I think its a great idea to do it and stick to it. When I am doing my end of year paperwork and tax stuff I think as to the mistakes that were made and what can be done to improve on the upcoming year. Last year I made some vows and stuck to them and I gotta say they worked out great. Some of the largest issues I have is dealing with dead end clients. I decided to no longer entertain these type of clients if they ever called the shop again.They called and I did not deal with them. I turned them over to someone else or just ignored them
I also vowed NO MORE RUSH JOBS. This was a couple years back I did this. The only way I will do rush is if I have the materials in hand and I have nothing else to do and they pay promptly. I have stuck by this also and it has really helped.
Last vow also a couple years ago, no more small BS projects for friends. They always lead to nothing but a freakin headache and a waste of time. If I could only go back 20 years ago and implemet these rules that would have saved me a lot of grief
Every year should start out with new goals and rules. Good luck and when you make the rules stick to them
I think he was asking about employee reviews.
Can't agree more with your take on "clients" in their various form.
Apparently we are 'sign shop' men.
The word "rush" makes me bristle.
We plan jobs weeks ahead.
My sign shop didn't even have a sign.
25 to 30 employees, two 80 foot, one 65 foot boom trucks, 35,000 sqft electricity sucking shop
on an acre and a half, $20,000 + / week payroll plus taxes, etc. Materials extra.
Pull your hair out kinda stuff.
No walk ins.
We never did retail,
Nothing without a contract.
But, a few times, every so often, a couple 'C' notes.
Thanks for dinner out.
Can't be that gruff day-to-day, but, Ooooh it feels good to vent to like minded fellows.
I feel what you are saying.
Now I go surf fishing every other day.
Long range, (8 to 12 days), every season.