always clean glass, frames and sills.
a lot of window cleaners dont but it makes all the difference and gets noticed
too right, happy customers mean a lot when another WC comes touting for business
JohnL
Do you not think there's more to keeping customers than purely producing a high-standard of work? I think that building up a good rapport with the customer is Number 1 priority.
A window cleaner I know was told by one of his cutomers that his neighbor no longer wanted his window cleaning services, but kept him on anyway; because he seemed such a 'nice guy'.
Now had this 'nice guy' cleaned all the frames etc, but didn't build up the rapport he had with the customer who didn't want a window cleaner; then he'd've been sacked.
I'm not knocking you 'fussy' guys; good on you; you're better window cleaners than me.
But you're not going to be knocking out four-houses an hour like young Leekson!
So is the maths worth it...
1. Time spent working longer on a window, on stuff that may not even be noticed; is that worth the loss of income?
Or
2. Clean the glass only; then move on; risking the loss of the odd customer here and there (remembering it's easier to find customers than for customers to find window cleaners)?
From a business point of view, once your established, I think Number two makes more sense.