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5 tips for smooth sailing through client communication

Business Coach Daniel Fitzpatrick shares the soft skills you’ll need to make sure your customers are thrilled with the end result, pay on time, and tell all their friends about you.

Ever found yourself at the finish line of a job but the customer still wanted more?

You did everything you could to get it right. Hustled to find materials. Answered their calls after hours. Agreed to meet them on site whenever they had concerns. 

If only they knew everything you’ve done to ensure a quality job.

So why are they complaining? 

  • Usually, the pushback is over workmanship.
  • But in most cases – the real cause is a breakdown in communication.

Here’s what’s interesting: If you can bring your communication up a notch – most complaints will disappear before they even begin. Saving you hours of extra work and stress. 

The secret is that great communication is proactive. From the first conversation with your customer to the final walkthrough to ensure they’re happy.

The good news? Communication is a skill. This means it can be learned. You can always be improving. 

Here are 5 winning strategies:

1. Invest in your onboarding (and win back your time)

Often we are too close to our work and assume that the client knows more than they do. Many clients have no idea what goes into a job. That’s why they’re often coming to you with queries as the job progresses.

Instead, set things up right: Create a brief “how we work” guide. It serves as a conversation starter on what clients can realistically expect.

This sets your standards from the outset and is something you can go through with every new client. Include things like:

The process – very clearly lays out each step including due dates of decisions they’ll need to make.

  • When and how they can contact you (eg you’ll reply ASAP but only during work hours).
  • When and how they can expect updates? Is it site photos, videos, or in-person walk-throughs?
  • When milestone meetings will be (these should be in person for bigger jobs).
  • What happens if progress payments are missed (ie. work stops).
  • What handover will look like?

Getting your onboarding right builds trust with customers and means they aren’t left in the dark about what’s coming next. So you’re free to work on the job itself. Without being bombarded with questions at inconvenient times.

2. Find the real issue (if they’re getting too involved)

What if the customer starts questioning your work? It’s a familiar scenario: They’ve spent 2 minutes on Google or chatted to a builder mate. Now they’ve got some “helpful tips” for you. 

They think they know better when you’ve been in the trades your whole working life! It’s perfectly natural to feel frustrated – but it won’t make things better.

These customers probably just heard too many stories. From people with leaky homes, or who had a bad reno and told them all about it.

You can stay in control by digging deeper: Ask them what they’ve heard. Uncover their main concern. Repeat back to them to make sure you understand. 

Then explain your process and why what they are afraid of won’t happen. You’ll diffuse the situation, and make them feel reassured they’re in safe hands.

No doubt about it: When potential issues crop up during the job, clear and transparent communication is a must. Be in touch early and often.

3. Learn to say no to the clients you don’t want

Some customers are, of course, more trouble than they’re worth. 

We’ve all been there: They didn’t pay on time. Had unrealistic expectations. Maybe even got aggressive. They definitely complained about everything. 

The trick is to be clear about what your ideal client looks like – so you can quickly recognise the ones you don’t want. Look: It’s okay to turn down work. Just because someone offers you work doesn’t mean they’re a good customer.

Make sure you notice any red flags when you first chat with clients. Have they had problems with other tradies before you? Do they want the job done yesterday? Do they complain about their neighbours even? These might be signs they’re difficult to deal with. 

You’ll need to test if your assumptions are correct. If they are, be the nice guy with a backbone. Tell them your company isn’t the right fit for this work. Avoid the temptation to explain these signs away; you’ll thank yourself later.

4. Separate yourself from the rest

Most tradies aren’t concentrating on delivering great communication. It’s an easy opportunity to get ahead of your competition.

You can easily wow and delight customers if you just do a few small things right: 

  • Tell your clients about the things you aren’t charging them for. Like when you encounter a hiccup and have to spend extra time spent prepping the job.
  • Arrive on time, or if running late, text an update. (81% of customers find lateness highly unprofessional. Don’t get off on the wrong foot.)
  • Explain things in their terms. (If your mum wouldn’t understand it, they probably won’t either.)
  • Train your crew to be extra polite – please, thank you, excuse me. No swearing.
  • Treat their property like your own. Remove rubbish. Leave the site better than you found it.
  • Give a final handover worthy of their investment. Take your time, walk them through, show them all that went into the job. Any niggles can be easily squashed.
  • A quick courtesy call to follow up after completion.

Make “looking good to the customer” a team mission. 

And educate staff on the actual value of a customer. Show them how much it costs to acquire new customers. You’ll get more effort and buy in from them when they understand this.

5. Build a team your customers love

As your team grows, it gets harder to keep consistent standards on all jobs. Quality slips. Mistakes happen. 

Still, it’s your reputation on the line. You’re the one explaining it to the customer. 

That’s why when tradies come to me for business advice, one of the first things we look at is team performance. Getting everyone on the same page and improving individually and as a team. 

You need to have good systems and rules for your crew so things aren’t missed. Send your team into jobs fully loaded: Use detailed job folders, set processes for the way things should be done, and quality control checklists.

Have clear standards and expectations that your team is accountable to – and rewarded for. This helps your staff take ownership. (Those with attitudes will either step up or step out.)

Getting these operating systems right means you can be away from site without worrying what is going on. Keep tabs on the right things – then you or your foreman can intervene early if issues crop up.

With these things in place, you can deal with problems before the client ever sees them. Less re-work and complaints. No squabbles over the bill. 

Ultimately: Put a bit of extra effort into communication and you’ll quickly become known as the best. Expect 5-star reviews, good recommendations… and bigger and better jobs with clients you enjoy.  

Article supplied by Daniel Fitzpatrick

www.nextleveltradie.co.nz

Published in Business, Health & Safety, Environment in WIRED Issue 66 / September 2022 by Fencing Contractors NZ