LSNAutoDetailing
Active member
- Jun 21, 2014
- 3,373
- 21
I found that it's important to define my business to potential customers. Being a part-time business, using word-of-mouth-only, I can be discerning about who I take and not take.
My interests lie highly in those customers that love their cars and want to maintain them but do not have the time to invest in product, material, learning and the actual doing of the work in maintaining their cars, but want a nice looking vehicle.
The customer I find it tough to define my business too is the person who approaches me with a 10 - 15 year old car, where the only water it's ever seen is rain, and the interior looks equally as bad... stains, pet stains and areas of carpet disintegrating due to some mold or fungus. It's not a job I really would want to take, it's not in line with my business and the amount of money, time and product that would have to be used on this car actually would put me in the red.
I usually quote my package price, which usually shocks them, and then I go onto say my business model is really geared towards high-line cars/trucks.
For the pro's on this forum, I see your pic's of the high-line cars you work on. How do you handle that vehicle / customer where it's just too far gone and you know nothing you can do will bring it back? (exterior - body damage, rust, wheels that look like they've bounced off the curb 1000 times, deep scratches, interiors where it looks like a battle zone, rot fungus, feces stains, etc...). What do you say to the person? Key being, to refuse the job, but not offend the owner.
How do you define your business to these owners?
My interests lie highly in those customers that love their cars and want to maintain them but do not have the time to invest in product, material, learning and the actual doing of the work in maintaining their cars, but want a nice looking vehicle.
The customer I find it tough to define my business too is the person who approaches me with a 10 - 15 year old car, where the only water it's ever seen is rain, and the interior looks equally as bad... stains, pet stains and areas of carpet disintegrating due to some mold or fungus. It's not a job I really would want to take, it's not in line with my business and the amount of money, time and product that would have to be used on this car actually would put me in the red.
I usually quote my package price, which usually shocks them, and then I go onto say my business model is really geared towards high-line cars/trucks.
For the pro's on this forum, I see your pic's of the high-line cars you work on. How do you handle that vehicle / customer where it's just too far gone and you know nothing you can do will bring it back? (exterior - body damage, rust, wheels that look like they've bounced off the curb 1000 times, deep scratches, interiors where it looks like a battle zone, rot fungus, feces stains, etc...). What do you say to the person? Key being, to refuse the job, but not offend the owner.
How do you define your business to these owners?