Question for the pros. How do you "get rid" of a customer?

I've made up my mind, I will be notifying
him that in one month we will no longer
be doing scheduled maintenance washes.

I don't even want to give him the
opportunity to sign on at a higher rate.

I like the guy,
I don't like how he deals with money issues.
Re: Question for the pros.
How do you "get rid" of a customer?


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Bob
 
I don't tip the owner of a Detail/Wash business.
The guy(s) doing the work gets a tip from me.

Note:
If the guy doing the work is the owner—still no tip.


Bob

Thank God the majority of my customers don't feel that way.
 
Increase your price and make scheduling increasingly difficult. Maybe he’ll get the hint you are busy. Maybe he’ll find someone else. I wouldn’t confront him on it.
 
I don't tip the owner of a Detail/Wash business.
The guy(s) doing the work gets a tip from me.

Note:
If the guy doing the work is the owner—still no tip.
Thank God the majority of my
customers don't feel that way.
I can’t believe a Detailing business owner
would include the dependency upon tips,
for the business’ solvency (and liquidity),
as part of their Business Plan.


Bob
 
I work on everything from daily drivers to high end European classics and exotics. I NEVER expect a tip. I am the owner/operator, no employees. If I get a tip, great! But I don’t expect them.

To answer the original question, I have one client that I decided last time I worked for them, that next time they call I will explain that I am booked out approximately 2-3 months, and I have increased my prices. I’m guessing that will take care of the problem.
 
I work on everything from daily drivers to high end European classics and exotics. I NEVER expect a tip. I am the owner/operator, no employees. If I get a tip, great! But I don’t expect them.

To answer the original question, I have one client that I decided last time I worked for them, that next time they call I will explain that I am booked out approximately 2-3 months, and I have increased my prices. I’m guessing that will take care of the problem.

Ya, that is pretty much what I do when there is someone I don't want to work for. I increase the price a lot and give availability very far in the future. If they decide to book anyway, great, I can make a lot of money, if not I avoid the pain of working for someone I don't want to.
 
I work on everything from daily drivers to high end European classics and exotics. I NEVER expect a tip. I am the owner/operator, no employees. If I get a tip, great! But I don’t expect them.

To answer the original question, I have one client that I decided last time I worked for them, that next time they call I will explain that I am booked out approximately 2-3 months, and I have increased my prices. I’m guessing that will take care of the problem.

Great approach, this doesn't totally alienate them and motivate them to leave a negative review. It keeps the door open too, they can ask what your new prices are and then decide for themselves if they want to pay them.
 
I can’t believe a Detailing business owner
would include the dependency upon tips,
for the business’ solvency (and liquidity),
as part of their Business Plan.


Bob
:dblthumb2:

I've never received a tip, never expected a tip nor if I was the customer would I leave a tip. You charge a price for the job, get paid, say thank you.
 
Great approach, this doesn't totally alienate them and motivate them to leave a negative review. It keeps the door open too, they can ask what your new prices are and then decide for themselves if they want to pay them.

I concur on this one. When I did consulting years ago I boosted my hourly to a much higher rate. After that I would only get calls from those customers who saw the value in what I did.
 
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