Annoyed by "Low Ballers"?

"Sure, it’s annoying when a company that is not thoroughly professional comes in, slashes prices, and takes business your company might otherwise have had. Sometimes that company isn’t doing anything illegal or unethical. It could be someone just starting out and trying to buy market share. It could be a solo practitioner offering low prices because he has very little overhead.

It seems whenever one of these outfits goes out of business (and most eventually do); another crops up to take its place. There are always people who think they can succeed by charging less than everyone else. In any market, at any given time, there will always be bottom feeders.

Fortunately, in every market, there are also customers who live according to the words of fashion designer Aldo Gucci: [B]The bitterness of poor quality is remembered long after the sweetness of low price has faded from memory.[/B] Businesses that know how to find and win these customers can largely ignore the price-cutters."

Do you really lose?

Sure, it hurts to see homeowners and businesses giving jobs to ill-qualified, low-ball operators. But are those really your prospects in the first place? Are they — the perpetual price-shoppers, the Yellow Pages quote seekers — the kind of people on which to build a business?

Bargain hunters are notoriously fickle: Win them over once and next time they’ll probably go to someone else who is five bucks cheaper. Furthermore, their ranks include many who don’t like to pay their bills — on time or at all.

So how do you focus on value-conscious customers? One way is simply to stay away from situations where the deciding factor is price. Mass advertising — like Yellow Pages — attracts price-shoppers. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t run Yellow Pages ads. It does mean your ads should stress quality, value and reputation. And it does mean you should train your staff to identify and cultivate callers who are not strictly price-driven.

Another way to find customers who buy value is to analyze your customer base. Who are your best and steadiest customers? Where do they live? What do they do? Where do they work? Target their neighbors and co-workers with direct marketing.

Most of all, know who your best customers are and hold on to them for dear life. They are the heart and soul of your business. It costs far less to keep them than to find new ones like them.

Enough to go around

As for Cheap Charlie competitors, take action against those who cheat or otherwise violate the law — they are bad for the profession and bad for the public, too. Otherwise, try not to lose sleep over the customers you might lose to them.

In an important sense, those were never your customers, anyway. Remember: You can’t lose what you never had. And you won’t miss what, deep down, you never really wanted in the first place.

If you keep value front and center, you’ll always deal with the kinds of customers you favor, and you’ll compete against other contractors you respect. That game may not be easy, but at least the field is level.

From: Cleaner Magazine March 2008

I can relate - thanks for posting.

Thank you so much for posting this. I didn’t know Aldo Gucci said that. I was looking all over for that quote. I remember first seeing it in a tattoo parlor where I was giving them a quote on the windows. They had it right above the register. Oftentimes it’s frustating as business owners when we first start out and pay for insurance and do are taxes properly and there are “low ballers” out there. Yes, there will always be guys doing it for cash and nothing more. It’s like that in any business.

Thanks for the reminder. I know I can overreact because I started from nothing and had to pay for insurance, taxes and all that. But like you said do we really want “price shoppers” or someone who will drop us like a hot potatoe for a dollar less? Definitely something to think about.