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Posted

Some jobs you’ll never get, no point worrying about those.

 

Normally when you go to a job the customer will have a figure in mind that they think it’ll cost.

During the walk around they eye you up and down, is he competent? Do I trust him?

Then, if you price on the spot, as I often do, you come in on or under their imaginary budget often as not they’ll give you the go ahead there and then.

Bullet points…

Appear competent/confident

Get the price right.

Bask in the glory.

 

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Posted

After 30 years i still over/under price jobs. Customers want confidence, so a couple of technical words, but not too many go a long way.

You ain't gonna win them all.

Options work in a few cases, but aways require good access. 9 out of 10 cases, there is only one option.

Stick to your decision,  and don't be swayed by the customer.

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  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

This thread feels underused. It could be mega useful. Aware it's harder to post things without specific questions/stimulus but anyone feel free to chime in with any little win/loss they've experienced recently out there at the coalface of customer service. As seemingly insignificant as you like. Someone will learn something. 

 

Tell you what, let's talk websites. I'm writing the guff for mine atm. I know what most arb websites look like. What have people had on theirs that have caused them grief? What don't you have on there but keep thinking you should add?

Edited by AHPP
Posted

Good idea for a thread, Alex.

 

I'm going back to your title/original point -mainly because I don't/won't have a website myself. 

 

Spending a few minutes with a new potential customer, to explain what works we do and our background, etc seems valuable to them, to glean an understanding of us, and seems to build their trust.

 

I always do this before discussing their potential work/problem. It helps set the initiative -and helps them understand there are two parties in their contract considerations .

 

On more complex/open enquiries, I think sacrificing half an hour or so to gently quiz a customer on their objectives, seems a mutually beneficial exercise, often for both parties.

 

Getting them to list/produce a simple specification of what they actually need, is helpful all round. 

 

I should have mentioned at the start, that our Conservation work includes treework.. so maybe a little different from others here.

 

Posted (edited)

I've heard the advice that you shouldn't be selling this job; you should be selling the ten after that. Which does sound good but is quite open ended.

Edited by AHPP

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