[pianotech] repeat business

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Wed Aug 18 14:33:07 MDT 2010


I agree with the no return calls and not showing up on time.  I can't 
stand when the cable guy says he'll be there between 2 and 4 for a simple 
call!  What's up with that?  I have to sit and wait....until 4:30. Even 
worse, are the drywallers who just say Tuesday, and then show up on 
thursday. 

When I say 8am, I mean it and even try my best to be 5 minutes early, but 
usually with 90% accuracy, I can time it to ring the doorbell at 8am. This 
was even when I had a 100 mile radius....I just knew where the traffic was 
going to mess me up or whatever. If I was really early then a coffee 
break, if more than 10 minutes late, a phone call telling them I'm on the 
way. Later in the afternoon, if problems arised from earlier appointments, 
I would call just before going into the appointment before asking 
forgiveness, ok to be late, or reschedule. you know how some appointment 
can go 20-30 minutes over, and then another, and then another, and on and 
on ( I never made more than 4 in a day since I had a huge area and a ferry 
boat ride mixed into the mix)

Maybe I'm just anal about that being raised in a Navy household.  I can't 
stand it when somebody tells me X:xx O'Clock and 20 minutes later, I'm 
still waiting! I guess it's just me.  Don't start me on customer "no 
shows!!"

Not returning phone calls is a sure way to kill a business as well.

well, enough from me.

Paul




From:
tnrwim at aol.com
To:
pianotech at ptg.org
Date:
08/18/2010 03:04 PM
Subject:
Re: [pianotech] repeat business




Having said all I said, what's hard is knowing how many of the 
no-callbacks are from my lack of disorganized, largely unsystematic and 
unmethodical way of running my business...
and how many are from people that are putting piano service at the bottom 
of their to-do's, for whatever reasons. 
I guess what I'm saying is I wish I knew how much of a chance my business 
has at coming back.

daniel carlton
 
Daniel
 
When I first started in this business 35 years ago, an old timer, who had 
himself at that time been in the business for 35 years, told me this. 
 
For no reason whatsoever, the phone will stop ringing, and then for no 
reason, it will start again. It has nothing to do with the economy, or the 
time of year, or the weather. And when I'm sitting around waiting for the 
phone to ring, the other tuners are running like crazy trying to get all 
the work done. This will last for a month or two, and then business will 
OK again for a year or two, and the cycle happen again. Just hang in 
there, and you'll be fine. 
 
I've found that to be true. When I've checked my income from one year to 
the next over a 5 year period, there never seems to be a pattern of when 
I'm busy and when I'm not. One year January will be busiest, the next 
year, January will the slowest month. 
All I can say is hang in there, and your business will come back. 
 
You also said: The reputation of being hard to get and way too busy 
spreads just like any other kind of reputation (like being prone to nag 
about repeat tunings, or not returning calls, or being slipshod, or always 
coming late, or charging a lot more than others...
Of the five things you mention I would say that not returning phone calls 
and always being late are probably the two worst things you do. Customers 
don't like to be kept waiting, and they expect someone to call them back 
in a reasonable amount of time. If you can't do that, you need to 
re-evaluate your business practice, or perhaps think something else to do. 
But communicating with customers is as important, and sometimes even more 
important, than the quality of the work you do. 
 
Wim
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: daniel carlton <carltonpiano at sbcglobal.net>
To: PTG Mailing list <pianotech at ptg.org>
Sent: Wed, Aug 18, 2010 9:00 am
Subject: Re: [pianotech] repeat business

Having said all I said, what's hard is knowing how many of the 
no-callbacks are from my lack of disorganized, largely unsystematic and 
unmethodical way of running my business...
and how many are from people that are putting piano service at the bottom 
of their to-do's, for whatever reasons. 
I guess what I'm saying is I wish I knew how much of a chance my business 
has at coming back.

daniel carlton


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