Training is of vital importance! It gives you knowledge, confidence and peace of mind when dealing with sensitive items. I did the advanced fabric cleaning course (this may not be the actual name of the course) at Alltec last year. Prior to that i had always shied away from using moisture in viscose, cotton velvet etc. Beginning of this year i did a job priced at £860, 3 duresta sofas cleaning & protection. Customer didn’t question my pricing at all simply asked when I was available. Re speaking to customers I remember reading a post from Ken Wainwright years ago where he calls the approach “ kitchen marketing”. Engaging with customer on casual topics is so important. I often just look around the house while setting up and try to find what intersts them and simply start a conversation arond that. It can be anything really, say their well maintained garden or the retro car on the drive or just ask them which location from the many fridge magnets they liked the best etc. People like this...
i sat on training coarse once and i had forgoten more then what the guy at the front of the class was trying to teach us yet he thought he was some kind of god !!!
if he really knew what he was talking about why would he still be working at 50 ? surly if he was as good as he said he was he would of retried when he made a load of cash not carry on working and training people in the mean time , when i asked him this at the end he couldnt give my the answer to the question ,
Where did you learn all that information you had forgotten?
i learnt from my old man we have been in the cleaning trade for over 100 years now long before training was ever invented , we had 8 vans out at our biggest point and not one person had been trained as there was just one training cores that was run by a load of fat old men feathering there own nests thinking there were clever , it was called the ncca i am guessing its changed alot from back in them days
i use to love going to jobs then there local rep had been to and put them right , training is ok but not the answer by a long shot , sitting on the shoulder of someone that been doing it for over 20 years is the only way you learn not sitting behind a desk
i just proved this when cleaning my sons office carpet , he did half with a truck mount i did the other with a extract model c my very first carpet cleaner i got when i started out both sides look the same when fished !!! ones worth 50k the other 40 quid yet same results mind it did take me 14x longer but i had a ace up my sleve extracts lift off god i forgot how good that stuff is
mine it been a few years since i retired i forgot how hard cleaning carpets was guess i got lazy