7 Pieces of TRASH Advice EVERYONE gives you...

  Рет қаралды 9,127

Jennie and Davis

Jennie and Davis

Күн бұрын

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00:00 Intro
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Пікірлер: 21
@jeffklein602
@jeffklein602 4 ай бұрын
We limit options, but... for a substantial upcharge, we will bend the rule. Great video you guys. Thanks!
@raisinggrainwoodworking
@raisinggrainwoodworking 4 ай бұрын
The full quote is 'The customer is always right in matters of taste'. This means if you love the color yellow and you only make your dodads in yellow, but the bulk of the market loves purple, you won't sell much. If you switch to the color purple, you'll make a ton of money. It DOES NOT mean the customer should always get their way. Just because they said you had ran an ad for your product 50% off doesn't make them right. You know you've never discounted 50%, don't devalue your product to make them feel right.
@KimandGarrettmakeit
@KimandGarrettmakeit 4 ай бұрын
HAHAHA! This was great! Garrett agreed with Davis every time and Kim agreed with Jennie every time! Thanks Guys!
@HarleyPebley
@HarleyPebley 4 ай бұрын
0:57 A coworker frequently uses the quote "The customer is not always right, but they do need to be listened to." In other words, the solution they may be proposing may not be the right course but it's addressing an underlying problem they have. 9:40 The increasing goals of the business plan sounds like a "profit snowball". Kind of the inverse of Dave Ramsey's debt snowball.
@mpbc48
@mpbc48 4 ай бұрын
Jennie is correct and the adage should be written: "The customer is never wrong." You don't want to tell the customer he/she is wrong; you just use your sales acumen to convince/show them the better way.
@CoyoteRoseCreations
@CoyoteRoseCreations 4 ай бұрын
Customer is always right... its always situational, my day job is selling insurance... my customers are wrong... often... in woodworking I feel that we are the experts in safety, and in safety situations we must be right, the customer should always have input, but like in your example with the cutting board, "ooohhh you are right, a dark color would work well with your kitchen, let's use (insert a darker foodsafe wood) instead, this will give you the look you are looking at for years to come" or something similar
@kmbbmj5857
@kmbbmj5857 4 ай бұрын
When will we see some more shop videos building stuff?
@matthewbakke1623
@matthewbakke1623 4 ай бұрын
you can also call it direct vs indirect cost. to outsource the finishing of my woodwork cost about the same as me finishing it myself. one is cash and the other is time.
@benwolf9612
@benwolf9612 4 ай бұрын
Jennie and Davis, I have enjoyed watching your videos for years. Can I make one observation on this video? It looks like your camera may be on auto white balance. I noticed that when you hold up the cash or trash signs the video goes warmer and then when the cards comedown it goes cooler.
@Tables4Games
@Tables4Games 4 ай бұрын
I just wanted to say thank you for your channel and for what you two are doing. I took my part time woodworking business of several years full time this time last year in no small part to the advice I received on this channel. My first year was a great success and I am looking forward to growing more in my second year. Keep it up!
@ericthompson5704
@ericthompson5704 4 ай бұрын
The customer may “always be right”, but they might not always be correct.
@steelsunpi
@steelsunpi 4 ай бұрын
You can take feedback, but you can ignore it.
@JasonWheelerHanningtonAsh
@JasonWheelerHanningtonAsh 4 ай бұрын
This was excellent, thank you - I now basically agree with all you have said but wish I had thought this through before I started!! Colour requests particularly annoyed me until I showed a number of different woods rather than stained wood. Appreciate you sharing your experiences.
@dtacklind
@dtacklind 4 ай бұрын
In my experience the customer doesn't know what they want but they know what they don't want. I always give them three designs to choose from or else they will nit -pick.
@VinnysProjects
@VinnysProjects 4 ай бұрын
You looked at the outsourcing part the wrong way. Say there's a product you want to make that your customers are always asking for, but it takes a rather expensive piece of equipment to make (eg. large CNC, ...). You're not sure if you should make that investment if it turns out that only a handful of people are going to buy it. Outsource that product, or at least the main part, and do the finish part yourself. Once you have an idea of how well it will sell you'll know if it's worth buying that equipment or just continue to outsource it. I follow a guy in the printing industry, he's found that it's faster, cheaper and easier to outsource a particular product than buy the equipment needed (cost apx $50k) for the volume it would bring in. There's more to it than that but that's the simplified version.
@kerrytoby7041
@kerrytoby7041 4 ай бұрын
Occasionally ( not very often) the customer is wrong. Rarely are they VERY wrong but it does happen and it's just best they leave.
@burnu2240
@burnu2240 4 ай бұрын
i love you guys and big respects for your service (Australia), Davis shave the head for 2024 mate, you'll love it
@jerry.goodman
@jerry.goodman 4 ай бұрын
Another great video. You guys are awesome. Your energy and enthusiasm make for entertaining viewing. I see a lot of your videos are aimed at helping out beginning / aspiring business owners. What about some content towards people that want to dabble in woodworking but don't want another full time job? I have ideas and wouldn't mind putting some effort into a hobby but I don't want to start a business as I'm closing in on retirement (retired USAF & I'm about 10 years away from full retirement). Keep up the great work.
@user-dn2rp7de3e
@user-dn2rp7de3e 3 күн бұрын
Shoukd i let the vendor shop owner tell me how to run my booth?
@jaytrent62
@jaytrent62 4 ай бұрын
1. you could tea stain a board
@10001gunner
@10001gunner 21 күн бұрын
?$ 425,000 To $500,000....in a lagitimat buzines..you probably made $75 k to maybe $85 k...pending price points.......Hmm,
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