jrannis
Senior Member
- Location
- Fort Lauderdale/ Miami
ceknight said:Those are all transactions where you get the goods at the end of the transaction.
Have you ever gone to McDonald's, had them ask for money and tell you to show up tomorrow and they'll give you your DeathBurger at Window 2? Have you ever bought a car from a dealership that told you to pay cash now, and they'll show up in your driveway with the car next week? Have you bought any houses where you signed all the papers and had to pay cash for it a week before you get the house keys? If you want your counterexamples to be relevant, you need to make them analogous...
My general point is that the materials don't belong to the customer until you're at least on site with them and prepared to let them assume ownership. I don't expect a customer to pay for materials before I've installed them. What happens to those materials before then is a risk I take as a businessperson -- the customer does eventually pay for that risk, it's passed along as markup. But between the shop and the customer's building it's my risk.
Expecting a customer to absolve you of the legitimate up-front risks of running a business is, to me, outlandish. But then I don't share the profits I reap from taking those risks with my customers, either.
I'll only add one more thing: What is the difference, in principle, between (a) showing up at a job, getting a check before you unload the van, and then starting work, and (b) showing up at a job, starting work, and getting a check at the end of the day? Would you consider one to be non-banking, and the other to be banking? Either way you're on site with an un-cashed check, only in one case it's a "deposit" and in the other it's a "progress payment." You've still charged the goods on your shop account, and you haven't got the money in the bank yet.
I see the only real difference as one of perception -- in one case the customer perceives you as either (or both) needing money and not trusting them, in the other the customer perceives you as trusting them and operating a business that isn't hand-to-mouth. That's how I see it, and it's my business model to form lasting, trusting relationships with my customers. I especially don't want them perceiving me as needy.
Your mileage may certainly vary.![]()
I dont know if I would start a normal job without a deposit. If you are doing small 5k or 10k jobs you dont have much risk I guess.