Reminds me in a car dealers near me. They phoned one day asking for us to put graphics on a 4x4 for them. After sending them a design, the same as one we done previously for them they phoned to tell us not to bother as they'd just found the last one in a shopping centre car park when they left it to advertise. The vehicle was brand new and worth over £20,000!!!Glad I don't live in the community they serve!
Can we see some real pics of your mom now - like soon but old picture of her in her prime?
Boss had hired a customer's kid as a favor to him, and as we needed an extra pair of hands. This kid knew everything and was unteachable - and I've been training people in every job I've ever held, so I'm used to working with newbies. Anyway, after several months, the kid was still messing up jobs consistently. One day, I'm standing there as he's laying down a print. He's using bad technique and I correct him. He blows me off and keeps going. So I sit back and watch him fail, knowing that can be a good teaching tool. He screws up and we have to reprint. This time I show him exactly what he needs to do. He blows me off again. We go through 3 prints before I'm able to get him off the job and do it myself. My boss kept the kid on for a long time after that. We wasted so much money that way.
I had a similar situation, but would make him turn in the job as finished. When the owner was unhappy I would then make the employee explain why he refused my advice and technique.
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Boss had hired a customer's kid as a favor to him, and as we needed an extra pair of hands. This kid knew everything and was unteachable - and I've been training people in every job I've ever held, so I'm used to working with newbies. Anyway, after several months, the kid was still messing up jobs consistently. One day, I'm standing there as he's laying down a print. He's using bad technique and I correct him. He blows me off and keeps going. So I sit back and watch him fail, knowing that can be a good teaching tool. He screws up and we have to reprint. This time I show him exactly what he needs to do. He blows me off again. We go through 3 prints before I'm able to get him off the job and do it myself. My boss kept the kid on for a long time after that. We wasted so much money that way.
I had a similar situation, but would make him turn in the job as finished. When the owner was unhappy I would then make the employee explain why he refused my advice and technique.
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I did that once with an employee that kept putting out subpar jobs. I knew a customer that was picking up was very picky and I didn't want to have to explain why we were redoing his signs. I wanted the employee to understand what I had to go through every time they messed up. The signs had a crease going down the short edge and a crooked trim on one. So I had the employee take the signs up to the customer and he said "oh wow these are great!" I had just told the employee how he was going to have to explain why he thought the signs he was making were acceptable. Yet, the customer said perfect, paid and left.
I couldn't help but laugh at how badly that failed. The employee was later taken off production.
This is why i couldn't hire someone to do my job. People pay thousands and even tens of thousands for our glass prints. These have to be 110% perfect. no banding, if it's multiple pieces, they need to line up. Colour needs to be correct. Therefore the printer needs to be running at its best all the time.
I have heard enough stories from other printers here that dont care about the quality as long as it leaves the shop.
I've had people help when we're in full production mode, and sometimes i cringe when i see a mistake about to happen.
At some point, I'd agree that perfection has to submit to actually putting out product and making money. I know that someone somewhere will pay for cheap crap (e.g. McDonalds, Walmart, etc.). But I'd rather not be known as the bargain basement shop. I also have a tendency towards perfectionism, which can be a useful tool as long as I don't let it take over my life.
It sounds like you're in a special niche that requires extra special attention to quality control. I'd be much more lenient about a coro yard sign than I would about a glass print. But the customer shouldn't be expecting the same quality from cheap crap and durable specialty prints.
We had a police chief drop off a car for an installation, we did the install and let him know it was ready for pickup. The car then proceeded to sit in out lot for 8 months. It turns out that that week he was involved in a real bad accident, he was the only one who knew the car was at our shop, and when he returned to duty noticed that the new car wasn't there... Finally he called here asking if we still had it. We do a lot of local departments and it seems they forget about a lot of their fleet, I think everyone just assumes it is at one of the "upfitter shops".
We've got a large lot, it isn't the first time we've stored vehicles for indecisive customers. We have a limo here currently that has been here 6 months now still waiting to be wrapped...I can't believe you let it sit there for 8 months...
I think I would have tried a little harder to find someone to pick it up...