I received this email from a customer this morning:
As agreed we left the side gate open, but no one arrived.
We would like to cancel our contact.
Regards
Steve New
So I replied with this:
Dear Stephen,
Richard cleaned your windows yesterday. We have a van on The Moors this morning who will be calling to check.
Regards,
Steve Seddon
In the meantime I spoke to Richard and emailed this:
I have talked to Richard and he says you have a black wooden conservatory. He has never cleaned your windows before. Is this not your house?
He replied with:
There was no sign that the windows had been cleaned, and our side gate was not closed and no bill through our door. We therefore wish to cancel this contract.
Again there will be no-one in today and we do not wish to leave our side gate open on the offr chance.
Steve New
Dan (who looked) caught the customer at home and phoned me to say that the windows were spotless apart from one small run on the window above the conservatory, so I emailed this:
Hi,
I believe Dan has been along and has confirmed the windows were cleaned. I believe however that there was a run on the window over the conservatory. These are difficult to reach windows, but we are happy to pop back and rectify. We will remove you from our round once payment has been received.
Regards,
Steve Seddon
I then received an aggressive phone call saying that Dan had agreed with him that they hadn’t been cleaned. I tried to explain that Dan had said something different to me at which he said “I don’t care what he said to you”. His tone was aggressive all the way through. I said I wouyld come straight over and look for myself. He wasn’t keen but in the end said “you’ve got 10 minutes!” to get here. He also repeated that he had received no bill.
Dan was working just around the corner from the guy so I stopped to see him on the way and he repeated that the windows were definitely cleaned and he had told the customer so. I took Dan with me to the house so that he’d have to call Dan a liar to his face. When he eventually emerged, he had a cheque AND the bill that he said he’d never got.
The moral of the story – when you get a cancellation, don’t assume that the customer is telling the truth.