[pianotech] No Shows (was What do you say?)

Ryan Sowers tunerryan at gmail.com
Wed Feb 2 00:28:53 MST 2011


Keith,

It is a loss. I think it is easy to lose perspective when you are self
employed. A no show, is like a miniature version of being laid off. It's
lost wages.

Like Jer said, he just looked at the numbers. No reminder calls = $1500 less
money at the end of the year. Reminder calls = perhaps $150 less money at
the end of the year.

So not reminding is a substantial loss of income.

Here's another way to look at it. Lets say you tune 500 pianos a year, and
do three pianos a day. You'd have approximately 167 reminder calls to make
over the course of the year. If you had 10 no shows per year and your
service fee is $150 that's $1500 you were not able to earn. Let's say your
167 reminder calls reduces your no shows to just 1 per year. So you are
recouping $1350 in potential lost wages. Now consider how much time it takes
to make the calls. Let's say it takes 5 minutes to do the calls. Multiplied
by 167 means it takes 835 minutes, or about 14 hours. For those 14 hours you
are saving $1350 in lost wages. That means your making over $90 hour for
those reminder calls.

It's just good business sense to do the calls. You'll make more money.
That's why the dentist does it. That's why weI do it. The courtesy is an
added benefit.

On Tue, Feb 1, 2011 at 9:50 PM, Mr. Mac's <tune-repair at allegiance.tv> wrote:

>
> On Feb 1, 2011, at 11:23 PM, David Lawson wrote:
>
> > … If we have a no show, we only have the revenue for the 3 tunes that
> were done. …
>
> Hello Alastair,
>
> I appreciate your input on this subject,
>
> Put the way you have, I just see this as what happened for the day.
> There was no loss, just not as much gain.
>
> For me there are days when there is earned income,
>   and other days, there isn't.
>
> The only thing I look at is the spread of what comes in,
>   and what goes out. Then what's left is the gravy.
>
> The greater the spread between the in and out, the more I have to utilize.
> The lesser the spread between the in and out, the less I have to utilize.
>
> Knowing that the most of the in and out can fluctuate,
>   I balance the more and the less with the little I do know.
>
> That's pretty much it.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Keith




-- 
Ryan Sowers, RPT
Puget Sound Chapter
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net
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