seafront folk know that you must be regular at their windows or they will be so bad they cannot see out . i live right on the seafront road myself and clean my own every 2 weeks . anybody who tries the "not this time" is a total jerk, okay have a go at being blind you old tit cos you wont see out from now on
We're cleaning a hospital near to blackpool seafront tomorrow and tuesday, we clean the externals on day one and the internals on day 2. By the time we're on the internals the externals are becoming dirty again.
carl seriously i would have dumped them if they didnt want them cleaning.your still removing a months dirt off their windows.if it wasnt blowing a gale on the day your cleaning them then id insist on cracking on whether theres a storm brewing the day after.to me you simply cant sustain your business with customers like that.i even clean in storms half the time! in the past ive had customers say "i dont want them cleaning as its forecast heavy rain later".they get dumped straight away.i never go back.
Quote from: dazmond on January 27, 2014, 10:48:28 amcarl seriously i would have dumped them if they didnt want them cleaning.your still removing a months dirt off their windows.if it wasnt blowing a gale on the day your cleaning them then id insist on cracking on whether theres a storm brewing the day after.to me you simply cant sustain your business with customers like that.i even clean in storms half the time! in the past ive had customers say "i dont want them cleaning as its forecast heavy rain later".they get dumped straight away.i never go back.Dazmond, do you clean any seafront properties ?Say you lived in one, would you be happy to pay £20 - £30 per month to a window cleaner who turned up regardless of weather conditions or an approaching storm ?
no i dont work near water unless you call the manchester ship canal "along the seafront"!! i wouldnt have a window cleaner as i do them myself.money for old rope!! so what do you suggest?have a few days off every time theres a storm forecast?your business will soon start going down the drain going off some of the awful weather we ve had at times.ive known it to rain nearly every day for weeks on end in summer too.what do you suggest?have 3 weeks off?
Quote from: Gordon Bennet on January 27, 2014, 04:55:34 pmQuote from: dazmond on January 27, 2014, 10:48:28 amcarl seriously i would have dumped them if they didnt want them cleaning.your still removing a months dirt off their windows.if it wasnt blowing a gale on the day your cleaning them then id insist on cracking on whether theres a storm brewing the day after.to me you simply cant sustain your business with customers like that.i even clean in storms half the time! in the past ive had customers say "i dont want them cleaning as its forecast heavy rain later".they get dumped straight away.i never go back.Dazmond, do you clean any seafront properties ?Say you lived in one, would you be happy to pay £20 - £30 per month to a window cleaner who turned up regardless of weather conditions or an approaching storm ?surely it would make sense to remove em from regular work list and charge higher for as and when service and find some more regular non salty seafront customers ?
Quote from: dazmond on January 27, 2014, 05:21:57 pmno i dont work near water unless you call the manchester ship canal "along the seafront"!! i wouldnt have a window cleaner as i do them myself.money for old rope!! so what do you suggest?have a few days off every time theres a storm forecast?your business will soon start going down the drain going off some of the awful weather we ve had at times.ive known it to rain nearly every day for weeks on end in summer too.what do you suggest?have 3 weeks off? No Dazmond I am not suggesting that at all, but you are confusing rain with high winds on a seafront.If you lived and worked in a seaside town you may be able to empathize a little more with what would otherwise be very good paying and loyal customers. Of course you could just dump them, cull your round until you have no customers with seafront views, but that maybe a little silly in a seaside town. All I am suggesting is using a little common sense as to when you clean a coastal property that is more prone to a months worth of heavily salted windows after one nights stormy weather . ( your business would soon go down the drain with countless cancellations from customers who were very unhappy about wasting their money )On those sort of days I schedule to clean houses further inland or those that do not face directly on to the coast. Its about keeping your round flexible when it needs to be thats all.Obviously my question as to whether you would be happy to pay a window cleaner £20 -£30 to clean your seafront homes windows the day before a storm was a purely hypothetical one. which incidentally you did not really answer