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geefree

  • Posts: 6180
get yourself round south heindley mate the lad who was doing them as packed in . he was wfp aswell .

hi, just been to look around... has he told them he has left...as all gleaming , worth a leaflet drop, but may be months before they realise he has gone.

DASERVICES

I've had seven calls today, 2 I have taken on and the rest passed on to other window cleaners. Looks like the summer brigade have gone early.

d s windowcleaning

  • Posts: 2782
get yourself round south heindley mate the lad who was doing them as packed in . he was wfp aswell .

hi, just been to look around... has he told them he has left...as all gleaming , worth a leaflet drop, but may be months before they realise he has gone.
yes mate hes told them all he wont be going back .
where theres muck theres money

geefree

  • Posts: 6180
cheers dave, will go again... i take it you are too busy  ;)

d s windowcleaning

  • Posts: 2782
cheers dave, will go again... i take it you are too busy  ;)
yes mate ive got enough work good luck anyway with the flyers .
where theres muck theres money

geefree

  • Posts: 6180
Thank you. and thanks for the info, will let you know.  ;)

Paul Coleman

Just one regular domestic gained this week and a one off end of tenancy window clean for tomorrow.

A 6 weeker at £17.00

An end of tenancy clean at £30.00

Another end of tenancy clean at £100.00

geefree

  • Posts: 6180
cheers dave, will go again... i take it you are too busy  ;)
yes mate ive got enough work good luck anyway with the flyers .

dave, you dont have any street names where he worked do you, would save me loads of time, yjust off the top of your head.....you could email me.

Gazzasp8@aol.com
Thanks.

d s windowcleaning

  • Posts: 2782
gazza youve got mail .
where theres muck theres money

geefree

  • Posts: 6180
Hi, nothing come thru...

try

gazasp8@aol.com

was capital g. before

 :D

d s windowcleaning

  • Posts: 2782
sent again
where theres muck theres money

Dean Aspects

  • Posts: 1786
Dumped one today and took another one on at the same price so still the same
I dont seem to pick up so many now

AuRavelling79

  • Posts: 26831
Picked up a £25 monthly today and lost a £10 monthly by post.

I checked how things have gone since April and with no active canvassing on my part on the
domestic side.

On a monthly basis:-

Domestic side I've gained £255 and lost £54 = net gain £201.
Commercial I've gained £32 and lost £125 - net loss £ 93.

So over all pretty good I think. A gain of £108 per month.

Domestic gains are either recommends or people coming up to me in the street.
Commercial gain from knocking on doors for half an hour between jobs.

The Commercial loss was one property developer account (no surprise there!)
The Commercial gain was a haulage firm (a bit surprising there)

Domestic loss breakdown:-

£21 monthly  - stated as "credit crunch"
£10 monthly -  reason not specified but suspect "credit crunch"
£5.50 monthly -       as above "will do them himself"
£17.50 monthly - dropped by me (poor payer and dog issues)
It's a game of three halves!

geefree

  • Posts: 6180
Thanks dave, managed to get out and find a few, as it was just getting dark, dropped about 60 around the  area... will have another go another day, thanks for that  ;)

www.mrgutters.co.uk

  • Posts: 871
gained 42.00 house a 30.00 house a 30.00 art centre in the past 3 weeks

shawn
If a job's worth doing, it's worth doing well.

seandyer2003

A 6 weeker at £17.00

An end of tenancy clean at £30.00

Another end of tenancy clean at £100.00
The end of tenancy cleans...are they inside or cleaning windows??

davidpitts

In the past week I got 4 houses and one restaurant

Davo

  • Posts: 412
Interesting post from another part of this forum.





There was this elderly man who had a profitable little business selling hot dogs on a busy street corner in a major city. He wasn’t particularly well educated, but he sold great hot dogs and his customers loved him.

During the early morning rush hour, he’d wheel his mobile hot dog stand to position it near the exit of the central railway station in town. A year ago he’d added a bacon and egg roll to his range and sold scores of them to this breakfast crowd every day. At lunchtime, he’d move his stand to a popular park where he had lines of regulars.

In the afternoon he’d be back at the station entrance and then later most nights he knew a great spot near a nightclub where young patrons rushed him off his feet. He had even installed special lighting and a flashing neon sign. Even people driving by would stop.

He’d worked hard for years and done well enough to put his only son through university who later became an accountant with a large accounting firm.

One day his son warned him that a recession was on the way. The old man asked his son what this meant. Being an educated man his son gave a very detailed explanation of how the recession would severely impact everyone in the community, particularly small business people like his father. There would be enormous unemployment; people would not be able to afford to spend money as they did now. He painted a gloomy picture of the future and warned his father that it would be wise to cut back on his expenses and “tighten his belt” financially and prepare for the worst. The old man didn’t know much about the economy or interest rates, but he trusted his son. After all, he was an educated man. Recession mentality kicked in...

The old man began to cut back on the quantity of sausages and bread rolls he bought. He didn’t want to get caught with stale rolls as business began to drop off. But it was hard to judge and some days he actually ran out of sausages and rolls earlier than he normally would. So he went home early and spent more time worrying about this recession that was coming.

   Soon he knew that what his son had said was right. He noticed that his takings were indeed falling. This depressed him more and so he tended to get out of bed later each day. After all, why get to the station so early when obviously more people would be eating at home rather than spending money on breakfast in the city. He decided that his bacon
and egg rolls were too expensive for most people now. After all, they were twice the price of a hot dog, so he cut them from his menu and his sales continued to plummet.

Wow, his son was right, this recession was hitting hard!

He decided to save more money and not replace the batteries that powered his neon sign and lights at night. Now because he was in the dark, fewer people bought from him and soon he decided that it wasn’t even worth his time setting up at night. Eventually he decided to sell off his equipment and his trolley. He was in luck though because the young woman who bought his trolley didn’t seem to know how bad business was, or how severe the recession was going to be. He managed to unload the trolley for more than he thought he would get. Now day after day he stayed at home, depressed, and occasionally his son would visit him and they would discuss how bad the recession was, and how lucky the old man had been to have an educated son who had warned him in advance about this terrible recession.

So what’s the moral of this story?

Recession mentality starts in one’s own head. If you believe that a recession is coming and that times will soon be tough, then they will be for you. Like the old man in the story, you’ll start to change your successful behaviour patterns and replace them with less resourceful habits. You’ll sleep in later. You’ll take longer lunch breaks, make less phone calls and go home earlier.

But it needn’t be that way...


A 6 weeker at £17.00

An end of tenancy clean at £30.00

Another end of tenancy clean at £100.00
The end of tenancy cleans...are they inside or cleaning windows??

One is windows outside, the other windows inside and out, NOT hoovering/dusting and all that malarky!