Doing The Job Right — With A Little Sacrifice

Doing The Job Right — With A Little Sacrifice

Some see success as having a $75,000 bass boat and catching their limit of 10-pound large mouth bass. My definition of success is the $800 boat and catching any fish at all.

Recently, I was invited to attend a car show and work a booth with one of our manufacturers. The where and who is not important, but rather the time it took to get there, the hours spent and how I learned nothing — nothing — except the knowledge about a product.

To me, learning about the product made the trip a success. Some see success as having a $75,000 bass boat and catching their limit of 10-pound large mouth bass. My definition of success is the $800 boat and catching any fish at all. Either can be viewed as success, depending on how you look at it.

The pride of having caught a six-inch catfish might not measure up to the 10-pound bass but my goal was not to catch the big fish — it was to be out on the lake, without a phone ringing. Does it mean my goal is less important than the 75k boat and big mouth bass?

Having sacrificed hours and hours at clinic after clinic, from air conditioning to paint classes, these sacrifices have added up. They compiled themselves into an education, and a very valuable one. And no one can take that education away. The hours have been at the expense of sleep, money spent on fuel and most of all, time away from my family. Rarely does anyone have success without sacrifice. 

But education is not an all-at-once occurrence. You don’t wake up one day and know everything. Life is a series of successes and failures. To volunteer, like I did at the show, is a small sacrifice. But these small sacrifices made over a lifetime have afforded me an education that I would never have gained anywhere else. Yes, there’s been a great deal of travel over the years but I’ve gotten behind-the-scenes opportunities that most would not have seen. 

I know what you’re thinking: What’s this got to do with me and my customers?

If a customer needs a drum of oil and you have to leave at 5 a.m. to be sitting at the oil supplier’s dock at 6:30 a.m., is it worth it? If a customer ordered six gallons of paint and you wake up at 3 a.m., remembering you did not order the mixing color, do you sacrifice sleep to be at the paint company’s dock in Dallas — some 180 miles away — to make the customer happy? That’s entirely up to you.

Doing so just might be the difference between making sure a job is done right or not right. Doing a job right gives you pride, which in my estimation, cannot come without sacrifice. People who have no pride in their work show it.

Those who have pride excel and pride cannot be taught, only learned. What an oxymoron, right?

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This is always an important topic to discuss, because I consider excellent customer service one of the most important tools you can have to earn trust, respect and repeat business from the customers that come through your door. Whether that customer is do-it-yourselfer from across town or the professional repair shop across the street, your business depends on a solid relationship.It’s a subject that I am passionate about, and it’s one that many people are losing touch with. Whether you are communicating to someone in person, on the phone or using some type of social media, good customer service and bad can both exist. You can’t afford the latter, so this is the first in a series of topics which can and should be shared from the front of the shop to the back. No matter which role you hold, you represent the shop and yourself. Customer service should be your number one priority.First on the list is the greeting. From the second a customer walks in the door, they need to know you appreciate them coming in and how important they are to your business. First impressions are everything and here’s the correct way to do it each and every time: look them directly in the eye, smile and say hello!Of course, you can say “Good morning” or “Welcome to Joe’s Autocare,” but it should be a formal greeting and the most important thing is that you have smiled, looked them in the eye and recognized that they have walked through the door.You should always retain a formal greeting until you are on a first-name basis with a customer. Only once you have established that level of relationship is it OK to use the less formal greeting of “Hi,” followed by the person’s name.This greeting does more than just indicate respect and appreciation for someone walking through the door. Most likely there are customers both new and old who are in earshot of your conversation. For newer customers, this continues to build rapport and reinforce their positive view of your shop; they see that you demonstrate respect and treat everyone in the same manner. For repeat customers, even ones that have been coming for years, the greeting is important because the way you treat them is the reason they continue to come.And when a long-time customer comes in and you greet them with “Hi [First Name],” this indicates your appreciation for them and that you’re glad to see them as a person, more than just a customer. New customers that witness this will see that your repeat customers are comfortable enough to be on a first-name basis, another indication of the trust they have in you.

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