As usual you've all gone of on a totally unrelated tangent and ended up talking about yourselves/ourselves.Talk about self obsessed. Me, me and a bit more me This thread is about perception in the business sence, that someone, and I believe Mick Hay was the example, could target a niche' market by doing everything very professionally and attract a high volume of customers at prices nearly double what a lot of us charge and still leave customers with the perception that they had had very good value for money and that their conservatory returned to nearly new.
As we are doing bios though I have always been a winner, but have found w/c very difficult. Particulary at the start when I just went knocking doors to set up a test market. I was so embarrassed, and humbled by this, especially as I say I have already been successfull.For a long time my wife said I was playing at it, and thought I wasted far too much money on it.
got to disagree with you in part as I think that with self perception you can only really highlight it with examples of your own experience and observation.
By getting your customers to believe in you you have to portray a whole host of things, much of which you are not going to be aware of as it will be subliminal.
There is the obvious stuff, smartly turned out, polite, perhaps the signed van and so on, and of course the quality of the work you carry out.
Much better the personalised invoices and stationary rather than a generic invoice or receipt pad from the local newsagent (er...I do use them as backup when I've forgotten to print out enough stationery

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your self perception comes from inside of course, some have commented on how others might see them as 'just a window cleaner' lowest of the low on a par with road sweepers....
Well in our little town of Chepstow we have two road sweepers, the one is a road sweeper you may well get the impression he is in fact the lowest of the low.
The other is an intelligent man, well spoken and with a proud, confident demeanor, with him you get a totally different perception.
He is a man who understands the importance of the job he does.
To change yourself from the inside out is of course something that no end of american self help books are all about, and to a degree this forum does a similar thing.
You might read of someone else's experience, or several on a particular thread that will help fire you with enthusiasm and leave you eager to go out and practice the advice you have read.
When you have had a downer, feel the world is against you, you may well share your 'bad day' on here, and your spirits will be lifted and your confidence restored by the many helpful replies you will receive.
although I have been a window cleaner for 25 years, and thought I knew all there was to possibly know about window cleaning, I've learned so much on here and over the last 3 or 4 years it has enabled me to change my perspective and as a result my 'self perception' or 'self belief', and this of course get unconsciously transfered outwardly to my customers.
I cannot say it has been a deliberate conscious thing I have done, but as I look back over the last 3 years or so I can see the change for myself, and I only have to look at my business now to see the very real and tangible evidence.
For over 20 years I basically kept my head above water, never really had much, just made a living...but it is bloody different now....
Ian