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Under Valued: 5 Ways to Protect Yourself From Unreasonable Customers
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| Guest post by: Marc Gordon |
Article Overview: Do your clients appreciate what you do? Do they they value the products and services you provide. If you answered yes, then consider yourself one of the lucky ones. But for the rest, here's some tips on how to deal with those that do not always see you as special, unique, or innovative.
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Free Download - 4 Vital Skills for Entrepreneurial Success By Marc Gordon |
Under Valued: 5 Ways to Protect Yourself From Unreasonable Customers
How much is a can of soup worth? After you bought one, it’s pretty
hard to argue you didn’t get your money’s worth. After all, you knew
what you were getting before you even bought it. There were no
surprises.
But does the same hold true for services? Bookkeeping, house
painting, web design – these are not as easy to relate to a specific
cost like a can of soup. After all, services are abstract. No two are
ever alike from one provider to another. Is a plumber that charges 100
dollars an hour twice as good as one that charges 50 dollars an hour?
While customers can find this concept difficult to grasp when
shopping for services, it can prove even more challenging for business
owners trying to market themselves.
Many business owners, bowing to competition and market
conditions, feel the need to compete on price. Others take the opposite
approach and attempt to position themselves as “premium” providers.
But in the end the ultimate decision on value lies with the
customer. And their role as judge, jury and executioner can bring
intolerable stress to even the most committed business owner.
So what can a small business owner do when questioned about the
quality of their work? How should they deal with clients who ask for
more but refuse to pay for it? And most importantly, what should they do
when the customer is just plain unhappy?
Here are 5 tips to help keep every business owner from having
to defend their work, beg for money, or apologize for giving the
customer what they originally wanted, but longer want.
It all starts with the proposal (or estimate). This lays the
ground work for the whole supplier/customer relationship. Expectations,
responsibilities, obligations, warranties, after sales service – all
need to be detailed and explained. It amazes me how many service
providers, both B2B and B2C, don’t spell out these conditions in detail,
if at all. A detailed proposal not only protects both parties should
disagreements arise, but can also serve as a marketing tool showing how
attentive and detail oriented your company is. In many cases, explaining
terms that may not always be 100% beneficial to the customer is still
better than not explain them at all, as the customer will at least know
where they stand.
Communication throughout the service process is also crucial to
a happy and long term business relationship. Check in with your
customer often and provide status reports either by phone, email or in
person when possible. This will help, should unexpected things like
delays or budget changes arise. And customers that continually receive
communication tend to be more understanding – and usually more
accepting.
Encourage you customers to share their concerns by explaining
that the sooner you know about their worries, the sooner you can deal
with them. Comfort them by welcoming even what appears to be a dumb
question or unreasonable request. What’s important to remember is that
just because you’re letting them make a request, doesn’t mean you have
to grant it – without making a change to the estimate, of course.
Payment schedules, should they apply, must be adhered to and
should be thoroughly detailed in your proposal. I have heard many
stories of business owners not wanting to ask for money out of fear of
offending the customer. Lets keep in mind this is a business
relationship first and foremost. After all, if they didn’t agree to pay,
you wouldn’t be working for them in the first place. Should the payment
schedule not be adhered to, then the work must stop. You cannot risk
incurring additional labour or material costs while not knowing if
another cheque will ever arrive.
And finally, only choose to work with customers than value what
you do. And while the argument “I have bills to pay” might be a
motivating factor for taking any work from anyone, the fact is that in
many of these cases, between the complaints, unreasonable demands, and
unreliable payments, you will actually end up losing money. In which
case you would actually be further ahead by not working.
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About the Author: Marc Gordon RSS for Marc's articles - Visit Marc's website Marc Gordon is a professional speaker and marketing consultant focused on small to medium sized businesses. Marc is also the host of marctv.net, and online video series that takes a fresh and entertaining look at everything about the whacky world of business. Click here to visit Marc's website Why No Business Should Be Involved In Online Social Networking 4 Vital Skills for Entrepreneurial Success Attract inform impress Making your next trade show a success Something to Remember You By If Only I Knew Sooner |
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