American Farriers Journal
American Farriers Journal is the “hands-on” magazine for professional farriers, equine veterinarians and horse care product and service buyers.
Dear Frank Lessiter,
I am the wife of an AFA Certified Farrier who is a ”good old country boy.” He lets customers eat him alive and is unaware if the customer doesn’t respect him.
If I point out the problem to him, he’s unable to tell the customer what he requires. I spend a lot of time developing easy ways that a guy can continue to be a ”good old country boy” and still get the respect he deserves.
I’ve developed a system that will help farriers attract and maintain a good client base, especially in their first 10 shoeing years. It will also help them avoid situations that cause hurt feelings when a customer is ignorant or lacks respect.
—Jeannie Hamilton
I’ve been working on a system that will:
1 Reward regular customers.
2 Charge irregular customers more (like last year’s customers who suddenly show up in the spring).
3 Give you time to handle emergencies.
4 Help you get rid of customers that are irregular and want cheap prices.
5 Give you time to handle new customers and replace them.
6 Not require you to remember how much to charge a customer based on whether they’ve been a good customer.
7 Get something for time spent on the phone.
8 Penalize customers that miss or cancel appointments without seeming rude.
9 Show your customers what they would have to do to get charged less, and leave it up to them as to whether that’s something…