Industries
Suites, tiles, brassware, sanitaryware. Customers want a bathroom.
A bathroom project is a coordinated set of decisions across half a dozen product categories — and most websites force buyers to assemble it themselves. Suggestly walks every customer through their bathroom step by step and surfaces a coordinated shortlist that fits the room, the style, and the budget.

The reality
Six categories, twelve finishes, three brand tiers. Your customer just wants the room to feel right.
WCs, basins, baths, showers, brassware, tiles, accessories. Each in matt black, brushed brass, polished chrome, gunmetal, white. Across three or four brand tiers. Customers can't hold the combinations in their head — so they leave the cart with one item, and never come back to finish the room.
What changes with Suggestly
Build the room with the customer, one screen at a time.
Suggestly asks the questions a designer would: room size, layout, style, finish family, budget. As the customer answers, the AI assembles a coordinated suite — sanitaryware, brassware, tiles and accessories that all work together. The customer sees a room, not a parts list.
What guided selling looks like for a bathroom retailer
Scenario 1
Homeowner refurbishing the family bathroom
She picks the layout from a visual grid, locks in matt black brassware, sets her budget, and lands on a coordinated suite — WC, basin, bath, taps, tiles, accessories. One shortlist, one quote, one decision.
Scenario 2
Plumber sourcing for a client's en-suite
He skips the lifestyle questions and goes straight to lead time, trade pricing, and stock availability. Suggestly only surfaces ranges he can fit next week. The trade desk gets a pre-priced quote ready to send.
Scenario 3
Hotel group specifying for a property refit
The procurement lead uploads brand guidelines and a target spec sheet. Suggestly filters across the catalog by tier, finish, and durability rating, returning a project shortlist priced at scale.
What changes when your bathroom catalog has a guide
Whole-room baskets, not single-item drop-offs
Customers leave with the complete suite — taps, tiles, accessories — because the AI surfaces what coordinates with their choices. AOV goes up without upselling.
Trade, retail and project flows on one site
Branch the journey by audience. Homeowners see styling and finance. Trade buyers see availability and trade pricing. Hospitality buyers see project specs and bulk terms.
Warm leads ready for a fitter or designer
Every guided session becomes a lead with the room layout, finish family, and shortlist attached. Your sales team opens the workspace already knowing the room.
Less return abuse on coordinated finishes
When the AI guarantees the brassware and accessories actually match across the suite, returns from finish-mismatch drop sharply.
How Suggestly delivers this for bathrooms
The three pillars, in the order that matters most for this industry.
Features that make it real
The capabilities that build, run, and close the journey.
Built for everyone in the deal
See Suggestly from the perspective of each side of the table.
Stop selling bathroom parts. Start selling bathrooms.
See Suggestly configured for a bathroom catalog in a live walkthrough.
