Now did I actually say up yours David? Come on! Why is it some of you take what I say incorrectly and so readily pounce? Of course we have to explain it, we explain it every day. --- Justify: "To defend or uphold as warranted or well-grounded." Mechanics do not "justify" why they charge us $90 + an hour, they just do it. That is to what I was referring. Take it or leave it. Do they explain what they did to our vehicles or what it needs in advance? Of course they do. We do likewise. After that, it is then up to the client to either hire us or not. I charge x amount for every single tuning. My clients know this. I charge x amount for pitch raises and x amount per hour. They know this too. Otherwise, I explain my prices when asked but, I do not need to defend (justify) why to my client and I will not. Either they wish to pay it or they do not. Most are fine with it because they know me. I've been in business full time for 36 years. Most of those that do not want to pay our fee, are merely price shoppers anyway and almost always will go for the cheapest regardless of who they are. When another technician asks me how do you "justify a certain price" I explain to them that those are my fee's based on my experience and qualifications. So, charge accordingly. Does that help? Jer -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of David Love Sent: Sunday, October 31, 2010 7:23 PM To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: [pianotech] billing dilemma with pitch raises You may not need to justify your fee but if asked you should be able to explain. It's a courtesy since people don't understand, and if they are paying they have a right to know why something costs what it does. The explanation can be simple--it takes more time, the materials cost x, it's outside of the scope of my normal service call... I don't hesitate to ask the mechanic why something costs what it does if I don't understand why or if it seems unusual. Most people don't mind explaining and we shouldn't either, unless we have no explanation. It's certainly better than "up yours, I don't need to justify my fee you jackwagon, just pay the damn bill". Won't likely get you a return visit. David Love www.davidlovepianos.com -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Gerald Groot Sent: Sunday, October 31, 2010 11:16 AM To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: [pianotech] billing dilemma with pitch raises I agree with Joe. First and foremost, I don't justify anything to any customer. That is something I hear far too often from technicians. How do you "justify charging this or that." We do not have to justify anything. That is, so long as we are honest and are charging a fair price. Does a plumber "justify" what they charge us? Does a car mechanic justify what we pay them? Learning how to operate a tuning business as a business is imperative if we want to make a good living. At least 50 % of what we make goes to pay for our expenses. We do not have the luxury of having free anything being self employed. As I have said before, we have to make $100,000 a year in order to take home roughly $50,000 after taxes, insurance and the rest of our business expenses. So, remember, what we are charging, is NOT what we are actually taking home by a long shot. I go strictly by an hourly rate after the initial tuning itself takes place. So, if I charged $100 for a tuning only and $100 an hour, the first hour would be $100, the next 1/2 hour would be an additional $50. Total = $150. So, if it normally takes YOU 1.5 hours to tune the piano and your normal tuning fee is $100, I would charge $100. If it took YOU 2 hours instead, I would charge an additional $50 for that additional 1/2 hour or, $150. I do not include any repairs whatsoever with my tuning or pitch raising charges because people already falsely presume that tuning is a cure-all. "I have a key not working. Can you tune the piano for me?" Sure, but, tuning does not include repairs. "It doesn't? Why not? I thought if I had the piano tuned, you would fix it too!" Jer -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Joe DeFazio Sent: Sunday, October 31, 2010 12:22 PM To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: [pianotech] billing dilemma with pitch raises > David Nerenson wrote: > > Say the pitch raise took 1/2 hr, and the final tuning an hour. That's an hour an a half. How do I now justify charging extra for the pitch raise when a "plain vanilla" tuning also takes an hour and a half and I only charge $X for it? Hi David, I don't justify my fee in terms of tuning time to the customer - it can make them wonder about the appropriateness of the hourly fee I'm charging (which may be more than they make per hour in some cases, and perhaps they are a trauma nurse helping to save lives everyday). Instead, I just give them the total before I start without reference to any time comparison (whether it is a normal tuning or a more expensive pitch raise). If it is a pitch raise, I tell them that the cost ("cost," not "expense" or "price" or, heaven forbid, "damage") is greater because it is more work. Or, as one of my friends puts it, "there are only so many tunings left in my hand/arm/shoulder, and we're using up about two of them today," or something to that effect. And that's accurate, I believe. Ask yourself how you feel after a day on which you happened to do three pitch raises in a row as compared to a day on which you did three single-pass tunings. Joe DeFazio Pittsburgh=
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