I agree Zorak, but again, no one forces anymore to do business with anyone else..
If this other person is unprofessional in how he deals with people it becomes his issue.. How we deal with our customers as business people reflects on us just as how we deal with people will tell people in many ways, "he's a great guy" or "he's a fucken jerk" and eventually drive business away no matter how good you are because there is always someone nipping at your customers door..
Francis, not sure if you read Zorak's post the same way I did... but I believe the "he" and "his" that Zorak was using referred to Dana, not the customer.![]()
It doesn't matter.. I have discussed this with Dana many times.. You must hold your composure when you deal with customers of all types.
Like I said. It's been sorted. I posted the work in Art & Fashion.
Umm... I wasn't talking solely to you... So whose being touchy?Umm...okay. I was typing my response at the same time as you. There was a delay b/c I was looking for an image to use instead. Chill out...it'll be okay.
Umm... I wasn't talking solely to you... So whose being touchy?![]()
:24: ouch?1 post saying it's been handled...new post by me...new post reiterating 1st post saying it's been handled. Easy to see how it came off that way...but it's whatever, no biggie.
And I'm only touchy w/ select people. :ninja
If you provided reasonable expectations for your client you wouldn't have this problem. You have to let them know when they need to get something to you for you to complete it by their deadline. You don't know their deadline? Ask. It's a pretty simple concept. But don't get pissed when your clients have unreasonable expectations because you didn't communicate with them from with start about what was expected and when.
As far as the professionalism goes... you are sorely lacking. Your clients will expect you to treat them like a client, not a friend, not a peer using their lingo, but as a client. Personally I think you could benefit from a seminar/class to teach you how to manage clients and your interactions with them.
:24: ouch?
It's a give and take scenario Jen. He contacted me via phone of Friday, discussing future endeavors. He ASKED me verbally if I wanted him to email. I said yes. Anyone doing business would expect a prompt email. What do I get a Facebook event with "More info to come". REALLY? I emailed him after I received an email with nothing but a promo shot about needing information and I got it yesterday. I didn't post our entire conversation but neither of us had our professional moments.
You're missing the point. With a business, professionalism isn't a give and take. You agree to "take" someone's money - you "give" them professionalism in return. Simple, really.
Not missing the point at all...
As far as the professionalism goes... you are sorely lacking. Your clients will expect you to treat them like a client, not a friend, not a peer using their lingo, but as a client. Personally I think you could benefit from a seminar/class to teach you how to manage clients and your interactions with them.
Customers and friendships CAN go hand in hand.
I agree with this, but - maybe I'm completely off here but did you start those professional relationships treating them as casually as you do your friends, or did that friendship grow out of the initial professional environment?
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