[pianotech] Old upright

wimblees at aol.com wimblees at aol.com
Wed Apr 8 20:29:02 PDT 2009


-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew Todd <toddpianoworks at att.net>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Wed, 8 Apr 2009 1:29 pm
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Old upright






And the customer may still want to have the work done as well.


TODD PIANO WORKS 
Matthew Todd, Piano Technician 
(979) 248-9578

http://www.toddpianoworks.com


True, Todd. And that is where the dilemma is. On the one hand, even after giving the customer all the "bad" news, he/she still wants to have the work done, do you walk away, knowing that someone else will get the work, or do you accept the job, knowing you are going to to the best job possible?
?
As Ed just pointed out, only by inspecting the piano will you be able to give the right answer, and only with lots of experience will you know if the piano will turn out right after all the work you've done. 

All I can go by is that in my 32 years in this business, I've?only had one instance where the customer was hell bent on doing to work against my advice. The only reason he wanted the piano was because it had his name on the front of it. (He wasn't even related to the builder, but he thought it was "cool" to have that piano in his summer home along the river). On? the other hand, I have turned away work on several occasions even though the customers wanted the work done. They probably got someone else to do the work, but I refused to work on the pianos?because?my conscious wouldn't allow me to do it. 

Wim 


--- On Wed, 4/8/09, wimblees at aol.com <wimblees at aol.com> wrote:

From: wimblees at aol.com <wimblees at aol.com>
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Old upright
To: ed440 at mindspring.com, pianotech at ptg.org
Date: Wednesday, April 8, 2009, 7:18 PM


This has nothing to do with the PTG, Ed. This has to do with treating customers with respect as far as their piano is concerned. As Del said, there are some pianos that don't deserve to?be restored. And, as several people have indicated, when it is explained how much the repairs will cost to restore a piano, and what the value of the piano will be after restoration, "sentiments" all of a sudden takes a back seat. 

What I?have seen happen too many times is a piano 'rebuilder" tell a customer that their "heirloom" piano will be worth much more than it realistically will be, for the sole purpose of having that customer spend a lot of money on having?it restored. I've had customers tell me that scenario on a number of occasions, and my response has been, (which, btw, I got from other members of the PTG,) to ask the customer to ask the technician if they will buy the piano for that.?

I am not, in any way, trying to imply that?the PTG?set?prices, or require our members to buy pianos that have been restored. What I am saying is we should not misinform our customers?the real value is of their piano.?As I say in my book:

"We have to keep, as it states in our Code of Ethics, the best interest of the client in mind. In other words, we need to look at a piano for what it can do for the customer. We need to look beyond our supposed capabilities, thinking we can fix anything, and ask, "is this piano really worth fixing?" We need to be able to say to our customers, "this piano is dead", regardless of what the customer thinks of the piano. The customer might not like what you said, but it is more ethical to tell the truth, than to let her continue to believe the instrument is worth restoring."?


Wim


-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Sutton <ed440 at mindspring.com>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Wed, 8 Apr 2009 12:41 am
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Old upright




PTG does not establish, maintain or recommend?a price structure for rebuilding pianos, nor does it require that members be willing to buy pianos for the cost of work performed. PTG does not police the?pricing policies?of piano technicians.

?

The statements below?are?sadly ill-considered. 

?

Ed Sutton

This is a problem we run across way too often. It's people like you who give reputable piano technicians a bad name. First of all, if you can do all of what you just described for only $5000, you must be working for virtually nothing, or you work so fast that you think you're making money. And if you're working that fast,?I would question the quality of your work.. 

Second, sentiments aside, what did you tell the customer the piano will be worth when you get done rebuilding it??If you told them it would be worth anything near $5000, are you ready and willing to buy it from them for that price? If not, then you're "ripping off" the customer. Without new strings and a new finish, you're not doing a complete rebuild. All you're doing is restoring the action and player system, and?it will never sell for anything close to $5000 in S. Louis, or anywhere else.?

This is the kind of attitude that doesn't sit well in the PTG. Perhaps that's why you got the feeling that "we" don't respect you. 






This is a problem we run across way too often. It's people like you who give reputable piano technicians a bad name. First of all, if you can do all of what you just described for only $5000, you must be working for virtually nothing, or you work so fast that you think you're making money. And if you're working that fast,?I would question the quality of your work.. 

Second, sentiments aside, what did you tell the customer the piano will be worth when you get done rebuilding it??If you told them it would be worth anything near $5000, are you ready and willing to buy it from them for that price? If not, then you're "ripping off" the customer. Without new strings and a new finish, you're not doing a complete rebuild. All you're doing is restoring the action and player system, and?it will never sell for anything close to $5000 in S. Louis, or anywhere else.?

This is the kind of attitude that doesn't sit well in the PTG. Perhaps that's why you got the feeling that "we" don't respect you. 







Wim



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