Forum Discussion
20 Replies
- HUGEHomeProsJobber Ambassador
THe best thing I ever built was my contracts. Make sure you have tight contracts (easy to do in Jobber) so do one can try to pull that on you after you perform a service. As far as low balling on the front end, everyone learns this one the hard way. Lose enough money on enough jobs and you will become desensitized to low ballers haha. Once you know what you can't do jobs for, it's really easy to politely tell someone that you will pass on their job. I tell people all the time now "dang sounds like you got a good deal then!" and just let them go on their way. Half the time they still come back! It's crazy. We run businesses not charities so don't take their low balling personally and just politely pass on the work.
- roselvaggioJobber Ambassador
I always get so irritated with these clients and we have learned to refer them out. I don't question my mechanic or my hair stylist when they're charging me, and the home service industry should be no different. Maintain confidence in your pricing!
- AdamsI01Contributor 2
that is good advice I have to keep that in mind seriously because as I’m trying to grow I have ppl just wanting to stop doing business with me and it’s kinda annoying
- DerrickContributor 2
If you know your price is competitive then just tell them you can’t do the work to the best of your ability at that price. If you’re not overcharging, then just let that customer go. Those customers are a pain to deal with. If they don’t see the value in your work then just go on to the next job.
- BravotreeContributor 2
True
- SirMightyMContributor 2
I like that advice it’ll be hard to tell one off unless your client list is full
- AdamsI01Contributor 2
My client list isn’t that long at all
- AdamsI01Contributor 2
That makes a lot of sense