This is our annual issue that honors FCNews’ Award of Excellence winners. The recognition has become exceptionally meaningful for manufacturers and suppliers for three decades. Why? While other award programs tend to focus on a particular product introduction or marketing/ merchandising concept, the Awards of Excellence honor companies based on an array of criteria as voted on by their customers. It validates what every supplier strives to do on a daily basis.
The competition has grown over the years to include 28 categories. We try to let the companies compete in their appropriate sandboxes. For example, suppliers go up against companies of similar size as the larger company simply has more resources at their disposal.
With all this said, you’ll find the well-deserved winners starting on page 26. But I always like to use this space to reveal voting nuances in some of these categories. Why? Some companies won in a landslide. You should know how much they are considered the best of the best. And in some instances, a company proved victorious by the smallest of margins, while some performed much better than in prior years, which says they are on the right track. So let’s take a deep dive into some of the categories.
If you’re wondering which companies dominate the voting by the greatest margins, the answer is Versatrim (66%) in the Moldings category, Mohawk (62%) in the Laminate A category and Unilin (62%) in one of the two Technology categories. Versatrim has dominated its competition in each of the four years since we launched Moldings. Unilin is also undefeated since we broke out flooring solutions into its own category. Flooring solutions include technologies that are licensed to manufacturers. A structural change in the Laminate category this year allowed Mohawk to coast. No surprise given its dominate position in laminate.
This year we launched our newest category, Best Distributor, which saw All Surfaces edge Herregan by less than 10 votes. Each commanded 13%. The next batch of distributors were exceptionally close in the voting: UCX, William M. Bird and Big D Supplies. UCX’s recent rebranding has one wondering if it would have garnered more votes if it was listed as Haines/Belknap.
I can tell most voters take the A of E seriously and don’t just vote one company across the board. Case in point: In the Carpet A category, Mohawk defeated Shaw by a sizeable margin. However, when it came to the higher-end Carpet B category, Anderson Tuftex handled Karastan by more than 50 votes.
Two more notes about carpet: Tarkett Home has taken the Carpet C category four years in a row, and Stanton has won the Decorative category in all four years since its inception. Tarkett Home has increased its share of the vote from 29% four years ago to 37% this year. Bearing mention in this category is Southwind, which constantly gets 22% to 25% of the vote.
Speaking of Stanton, they returned to the Area Rug winner’s circle after a two-year hiatus. Over the last 10 years, Stanton and Karastan have alternated victories. I do want to call attention to Couristan here, which increased its number of votes more than threefold from 2025 to 2026. The company has made efforts to be more visible this year, even taking home a Best of Surfaces award, and it’s showing in the voting.
When it comes to resilient, COREtec has dominated Rigid Core A for 11 years, the same number of years Mannington has won for Resilient Sheet. Both seem impossible to knock off. Karndean has taken Rigid Core B eight years running. Another model of consistency, either Korlock or Art Select gets 20% of the vote every year. This year it was 28%. Who finishes second to Karndean these last few years? TRUCOR from Dixie. And in the C category, kudos goes to upstart Canopy. Two years ago it mustered only 10% of the vote; last year the number ballooned to 24%; this year it was 29%. The Dossches are obviously working hard to create a viable brand in their second go-round.
Something I found interesting occurred in the Rigid/Wood Hybrid category. Last year HF Design’s AquaProof defeated MSI’s Woodland Hills by 25 votes. This year, MSI turned the tables for its first-ever A of E victory, winning by 30 votes. That shows the collection is gaining traction with retailers.
Let’s talk about one exceptionally close category every year: Laminate B. Inhaus returned to the winner’s circle after a two-year hiatus, defeating the likes of Cali, Tarkett and Stanton with less than 12 votes separating all of them. Stanton is the company to watch here going forward, basically quadrupling its vote count from 2025 and nearly tripling its share of vote.
When it came to Hardwood, three of the four winners were repeaters: Mirage (ninth consecutive) again garnered 45% of the vote in the Canadian category, while Hallmark (fifth consecutive) in the Asian category and Kährs (fourth consecutive) in the European category are entrenching themselves as the cream of the crop in the minds of retailers.
This year we modified the Installation category to strictly Adhesives, and Taylor captured its first A of E awards by single digits over Bostik. Interestingly, three other manufacturers garnered double-digit share of the vote: Roberts, Sika and Bona.
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