I do work in rain if it doesn"t affect my job, light rain, not landing on the glass etc, but yesterday for instance, i dont believe i would have been providing a service for my customers, i would have merely been earning a wage for myself!
And is that necessarily a bad thing? Or do you not think being reliable regardless of the weather is just as much of a service?
It's here that lies the problem. It's a grey area. As Number23 says its opinion. Not fact.
You have two choices......
Work in poor weather but provide a reliable service for your customers...
Or
Only clean your customers Windows in good weather, but your always late.
I'm not sure that I can agree with this. It's not good service to clean someone's windows knowing in a short time - a matter of hours even - they will be as bad as when you arrived, indeed it's morally wrong, especially if the customer is vulnerable. Nor is good service to turn up and clean someone's windows when they don't want it (though they don't vocalise it). In addition it's not a case of only clean windows when the weather is "good"; it's about thinking strategically about how you can provide the best service at a value-for-money price (that doesn't mean the cheapest) at a frequency and timeliness that the customer and you are happy with.
Experience tells me that most people don't know you are late by a day or so (that's all it would be if you planned and priced correctly); indeed I bet i'm not alone in hearing people say "Is it a month already". If you've heard that you've made my point for me.
I agree with you Carl. My customers (most of whom have my phone number and I theirs) would be phoning me if they thought I was excessively late. Very, very rarely does this happen.
I live in the south west of Ireland (an area of high unemployment, elderly and welfare claimants) which also suffers a wetter and sometimes windier climate than average for this country.
All these factors have to be taken into account, as I would almost certainly go out of business very quickly if I tried to enforce any conditions on my customers by working in inclement weather. At the same time, I have a family to support, and at my age, my employment options are very limited, so I have to balance these factors carefully in order to provide the kind of service my customers want, and at the same time make a reasonable living.
I've lived in Ireland for over 4 years now, started up from scratch in the middle of the biggest recession in recent memory, haven't claimed and don't owe a penny. I'm happy with the way things are. True, it's been over a week since I have been able to do my residentials, but I'll be flying once the storms have passed.
John