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I’m raising prices this year. Some I’m going to double with the hope to lose them. Some parts of my work haven’t had a raise in 10 years. (My bad) I’ve got too much work and new enquiries all the time so I’m not worried. I’ve held off raising prices for too long.
Some of my customers have been putting their own prices up. Had one yesterday increase theirs from £25 to £30 which was nice of them. Loads have increased their payments online without me requesting it.
Every year I put my prices up in January, I increase half the round and the following year the other halfby doing this all my customers get an increase every 2 yearsusing this system I very rarely get a cancellation from increasing my prices
I had a job @ £16 (small 3 bed) I put my increase slip in the letter stating that it was going up £1, £16 to £17the customer who always pays online text me to say "instead of £17 we will now be paying you £20 as you always do a good job and regular as clockwork, sure enough I check my bank account and they paid the £20............good result
Quote from: Jay Le Huray on February 09, 2022, 02:49:36 pmI had a job @ £16 (small 3 bed) I put my increase slip in the letter stating that it was going up £1, £16 to £17the customer who always pays online text me to say "instead of £17 we will now be paying you £20 as you always do a good job and regular as clockwork, sure enough I check my bank account and they paid the £20............good result[/quoA lady paid me £1300 (instead of £13) this morning but unfortunately it was by mistake and she wants it back. Just tell her she has paid for the next 99 cleans and as she has prepaid she has inflation proofed her money from any price rises over the next few years.
I had a job @ £16 (small 3 bed) I put my increase slip in the letter stating that it was going up £1, £16 to £17the customer who always pays online text me to say "instead of £17 we will now be paying you £20 as you always do a good job and regular as clockwork, sure enough I check my bank account and they paid the £20............good result[/quoA lady paid me £1300 (instead of £13) this morning but unfortunately it was by mistake and she wants it back.
Quote from: Jay Le Huray on February 09, 2022, 02:49:36 pmI had a job @ £16 (small 3 bed) I put my increase slip in the letter stating that it was going up £1, £16 to £17the customer who always pays online text me to say "instead of £17 we will now be paying you £20 as you always do a good job and regular as clockwork, sure enough I check my bank account and they paid the £20............good resultA lady paid me £1300 (instead of £13) this morning but unfortunately it was by mistake and she wants it back.
Dead simple:1. Fraudster gets into your customer’s bank account2. They make a large payment from the customer’s account to you, say £1800 instead of the usual £18.00 (easy mistake)3. They phone you up and tell you about the mistake ("ho, ho, ho, what an idiot I am") and give their bank account details4. You check with the bank, see the money has arrived from your customer and so you pay the money back (actually into the fraudster’s account)5. Customer realises that the money’s been taken illegally and their bank gets the money back off you6. You have no comeback as you chose to send the money to the fraudster’s account so it’s a valid transaction – you won’t get a refundWe dodged a £1,700 bullet yesterday at the end of stage 3 because something didn't seem quite right. Be sure to speak to the customer (on a number you have for them, not one they give you when they contact you about the "overpayment"). If necessary, go and see them face-to-face.Be careful.Vin
Quote from: Soupy on February 09, 2022, 03:28:39 pmQuote from: Jay Le Huray on February 09, 2022, 02:49:36 pmI had a job @ £16 (small 3 bed) I put my increase slip in the letter stating that it was going up £1, £16 to £17the customer who always pays online text me to say "instead of £17 we will now be paying you £20 as you always do a good job and regular as clockwork, sure enough I check my bank account and they paid the £20............good resultA lady paid me £1300 (instead of £13) this morning but unfortunately it was by mistake and she wants it back. Be very careful that it is your customer contacting you:Quote from: Perfect Windows on January 17, 2018, 07:11:00 pmDead simple:1. Fraudster gets into your customer’s bank account2. They make a large payment from the customer’s account to you, say £1800 instead of the usual £18.00 (easy mistake)3. They phone you up and tell you about the mistake ("ho, ho, ho, what an idiot I am") and give their bank account details4. You check with the bank, see the money has arrived from your customer and so you pay the money back (actually into the fraudster’s account)5. Customer realises that the money’s been taken illegally and their bank gets the money back off you6. You have no comeback as you chose to send the money to the fraudster’s account so it’s a valid transaction – you won’t get a refundWe dodged a £1,700 bullet yesterday at the end of stage 3 because something didn't seem quite right. Be sure to speak to the customer (on a number you have for them, not one they give you when they contact you about the "overpayment"). If necessary, go and see them face-to-face.Be careful.VinVin
Luckily for me your banks fraudulent department works different to my bank then. I had this very scenario happen to me a few years back so I talk from experience.
Quote from: KS Cleaning on February 14, 2022, 06:24:13 pmLuckily for me your banks fraudulent department works different to my bank then. I had this very scenario happen to me a few years back so I talk from experience.Sounds as though your bank thinks that if someone hacks an account and uses it to send you money then you're allowed to keep it. That does seem a tad odd but I'm sure they know what they are talking about.
Quote from: Perfect Windows on February 15, 2022, 02:44:30 pmQuote from: KS Cleaning on February 14, 2022, 06:24:13 pmLuckily for me your banks fraudulent department works different to my bank then. I had this very scenario happen to me a few years back so I talk from experience.Sounds as though your bank thinks that if someone hacks an account and uses it to send you money then you're allowed to keep it. That does seem a tad odd but I'm sure they know what they are talking about.If that is your interpretation of it I’ll just leave it at that.
Quote from: KS Cleaning on February 15, 2022, 04:25:04 pmQuote from: Perfect Windows on February 15, 2022, 02:44:30 pmQuote from: KS Cleaning on February 14, 2022, 06:24:13 pmLuckily for me your banks fraudulent department works different to my bank then. I had this very scenario happen to me a few years back so I talk from experience.Sounds as though your bank thinks that if someone hacks an account and uses it to send you money then you're allowed to keep it. That does seem a tad odd but I'm sure they know what they are talking about.If that is your interpretation of it I’ll just leave it at that.I literally cannot see any other interpretation of the words "The bank can’t take the money off you as you weren’t the one who hacked into the victims account and took the money."