Re: Independent Service
When I started in 94. I went door to door handing out flyers. Your lack of money (no insult) will make things much tougher. I lived off my savings for about a year and a half before people started calling. I focused on the service side instead of sales. All that matters is getting your foot in the door. Granted sales gets you there faster but service will work if you can wait it out. Eventually if they like your service you will get a sale. You need a good website and rank highly on the search engines. If you're on page 10 your website will be useless. Back in the day I made sure I had a good yellow pages ad now it's the internet. Make sure you offer competitive service rates. I charged a very competitive hourly rates way back when. The service plans for the copiers or printers is the goal. It makes things much easier for you and the customer. However you will have some customers that will never get a plan. I have many that are charge but are loyal. I touted my low overhead which allowed me to offer good pricing and not having to call a 800 number to get service.
A few final thoughts. Make sure you have a couple of loaner machines. Nothing worse than having a customer down for a week because you don't have the part. If you have machines to sell and loan you need a way to move machines so you will require a trailer of some sort. I would stay away from rentals unless they are short term. They are not worth the effort. Also there are new machines and leasing companies if you want to go that route. You will need to be more established before you can offer leasing. The leasing companies will expect you to have a solid financial situation.
Good luck.
When I started in 94. I went door to door handing out flyers. Your lack of money (no insult) will make things much tougher. I lived off my savings for about a year and a half before people started calling. I focused on the service side instead of sales. All that matters is getting your foot in the door. Granted sales gets you there faster but service will work if you can wait it out. Eventually if they like your service you will get a sale. You need a good website and rank highly on the search engines. If you're on page 10 your website will be useless. Back in the day I made sure I had a good yellow pages ad now it's the internet. Make sure you offer competitive service rates. I charged a very competitive hourly rates way back when. The service plans for the copiers or printers is the goal. It makes things much easier for you and the customer. However you will have some customers that will never get a plan. I have many that are charge but are loyal. I touted my low overhead which allowed me to offer good pricing and not having to call a 800 number to get service.
A few final thoughts. Make sure you have a couple of loaner machines. Nothing worse than having a customer down for a week because you don't have the part. If you have machines to sell and loan you need a way to move machines so you will require a trailer of some sort. I would stay away from rentals unless they are short term. They are not worth the effort. Also there are new machines and leasing companies if you want to go that route. You will need to be more established before you can offer leasing. The leasing companies will expect you to have a solid financial situation.
Good luck.
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