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Thread: Customers

  1. #1

    Customers

    I am "firing" customers left and right. Too old to deal with BS. We are very skilled at our trade and abilities. My guys are a Motley Crue but I keep them all doing what is correct and right. And then get called out for being wrong when those I work for drop the ball.

    WTF? Anyone Else? I hate to be bitter but I am right now.
    1966 34c
    1982 46 HP

  2. #2

    Re: Customers

    Yes, We dropped customers and upper handlers (brokers or boat yard work) quite frequently. Usually after we got the last dollar owed to us (or what we could get).
    Only a few of us independent service companies around the Ortega area and we passed customer and handler info between us all. Most of the problem customers had sticks growing from their decks and tap roots down below. Some had real big boats and thought their stuff didn't stink. Some brokers who hired us had similar issues also.
    Well it did (stink) and there are a few big boats still there that nobody will service (now dock queens) and brokers calling in techs from out of town, state. They also do not come back.

    I never allowed our crew to board an unsafe or rude boat and alerted the other shops of what we witnessed. They also reported back on their findings and issues. Usually on our aft deck on Friday nights. Monday mornings, lots of calls were not returned.
    A few brokers that do not get return calls have taken the hint also.

    Working tight with the marina managements (24 x 7 access cost), they also knew of unsafe vessels owners and others that said they were in the trade. Oh, some of them are hard to deal with also, but you have to get on their docks to make a buck.

    We closed our company a couple of years ago. Still support our allies and some favorite customers.

    The important part, we sleep well at night over past business activities.

  3. #3

    Re: Customers

    In defense of customers, a/k/a, the hand that feeds you, I am compelled to respond. I have owned boats for the better part of the last 30 years. I have always paid my bills in full on time. However, it took me many, many years to find marine vendors worth paying. I am recently retired but ran a large lawfirm (300 lawyers) for 35 years. I know a thing or two about running a business. I have found that the marine service industry is one of the most poorly run industries I have ever seen. If I ran my business that way, I would be out of business. I have done most of my boating in New York, with short seasons and even shorter tempers. I have been boating in Florida for the last ten years or so. I have a terrific Captain in Florida and have found good mechanics etc whom I treat with kit gloves.
    Many years ago, I added security cameras to my boats. They were not meant to catch thieves, or even mechanics who openly lied about how long they were on the boat, but rather to ferret out the “no call, no show” marine workers. I got tired of leaving my office to check on a repair, which amounte to about an hour drive, just to find out the mechanic never showed up, nor called. In my experience, this has been the rule rather than the exception in the marine service business.
    Fiberglass guys and canvass guys have been the most difficult for me. Either tough to find, tough to schedule or crappy work (most times all three).

    I recently purchased another boat. I had the chance to buy a new one, with full warranties on the boat and engines. However, what good is a warranty in a 12 week season if the yard guy says they are backed up three months on work.

    So, before you start throwing stones at customers, look in the mirror at your industry and gauge your audience.

  4. #4

    Re: Customers

    The customers I fire are for good reasons.

    They compare my rate to the drunk down the dock with no insurance.

    They complain about paying $3k in labor for installation of their new toys on their new boat and then brag about how they paid cash for it or a new car.

    They call all the time to go over details again and again and a again for a small fix while they know I'm one someone else's project.

    Parts in my world (electronics) are pretty much low margins thanks to the online thieves.

    Manufacturers set minimum sell prices to hold a bit of margin but it's not a big profit center anymore.

    Local responsive and knowknowledgeable vendors are being beaten to death by internet know it all morons.

    Choose your relationships well.
    Scott
    41C117 "Hattatude"
    Port Canaveral Florida.


    Marine Electronics and Electrical Products Distributor.

  5. #5

    Re: Customers

    When your scheduling new service work 3+ weeks in advance, we were getting feed well thank you.
    We closed our shop due to health reasons.

    Interesting enough, some of our worst customers were lawyers telling us how to run our business.

  6. #6

    Re: Customers

    Novus Ordo Seclorum
    Scott
    1976 43DCFB ,Hull #428, “Exodus”
    Long Island, NY

  7. #7

    Re: Customers

    Annuit cœptis

  8. #8

    Re: Customers

    JLR, it appears that upon reading your post that you have had a better experience in Florida. My reaction when I first read/skimmed your post was I wonder if he would have a better experience in Florida. I used to keep the boat in NC and VA, now I leave it in Florida year around. In my experience Florida’s marine industry does a better job, but still you have to be careful. I think it is worth mentioning that not all charges on a bill will occur on the boat. There is running down parts, coordination with the yard and other subs, consultation with manufactures that in my opinion is billable time. None of these typically happen while a tech is on the boat. I can’t imagine trying to own/manage a business that relies on a 12 week period to make a profit. What do you do with the other 40 weeks. I am decent with some repairs but have to rely on professionals to keep my boat in shape. By and large I have been pleased with my experience. In my opinion there is a direct correlation between cost and quality. Not at all times but most of them. I try to work with professionals and that usually means I pay more. Not at all trying to imply that you are trying to save money by going cheap. I am 56 and in my experience the American consumer has become more demanding and unreasonable over the years. Ironic that this post came when it did as we are on the cusp of firing a customer as well. I also think the Pandemic has affected people’s behavior and also the boating spurt since the pandemic has made demand for marine services exceed the supply. So I think that is a factor as well. In closing, I do think the trades (marine and otherwise) have more than their share of people who are not professional nor qualified but none the less they go into business. But is that not the case in all fields. I have worked with some very good attorneys and some poor ones.

  9. #9

    Re: Customers

    I have a serious, self diagnosed "nut" allergy that flares up now and then. Treatment is to fire a few of the nuts that are the cause. Works like a charm. Life is short. Good physical and mental health is important to me.
    Eric
    41TC 1966 Hull #53 "Requisite"
    Kent Island, MD/Ft. Lauderdale, FL

    "Though she creaks - She holds"

  10. #10

    Re: Customers

    Old friend in retail told me you need a barbed wire fence to keep the customers out. Of course, he was referring to the nut jobs. Other side of the coin: Most everything boat related operates on boat time.
    Semper Siesta
    Robert Clarkson
    ASLAN, 1983 55C #343
    Charleston, SC

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