TheSnowman
New Member
Over the last 10+ years in the business, I've had those customers that have always tried to push me around and run MY business the way THEY think it should run. As I've gotten older, I've taken less and less crap, and seen more and more bad warning signs. Here's how this customer went. Just looking for confirmation that I made the right move walking away.
Guy calls, renting a place in a little development office area with a bunch of offices, and they have a big sign out front with all the tenants. He says he needs me to put his logo on it, and wants a quote. I tell him no problem, email me the logo, and sure enough...it begins. Dude doesn't know how to email, and all he's got is a picture of it. He HAS to text it to me. So now the guy has my cell phone number, sends me the picture, and starts calling me after 7 in the evenings (I don't answer) so he starts texting, wanting to talk about his project. I call him back the next morning and he goes on and on about how no one else in town will return his calls or get back to him (red flag), and can't even remember the name of his business (twice now).
I go measure it up, give him a quote, then he tells me he found out he also needs the faces. Well, that totally changes the quote, so I get a quote on new acrylic, and I tell him that I have to buy a 4X8 to do the job because I don't just have scraps of acrylic around and his comment is "Well I'm not gonna pay for a full 4X8" and I'm thinking...I'm sure as heck not going to do it, so there's the next red flag.
I get him the quote, he says it sounds good, I tell him I just need payment up front since it's all special order custom stuff, give him the price, and it includes the artwork and all. He says "let me talk to the wife because she may want to pay cash."
So a while later he calls me back and says "She wants to see the design before we pay for it" and I inform him I'm not going to design anything until I get payment for it (as everyone here has taught me, and as I've tried to follow more lately for people I have zero history with) and he said "well, we may just have to part ways then, because if you design something she doesn't like, you have her money and there's nothing you can do about it". I inform him that it's also the same way that I can spend time designing it, and him take my design somewhere else as well, and he seems to think that I'm crazy and that it would never happen (which we all know happens more with this personality of people than we'd like it to) and I basically tell him to pound sand if that's how he wants to handle it, and we part ways.
So all in all, I feel like I made the right call firing the dude. When one of the first conversations is how no one would call someone back, or didn't give them a quote, there's normally a reason for that, and it's normally because the person I'm talking to is a major pain in the rear.
In the end, it was like a $250 job...so I wasn't willing to do spec work for a job that I probably wouldn't have profited much more than $150 or so on. The fact the dude couldn't even remember his business name pretty much tells me he's no way going to survive...but that's not my problem now. He can go to the hacks in town. I didn't feel like I needed to defend myself that in the last 10 years we've never had a client not end up with a design that they like in the end.
Guy calls, renting a place in a little development office area with a bunch of offices, and they have a big sign out front with all the tenants. He says he needs me to put his logo on it, and wants a quote. I tell him no problem, email me the logo, and sure enough...it begins. Dude doesn't know how to email, and all he's got is a picture of it. He HAS to text it to me. So now the guy has my cell phone number, sends me the picture, and starts calling me after 7 in the evenings (I don't answer) so he starts texting, wanting to talk about his project. I call him back the next morning and he goes on and on about how no one else in town will return his calls or get back to him (red flag), and can't even remember the name of his business (twice now).
I go measure it up, give him a quote, then he tells me he found out he also needs the faces. Well, that totally changes the quote, so I get a quote on new acrylic, and I tell him that I have to buy a 4X8 to do the job because I don't just have scraps of acrylic around and his comment is "Well I'm not gonna pay for a full 4X8" and I'm thinking...I'm sure as heck not going to do it, so there's the next red flag.
I get him the quote, he says it sounds good, I tell him I just need payment up front since it's all special order custom stuff, give him the price, and it includes the artwork and all. He says "let me talk to the wife because she may want to pay cash."
So a while later he calls me back and says "She wants to see the design before we pay for it" and I inform him I'm not going to design anything until I get payment for it (as everyone here has taught me, and as I've tried to follow more lately for people I have zero history with) and he said "well, we may just have to part ways then, because if you design something she doesn't like, you have her money and there's nothing you can do about it". I inform him that it's also the same way that I can spend time designing it, and him take my design somewhere else as well, and he seems to think that I'm crazy and that it would never happen (which we all know happens more with this personality of people than we'd like it to) and I basically tell him to pound sand if that's how he wants to handle it, and we part ways.
So all in all, I feel like I made the right call firing the dude. When one of the first conversations is how no one would call someone back, or didn't give them a quote, there's normally a reason for that, and it's normally because the person I'm talking to is a major pain in the rear.
In the end, it was like a $250 job...so I wasn't willing to do spec work for a job that I probably wouldn't have profited much more than $150 or so on. The fact the dude couldn't even remember his business name pretty much tells me he's no way going to survive...but that's not my problem now. He can go to the hacks in town. I didn't feel like I needed to defend myself that in the last 10 years we've never had a client not end up with a design that they like in the end.