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| When Is Enough Enough? | ||
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There are times when I really wonder what I should
do. Like the time that a window was broken by a friend who installed it as
a favor to a customer. Do I have a responsibility because I knew them?
Where does my involvement start and end? I mean, I want to be a good guy,
but I'm also in business to make a profit, not to lose money. To resolve the issue in my own mind, I think about
the way that Randy Meitler, a metal artist reacts when things go wrong. (www.meitlermetalworks.com)
Randy bends over backwards to satisfy the client. He often goes and does
work for a client when he had little or nothing to do with a problem. I
have seen him lose money time after time, fixing problems that others
caused. When he installed a gate according to the instructions that the
firm who hired him gave him, it didn't work right. Those guys didn't
engineer the project properly. Really, Randy wasn't at fault, but he came
out and re-hung different hinges which had less friction in them and the
gate worked fine. By rights, he should have been able to charge for the
extra work, since it was the other guys fault, but he didn't. When I asked
him about it, he explained that he would rather feel good about the job
than to haggle over right and wrong and have the client have bad feelings. He believes that what goes around, comes back in some form. If you give good service, you'll get repeat business. If you give poor service, people will know. There was a mechanic in the town where we lived in Missouri. He was an excellent mechanic, but he always had to cut himself a little better deal. When you took your car in for a tune-up or inspection, he always recommended that you get a new starter because that old one was going bad. If you happened to need a new starter, he was sure to find that your battery was bad as well. He padded every job with as much as he could and as a result, over the years, folks quit coming to him. He was still an excellent mechanic, but he had milked so many jobs that his reputation caught up with him and he lost more business that he gained. So what am I going to do when asked to make good on a deal that has already cost me dearly? I'm going to remember what my son told me in a recent conversation. "It's not that the customer is always right, they're wrong as often as not, but we treat them with the same respect and care as IF THEY WERE RIGHT." | ||
| David Gomm started building stained glass windows professionally back in 1983 and has become an expert at many aspects of stained glass building, design and repair. He writes a monthly newsletter at www.betterstainedglass.com | ||
| These articles may be distributed freely on your website and in your ezines, as long as the entire article, copyright notice, links and this resource box are unchanged, or if using a portion of the article, it points back to one of our pages where the entire article resides. Copyright © David Gomm All Rights Reserved. | ||
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Email: david@gommstudios.com |
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