evo
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- My Island, WA
Recently I've been running into massive headaches regarding scheduling jobs. Within the past 3-5 weeks I've had about 6-8 reschedule requests! Many have been simply due to the client desiring to be home, offering narrow availability dates to meet. The problem is that I'm about two months out, so that shuffles the deck too much.
Another issue I'm having is defining the line between consultation, bid, and education. Typically when I sell a consultation it's with a one hour min charge, and a hourly after wards, I communicate that my purpose on site is only my opinion and I'm not there to sell work or offer estimate (I will review others for the client however). To me a free estimate is a simple 15-30 minute visit to a client who knows they want tree A, B, and D worked on. I will offer suggestions, and if I see tree C is about to fall over I will point it out. Often this turns into a much longer discussion, and I can be onsite for longer than an hour discussing options. I feel that this frequently turns into a free consultation as I rarely do removals, or I'm making referrals.
I'm considering taking the time to write up policies to email out to incoming work inquiries. Much like other professions do. A example is going to a new dentist, doctor, counselor, massage therapist, where they either email you forms, policies, to fill out before the appointment. Could the same work well for tree work? I have my terms and conditions which go out with the estimate, but could I also email scheduling policies, and define the difference with cost of bid's vs consultations?
What do you all think about this idea, and what do you do? What verbiage would you use?
Another issue I'm having is defining the line between consultation, bid, and education. Typically when I sell a consultation it's with a one hour min charge, and a hourly after wards, I communicate that my purpose on site is only my opinion and I'm not there to sell work or offer estimate (I will review others for the client however). To me a free estimate is a simple 15-30 minute visit to a client who knows they want tree A, B, and D worked on. I will offer suggestions, and if I see tree C is about to fall over I will point it out. Often this turns into a much longer discussion, and I can be onsite for longer than an hour discussing options. I feel that this frequently turns into a free consultation as I rarely do removals, or I'm making referrals.
I'm considering taking the time to write up policies to email out to incoming work inquiries. Much like other professions do. A example is going to a new dentist, doctor, counselor, massage therapist, where they either email you forms, policies, to fill out before the appointment. Could the same work well for tree work? I have my terms and conditions which go out with the estimate, but could I also email scheduling policies, and define the difference with cost of bid's vs consultations?
What do you all think about this idea, and what do you do? What verbiage would you use?










