Turning a Bad Job Into a Loyal Customer
The customer whose problem you fixed well can become your most loyal one. Here's how to close the loop so a recovered job turns into repeat work and referrals.
What a Customer Complaint Is Really Telling You
A complaint is free information most owners waste. Here's how to read what's underneath it, and how to fix the process so the next customer never hits it.
Refunds, Redos, and Discounts: How to Make It Right
When something goes wrong, which remedy fits — a refund, a redo, or a discount? Here's how to choose one that satisfies the customer without bleeding your margin.
When to Apologize and Make It Right (Without Giving Away the Store)
Owning a mistake doesn't mean caving on everything. Here's how to apologize in a way that rebuilds trust, and how to decide what you actually owe.
How to Handle an Angry Customer Without Making It Worse
An angry customer isn't a problem to win — it's a moment to steer. Here's how to take the heat out of the conversation and get to a fix that holds.
Why Recovery Beats Perfection With Customers
You can't get every job perfect. But a problem handled well can make a customer more loyal than a flawless job ever would. Here's the recovery paradox, explained.
When a Job Goes Wrong: Handling Mistakes and Complaints
A mistake or an unhappy customer isn't the end — it's a fork in the road. Here's how to handle it in a way that keeps the customer and protects your name.
Difficult Customers: How to Handle Them and When to Let Go
Not every customer is worth keeping. Here's how to tell a difficult-but-valuable customer from a genuinely toxic one, and how to part ways without drama.
Saying No and Setting Boundaries With Customers
Saying yes to everything trains customers to expect everything. Here's how to set boundaries and say no in a way that protects your business without losing goodwill.
Keeping Customers Informed (Silence Is What They Hold Against You)
Most customer frustration during a job isn't about the work — it's about not knowing. Here's why communication beats silence, even when the news isn't good.
What's Included: Getting Scope Right Before You Start
Most job disputes are really scope disputes — over what the price did and didn't cover. Here's how to define scope up front so 'that wasn't included' never becomes a fight.
Under-Promise, Over-Deliver — Done Right (Not as a Trick)
Under-promise and over-deliver is good advice and easy to get wrong. Here's how to use it to build trust without sandbagging your customers or losing work to it.
The Cost of Overpromising to Win the Work
Overpromising wins the job and loses the customer. Here's why inflated promises cost more than the work they win, and how to sell honestly without losing to hype.
Customers Expect Too Much? You Probably Set the Expectation
When customers expect the wrong things, the cause is usually upstream — in what was promised, implied, or left unsaid. Here's how to set expectations that prevent conflict.