I think its a great idea to do it and stick to it. When I am doing my end of year paperwork and tax stuff I think as to the mistakes that were made and what can be done to improve on the upcoming year. Last year I made some vows and stuck to them and I gotta say they worked out great. Some of the largest issues I have is dealing with dead end clients. I decided to no longer entertain these type of clients if they ever called the shop again.They called and I did not deal with them. I turned them over to someone else or just ignored them
I also vowed NO MORE RUSH JOBS. This was a couple years back I did this. The only way I will do rush is if I have the materials in hand and I have nothing else to do and they pay promptly. I have stuck by this also and it has really helped.
Last vow also a couple years ago, no more small BS projects for friends. They always lead to nothing but a freakin headache and a waste of time. If I could only go back 20 years ago and implemet these rules that would have saved me a lot of grief
Every year should start out with new goals and rules. Good luck and when you make the rules stick to them
I think he was asking about employee reviews.
Can't agree more with your take on "clients" in their various form.
Apparently we are '
sign shop' men.
The word "rush" makes me bristle.
We plan jobs weeks ahead.
My
sign shop didn't even have a
sign.
25 to 30 employees, two 80 foot, one 65 foot boom trucks, 35,000 sqft electricity sucking shop
on an acre and a half, $20,000 + / week payroll plus taxes, etc. Materials extra.
Pull your hair out kinda stuff.
No walk ins.
We never did retail,
Nothing without a contract.
But, a few times, every so often, a couple 'C' notes.
Thanks for dinner out.
Can't be that gruff day-to-day, but, Ooooh it feels good to vent to like minded fellows.
I feel what you are saying.
Now I go surf fishing every other day.
Long range, (8 to 12 days), every season.