(01-24-2018, 05:59 AM)BPman Wrote: The $64,000 question I have for the vendors posting/reading in this thread is simply that if they could go back to the day that they made the decision to leap into this field would they change their mind based upon what they know now?
Not at all. Although when Mandy and I started this it was as a hobby to keep us from laying around watching TV at night. When we did decide to go full time I had a 4th trip to a war zone staring me in the face which meant another year away from Mandy (and missing the 1st year of our son's life). So, I am very happy that Stirling took off when it did. There are times I get frustrated and want to throw in the towel. There are definitely times I want to try another business and find something that would be more profitable.
It's a ton of work for not a ton of pay, but 90% of the time I really enjoy it. But the sad fact of this is that not every customer is as wonderful ( and I mean that with all seriousness) as you folks are. I'm sure this will come across as rude, mean, elitist, or ungrateful, but there are some customers that I've had that I wish I didn't. I've used this analogy before somewhere, but indulge me if you will. How many people do you come across in a day, week, month, year that are just plain jerks? I'm not talking about acquaintances that you argue with or people you have political differences with. I mean people that are just miserable jerks who make life worse just being around them. They may not be friends, family, or work associates. It may just be some nimrod in the parking lot of a restaurant or some witch at an airport. We've all run into people like this. Some of those people are wetshavers. And when you voluntarily interact with the public (aka your consumers) as a business owner in wetshaving, you are giving people carte blanche (in their minds, at least) to speak to you and treat you in any manner they see fit. Both publicly and privately. Sometimes you have to just step away for awhile and reset and force yourself to remember that the overwhelming majority of people that you meet in this business are good people who want your business to succeed.
I've had the opportunity to travel and meet hundreds of wetshavers in person and they were nearly all fantastic people that I hope to see again at some point. The vocal minority can really make life difficult some times though. The solution I've been given from others before is to hire someone to take over customer service for me and pay them to deal with it. Sounds good sometimes, but it won't work at this point. I can't give an hourly wage customer service employee years of knowledge on shaving and soap. That 's not the main issue though. People want to talk to me and Mandy when they contact Stirling. I like that and I think customers like that I respond to every email and either Mandy or I pick up the phone when you call us. It's fosters a connection.
Anyway, sorry for the rant. I could honestly go on for 20 pages about this. Perhaps some day I'll write a book about the shave soap game.