Here's a typical scenario. Not sure what I should be doing or what I'm doing wrong.
Lets say your installing 10 battens with tubelights for a customer. You do the job and customer wants you to supply all parts including the battens and tubes.
You go and buy the lights from your supplier. You complete the job. You tell customer the lights come with 3 years manufacturers warranty. Jobs a good un, you invoice customer, they pay on time and it's all over.
6 months later they ring you and say one of the lights is not working. You go down to investigate, and it's a faulty light. "Well", says the customer, "that's ok, they have 3 years warranty. Just pop down to your supplier and get a new one for us and replace it thankyou."
The customer does NOT expect to pay anything more becasue as far as they are concerned you supplied the light to them, you fitted it, the light had 3 years warranty, so now that it's gone faulty, it's your duty to replace it free of charge.
But's obvioulsy that's a waste of day for nothing. So how to overcome?
1: Keep customer happy and replace everything for free becasue the parts were still under warranty?
2.Lose customer becasue you tell them you are going to charge them?
What's the best way around this sort of problem, to keep customer happy, and not make a loss yourself?
Lets say your installing 10 battens with tubelights for a customer. You do the job and customer wants you to supply all parts including the battens and tubes.
You go and buy the lights from your supplier. You complete the job. You tell customer the lights come with 3 years manufacturers warranty. Jobs a good un, you invoice customer, they pay on time and it's all over.
6 months later they ring you and say one of the lights is not working. You go down to investigate, and it's a faulty light. "Well", says the customer, "that's ok, they have 3 years warranty. Just pop down to your supplier and get a new one for us and replace it thankyou."
The customer does NOT expect to pay anything more becasue as far as they are concerned you supplied the light to them, you fitted it, the light had 3 years warranty, so now that it's gone faulty, it's your duty to replace it free of charge.
But's obvioulsy that's a waste of day for nothing. So how to overcome?
1: Keep customer happy and replace everything for free becasue the parts were still under warranty?
2.Lose customer becasue you tell them you are going to charge them?
What's the best way around this sort of problem, to keep customer happy, and not make a loss yourself?