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Replies
Bud,
My suggestion to you is to charge a diagnosis fee, similar to what you would be charged at an auto repair place. This fee gets the customer the diagnosis, the cost for repair, and all of the information that you are giving away free now. Should they decide to go with you for the repair, you then credit them the diagnosis fee. Should they choose to have leslie's do it, then you still get paid for at least a little of your time.
It boils down to eonomics.There are some pool guys who only clean pools. They rush from pool to pool and rarlely notice problems like you described. What they lack in quality they make up in volume. You obviously take the time & look out for your customer's best interests. You get paid for that time when the customer trusts you & pays you to repair the problem you took the time to diagnose. You either need to have your customers give you the repair work or get more new customers to just let you just clean their pools. If you have a customer that doesn't trust you, you can't trust him to reward you for caring about his pool.
Your customer had no qualms about acting in what he thought was his own best interest by getting the cheapest job possible. It is also fair on your part to act in your own best interest, even if it means you dismiss him & find other customers who respect your time expertise, and the right to make a decent living from that.
Bud,
I have run across customers like this and for me, the best way to handle it is to bluntly ask him if he/she is satisfied with the cleaner.Very rarely will a customer admit they made a mistake by not listening to your advice. But that is not the point. You want them to realize you were looking out for them by recommending, based on your experience, the best product for their application.
"I realize the cleaner you bought was less expensive, but are you really satisfied with job it is doing? The one I quoted is designed for your pool, not some "off the shelf" cleaner. Had I realized saving the money was more important than the correct cleaner, I would have quoted a lesser model." Of course tact is imperative here. Convey to them you only had their best interest at heart.
Regarding the pump: Again, I'd ask if he would still like you to complete the repairs on the pump, since all he did was address one part of the pump (the motor). You & I know, with a bad impeller and seals, the pump will soon fail.
If that doesn't work, see Scott's suggestion at the end below. LOL