Hi ladies and gents,
Just thought I'd give you a laugh.
As some of you are aware, I'm currently the owner of a newsagent's shop out in the sticks in Italy. Very long story, but I didn't want to close an 80-year old business if I didn't have to. It was never part of the plan and I intend to come back to the UK as soon as reasonably practicable. Bit fed up with working 6+ day weeks without holidays to earn €2,000 a year, so yes, I will close it!
Anyway, today a customer came in, my aunt served him and he left and later came back to complain we'd charged him ("and I'm a customer, not a tourist", he said) €2,00 for receiving and printing an email [what he doesn't realise is that it is the tourists that make the public service aspect for the locals possible]. I'm more diplomatic than my aunt, and I'm (supposedly) the boss so I handled it. Since I'm a newsagent, stationer, and bookseller, with 'FAX SERVICE' on the door and not a fishmonger, I thought it was obvious that this was a service I provide and would charge for. Still, I bit my tongue and said, if you feel it's excessive, here, have the money back. Instead, he finished his rant without giving me a word in edgeways and walked out implying that we would lose his custom (he spends around €20 a month on which we earn €4).
Given that the other newagent will have far less patience for him than I have (I think he has Asperger's to be honest and we make allowances), I left a letter for him at the grocer's:
[translated] Good evening ----,
You left without giving me the chance to speak.
Firstly, I was left quite unhappy that you are unhappy that I made you pay €2 for the receipt and printing of an email. My aunt is clearly not at fault here as she was simply following the price list, as is her job. If, however, I wasn't clear with you and you had the impression this was supposed to a favour, then you should not have been charged.
Regarding the cost, I'd like to charge less, but running this shop is the worst paid job I have ever had and I think I'll have to close it in the next few months. As I suspect is public knowledge, for every Euro taken at the till for newspapers and magazines, we earn almost twenty cents (less, if one considers the delivery charges). In practice, every year, I have to find €25,000 just to open the doors in a legal manner (for various overheads, including the business phone line I pay for in order to have internet). My father, being a pensioner, had a discount on Italian NICs [half the €4000 I have to pay... ouch], and he had many other sources of income, and even he intended to close last December [ ... ].
True, €2,00 (the minumum charge for up to 13 pages of black and white) seems a lot to me as well, but, when I started this service last summer at a lower price (a service my father refused to offer as he felt it wasted too much time), even customers were complaining I was under-charging. In the end, I did the maths, considered the time involved (and the fact that computers can be diabolical work partners, hence I do not always succeed in getting a printout to come out correctly at the first attempt) and €2,00 seemed a fair price: a price other good customers pay willingly. When I think about it, the hairdresser charges me €1 a minute (and I'm her relative as well as her customer), but I pay this price in order to retain this service in the village. [The next village is 5 miles away.]
This does not take away the fact that if this was supposed to be a favour, it shouldn't have been paid. This is what upsets me, not losing your custom. And if you want a refund, the offer is still valid.
Kind regards [ ... ]
My aunt said I'd taken the words from her mouth... and could she sign it too. I mean, generally customers do pay. That's why they are customers. We both agreed that if the silly sod had said he wanted a favour and didn't want to pay us we would have done it for free, once, anyway. Perhaps when the forum member that was looking for his free plumber finds him, he can ask him where the free copy shop is.
Nice to know you find them in every trade!
Take care,
R
Just thought I'd give you a laugh.
As some of you are aware, I'm currently the owner of a newsagent's shop out in the sticks in Italy. Very long story, but I didn't want to close an 80-year old business if I didn't have to. It was never part of the plan and I intend to come back to the UK as soon as reasonably practicable. Bit fed up with working 6+ day weeks without holidays to earn €2,000 a year, so yes, I will close it!
Anyway, today a customer came in, my aunt served him and he left and later came back to complain we'd charged him ("and I'm a customer, not a tourist", he said) €2,00 for receiving and printing an email [what he doesn't realise is that it is the tourists that make the public service aspect for the locals possible]. I'm more diplomatic than my aunt, and I'm (supposedly) the boss so I handled it. Since I'm a newsagent, stationer, and bookseller, with 'FAX SERVICE' on the door and not a fishmonger, I thought it was obvious that this was a service I provide and would charge for. Still, I bit my tongue and said, if you feel it's excessive, here, have the money back. Instead, he finished his rant without giving me a word in edgeways and walked out implying that we would lose his custom (he spends around €20 a month on which we earn €4).
Given that the other newagent will have far less patience for him than I have (I think he has Asperger's to be honest and we make allowances), I left a letter for him at the grocer's:
[translated] Good evening ----,
You left without giving me the chance to speak.
Firstly, I was left quite unhappy that you are unhappy that I made you pay €2 for the receipt and printing of an email. My aunt is clearly not at fault here as she was simply following the price list, as is her job. If, however, I wasn't clear with you and you had the impression this was supposed to a favour, then you should not have been charged.
Regarding the cost, I'd like to charge less, but running this shop is the worst paid job I have ever had and I think I'll have to close it in the next few months. As I suspect is public knowledge, for every Euro taken at the till for newspapers and magazines, we earn almost twenty cents (less, if one considers the delivery charges). In practice, every year, I have to find €25,000 just to open the doors in a legal manner (for various overheads, including the business phone line I pay for in order to have internet). My father, being a pensioner, had a discount on Italian NICs [half the €4000 I have to pay... ouch], and he had many other sources of income, and even he intended to close last December [ ... ].
True, €2,00 (the minumum charge for up to 13 pages of black and white) seems a lot to me as well, but, when I started this service last summer at a lower price (a service my father refused to offer as he felt it wasted too much time), even customers were complaining I was under-charging. In the end, I did the maths, considered the time involved (and the fact that computers can be diabolical work partners, hence I do not always succeed in getting a printout to come out correctly at the first attempt) and €2,00 seemed a fair price: a price other good customers pay willingly. When I think about it, the hairdresser charges me €1 a minute (and I'm her relative as well as her customer), but I pay this price in order to retain this service in the village. [The next village is 5 miles away.]
This does not take away the fact that if this was supposed to be a favour, it shouldn't have been paid. This is what upsets me, not losing your custom. And if you want a refund, the offer is still valid.
Kind regards [ ... ]
My aunt said I'd taken the words from her mouth... and could she sign it too. I mean, generally customers do pay. That's why they are customers. We both agreed that if the silly sod had said he wanted a favour and didn't want to pay us we would have done it for free, once, anyway. Perhaps when the forum member that was looking for his free plumber finds him, he can ask him where the free copy shop is.
Nice to know you find them in every trade!
Take care,
R