along at 3-4 seconds, losing impatient customers who won’t wait for a page to render. Different infrastructure, different physics entirely.

< 1 sec
page load on Astro vs 3-4 seconds on typical Shopify furniture stores

The Principle

If customers can Google your product and find it cheaper elsewhere, you’re competing on price. If they can’t find it anywhere else, you’re competing on brand.

The naming engine isn’t clever marketing. It’s architectural brand protection that I built into the product catalogue itself.

Every “Hartwell Bedside” I sell is a sale that couldn’t have gone to a competitor - because the competitor doesn’t have The Hartwell Bedside. They have IN014, and so does everyone else.

The same product. The same supplier. Completely different game.
Tony Cooper

Tony Cooper

Founder

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