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Mistakes I’ve made. Mistakes I’ve seen others make. Mistakes you’ll probably make at some point along the way. Find a way to avoid 90% of these and you’re doing pretty good. Find a way to avoid all 21 and you’re probably a liar. It’s inevitable that from time to time you’re going to inadvertently anger or frustrate a homeowner. Sometimes it’s just a conflict of personalities, sometimes the customer is just an odd bird who gets their feathers ruffled over petty issues, and to an extent a small percentage of your customer base will not get along with you very well no matter how nice, competent, and professional you are. But you can effectively minimize these episodes by taking some common sense approaches to your business. If growing your business doesn’t matter to you and you enjoy conflict, then by all means, do the following:
- Stick a sign in the homeowner’s front yard without asking. I see this done all the time but it’s always struck me as a little rude and presumptuous. Of course I use yard signs as a part of our marketing strategy but I always ask first and people are almost always okay with it. Don’t ask for permission and you can bet that more than half those signs are yanked out of the yard as soon as your truck turns the corner.
- Take more than two hours to call back or 12 hours to answer an email. We live in an age of instant messaging, texting, fast food, and 15 minute oil changes, yet you’re going to wait 24 hours to return a phone call? What are you, nuts? People want answers NOW, and the longer you wait the better the chance they’ll move on to your competitor.
- Show up late with no call. Nothing enrages people more than disrespecting their time, so if you’re gonna be late (which is bad enough), at least give someone the courtesy of calling them to let them know. Most people will forgive your tardiness if you make an attempt to let them know. Anything more than 10 minutes past an agreed upon time probably merits a call.
- Don’t clean up. This is something I use to struggle with a bit, but I’ve come to understand that many homeowners are downright looney when it comes to dust and debris in their home. Some people will absolutely lose their mind if you leave even the slightest trace of dust on the floor or counters after the end of each work day, even when it’s a multi-day job. I recommend taking every precaution possible to minimize dust and to clean up every day until the work area darn near sparkles. Ignore this one at your own risk.
- Blindside the homeowner with surprise costs. There’s no quicker way to spoil an otherwise good relationship with a customer than to nail them with a $100 surcharge near the end of a $30,000 job. This is particularly irritating to people when it involves something that you should have anticipated from the beginning. Didn’t realize that you’d need to buy a new tool to finish the job? Tough. It’s on you, not the customer. Don’t trash your chance for future free construction leads just so you can nickel and dime a good customer.
- Take forever to complete a job. It should go without saying that a four-week long kitchen remodel that was supposed to take 10 days will probably light the fuse of even the most patient homeowner. Review plans carefully and map out daily activites before you begin so that your estimate of a completion date is accurate to within a day or two. This is one of those areas where you’ll want to under-promise and over-deliver. Better to finish early than late. I’ve learned this one the hard way on a few occasions.
- Do crap work. If you’re a glutten for punishment and really enjoy getting nightly phone calls from infuriated customers, then go ahead and speed through your jobs with no regard for quality. If not, then take those extra few minutes or hours to make sure your work is outstanding and you’ll avoid untold numbers of massive headaches. You don’t really want to drive 30 minutes back out to a home just because you missed one small spot of paint, now do you?
- Lack organization. If your company is lacking in systems and standard procedures then it will be tough to turn a profit, let alone grow the company. If when a potential customer calls you have to put them on hold for two or three minutes while you search through stacks of papers on the floor for a copy of their estimate, this one definitely applies to you. Again this is related to wasting peoples’ time. Good organization will go miles in giving you the image of professionalism and experience; bad organization will cause homeowners to sometimes lose their cool and often times run to your competitors. If you have your heart set on learning how to become a general contractor, just know that organization will be especially important for you because you’ll have to manage not only your own people but also the subcontractors.
- Come to the job unprepared. Nothing says competence like showing up that first day for a major tile job but forgetting to bring mortar. Or telling the homeowner halfway through painting a room that you ran out of paint and need to go buy more. These sorts of dumb mistakes not only tick off customers, they cost you valuable hours during the day. Result: the customer gives you a negative review on Angie’s List, and you just finished a project where you averaged $5 per hour because you had your head up your ass. Congratulations.
- Be inflexible. As I’ve said before, you’ve got to stand firm when it comes to pricing your work or performing free services, but that doesn’t mean that you should absolutely refuse to work with the customer when it comes to small requests and adjustments. If they ask you up front to split what should be a one-day job into two days to accommodate a major event at their home, try to make it work. Just build the added inconvenience into the estimate and use those two half-days off to catch up on paperwork, give other estimates, or start other jobs.
- Don’t listen. It’s a common human characteristic that we want our concerns to be heard, and we don’t want to have to repeat them. So your job as the contractor, particularly during the estimate/first meeting is to listen as much as it is to sell. Don’t just bull-rush them with a boilerplate sales pitch; be receptive to their unique questions, fears, and expectations and then provide clear, specific answers. People will appreciate your willingness to honestly and thoroughly address their particular situation, and the ultimate result will be a higher closing ratio for your business. If you insist on talking over them or if they have to ask you the same question two or three times before getting an answer you are on the fast-track to a failing business.
- Give unrealistic expectations. This one can get a little tricky because while your marketing and advertising should play up your accomplishments and show potential customers what is possible, you also need to give them realistic expectations before things get underway. Don’t promise them a Homearama-grade kitchen with vintage kitchen cabinets if they only have a $5000 budget and live in a 1000 square foot home. By delicately lowering expectations up front you’ll end up with much happier customers at the end of the job.
- Be rude or dismissive. This is a no-brainer but I’m always amazed by how many businesses I come across that treat their customers like chumps. Whether it’s rooted in a lack of basic manners or just a hatred of humanity in general I can never tell, but I can tell you that eventually these people will be out of business. It might not be tomorrow, it might not be next year, but eventually karma has a way of chopping down the jerks. And if karma doesn’t do the trick then the fact that I and 100 other disgruntled customers are going out of our way to badmouth your company probably will. Word of rotten customer service spreads faster than wildfire.
- Lack job skills. Suffice it to say that if you’re bringing “how-to” books to a customer’s home while doing a remodel, they probably won’t be a happy camper. Not only that, but if you’re taking on work for which you’re not qualified you’ll be so slow that earning a respectable amount per hour will be virtually impossible. In fact, you might even lose money. Don’t be afraid to tell somebody that you have neither the experience nor the tools to take on projects outside of your skill-set. They’ll respect your honesty and it’ll give you an opportunity to send some business to another local contractor who can handle the job. Odds are he’ll send you some leads for your specialty down the road. Reciprocity can be a powerful business-booster.
- Wear your emotions on your sleeve. Sometimes customers are jerks, but if you’re smart you’ll keep your cool as much as possible. This is one of those professions where you’ll need to develop a thick skin and lots of patience. People will tick you off, they will disrespect you, they will ask millions of stupid questions, but you need to understand that by rolling your eyes or showing your irritation you’ll be magnifying the situation by a factor of ten. Act perturbed by a homeowner’s concerns and there’s a good chance that they’ll go from being slightly distressed to being Bob Knight. The more you can tolerate crazy customers the better off your business will be in the long run. Bite your lip, swallow your pride, and watch your wallet get fat.
- Give less attention to low-dollar jobs. You’d be wise to focus your ad dollars on areas of town where people have gobs of money, but if somebody calls you from a shady part of town with a smaller job request, do them the courtesy of listening to their needs and offering your services. This goes back to basic decency and respect for people (regardless of their net worth), and though they may not be able to afford your services you can at least call them back to offer other solutions or advice. In some cases it’s as simple as explaining to them how to fix a problem on their own. Or find a way to schedule the job so that it coincides with other similar jobs in the same area. You never know when that small-dollar job could result in a referral down the road that drops a monster project in your lap.
- Put people on hold to take another phone call. Recently I called a local company to ask about having a windshield replaced, and in the middle of the conversation the guy put me on hold to take a call from another prospective customer. About half a second later I ended the call and later that day gave my business to someone else. Loss to me: nothing. Loss to said dipwad: about $300.
- Lack of communication within your company. Less common in a smaller business, but once your company starts to grow you’ll want to keep a close eye on this one. It’s always frustrating to me when I make a specific request to the salesman or estimator that never actually makes its way to the people performing the work. Bottom line: the customer sees your company as one entity, one body, one cohesive unit. If the left hand isn’t talking to the right you should expect to encounter some fire-breathing homeowners.
- Be condescending. If you have a habit of boosting your self-esteem by trying to make others feel stupid then prepare for the wrath of the normally calm soccer mom. She may not know as much about installing cabinets as you do, but give her the impression that you think she’s dense and she’ll make your life a living hell until job completion.
- Talk about politics or religion. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been (foolishly) talking politics or some other garbage with my brother at someone’s home with the assumption that they were out of earshot only to look up and see them standing there like Houdini. You’ve got a 50% chance that they agree with your views and will laugh it off, but if they’re in that other 50% you could be in some deep doo-doo. Americans get pretty fired up about their politics and their religion so you’d be wise to keep your opinions on these topics to yourself until after work hours.
- Forget to send a thank you letter to the customer. How would you feel if you spent $40,000 on a remodel and never received a thank you in the mail?
Discovered this site recently. Really enjoy your perspective and insight. Its definately a world that contractors can relate to. Many Thanks
thanks, limelight!
Recently stumbled this blog and it is now a bookmark. Great stuff.
A couple of suggestion posts if you ever think about writing on these topics: business plan formation, scheduling/time management, negotiating to the benefit of yourself and customer on prices, services rendered. Kind of broad, I know, just popped in the head.
Keep it up, you got some new readers eager for your insight.
Thanks, Andrew! I’ve actually been thinking about asking my readers for more feedback so I appreciate yours. Count on seeing some posts related to those topics you mentioned in the near future.
Just came across your site today looking for sample thank you letters for customers. Yours was the best I found, thanks. We just sent out Christmas cards thanking our customers from 2008. My husband’s business is coming along slowly. Many of the jobs are small (under $200) but we realize these little jobs are just as important as bigger jobs. I’ve subscribed to your feed, looking forward to more informative posts like the ones you’ve written so far! I’d love to hear more information on “selling” the business. We have placed ads in the local newspapers, and in the Yellow Book and Yellow Pages. We have a minimalist website just to have an Internet presence. What do you think about advertising on Craigslist?
Mrs. Accountability-
Thanks for your comments. I would definitely advertise on Craigslist. It’s free exposure to a huge audience, and I use it for my business. I would also consider ordering direct mail postcards for wealthy suburbs and zip codes in your town. I would also suggest that you view your website as a marketing and lead-generation tool and not just a pageholder. Try to learn some SEO basics or consider hiring a web marketing pro who can get your website ranked #1 in Google and Yahoo for all your local target keywords. Also make sure you are listed in Google Local Maps and Yahoo Local….both are free and can provide great exposure for the company. Thanks again for your feedback and good luck.