i have just recieved an e-mail from a customer of mine which makes me mad.
we have cleaned his windows for about 2 years and a month ago he cancelled owing us 3 months money = £13.50
i called to see him 5 times before catching him in and then he didnt have the money so he said he would send it through the post , well today i recieved this e-mail from him.
Gary,
You came round on Saturday to collect the outstanding £13.50 for cleaning our windows, I must say the reason we cancelled the cleaning is the that we were not satisfied with the results as we pointed out to you on several occasions due to this I am willing to send you a cheque for £10 as final payment. Please reply by return email if you accept this and I will post you a cheque
this has made me mad so the reply i have sent him reads
hi Paul i am sorry that you were not satisfied with the service we supplied , i must say that we did have problems with your property ie getting around the back of the property, the fromt downstairs window has a bush above it that drips water onto the window when it rains and leaves spots, and concrete on the side porch glass which we found very difficult to clean , we did try our best to get around these obsticles and didnt charge you any extra for it.
if you feel that our service is only worth £10 for 3 cleans of your property then send the cheque for £10
gary
G,L,R Professional Window Cleaning Services
ive got to say that i didnt feel like being so diplomatic i just wanted to rave at him
what would you have said in your e-mail to him
gary
I once had something a bit like this happen (by snailmail rather than email) but for different amounts of money. Using your amounts as the example, my reply went something like:
Dear Madam (I deliberately didn't use her name LOL),
I was surprised to read that my work was not up to the standard that you required. In view of the circumstances, I accept your offer of only paying £10. When you send me the cheque, could you please make it out to <charity of my choice>? If you feel that this is a worthy cause, perhaps you may also wish to donate the other £3.50 either to <my chosen charity> or, if you prefer, another charity of your own choosing.
I found that this really took the sting out of the situation and, instead of feeling bad about being ripped off, I felt good about making a donation to charity. It also felt good because it gave the ex-customer the message that they hadn't got one over on me and that I didn't give a 4 x about their money. WEALTH WARNING: ONLY DO THIS WITH AMOUNTS YOU CAN AFFORD TO LOSE
) . I got the money (made out to the charity). I don't know if they donated as well but that wasn't the issue. The point was that I didn't feel bad.