advertising & stuff

Wimblees@AOL.COM Wimblees@AOL.COM
Wed, 6 Jun 2001 19:31:30 EDT


---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment
In a message dated 6/5/01 9:27:39 PM Central Daylight Time, 
pianolover88@hotmail.com writes:


> On a lighter note, If a customer failed to show up for a tuning appointment, 
> would you charge her mileage to make a second trip? I did.
> Terry Peterson 
> 
> 

First, regarding specialty advertising. I found, for the most part, that 
anything but the Yellow Pages, or a constantly running 3 or 4 line ad in the 
classifieds promoting your tuning business, doesn't pay. I have tried dozens 
of them, and none of them produced enough additional work to make it worth 
while. Sometimes they just barely broke even, and some didn't do a darn 
thing. 

As far as no shows are concerned. I wrote a post about this subject about a 
year ago. Basically, I give the customer the benefit of the doubt for her 
excuse why she wasn't home. In fact, what difference does it make what her 
excuse is, the bottom line is, she wasn't there to let you in to tune the 
piano. Therefore, my stand on this subject is that this part of the "job 
description" of being a piano tuner. It comes with  the territory. No matter 
how hard we try, there are always going to be no shows. Therefore, I write it 
off, and go on with my life. When I did try to collect in the past, it 
created bad feelings. I just don't need that. So I let it go, and hope we can 
reschedule at a later date. Of course, the customer only gets one shot at 
this. The second time, I get nasty, and either collect, or write the customer 
off for ever. 

Willem 

---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/45/28/df/ea/attachment.htm

---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment--


This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC