
slowmotion
New member
Hey guys
So I'm doing more and more setups on guitars. There's also several places that'll do the same in my area for roughly the same dollars. I want to stand out from the rest, and so, my question is: how do you go "the extra mile"? Is there something you do as part of your standard setup that others might not (that you're willing to share?)
For my setups, currently, after checking what the clients needs and wants, I do the normal relief, action @ bridge and nut, intonation, electronics check and clean, fretboard clean, frets polished, body cleaned, tuners lubed, bridge cleaned, new strings fitted, strap buttons secured, all screws checked blah blah - what I'd consider "the basics". But I don't want to JUST do the basics, I want to provide a service that stands out. So I also do a couple of extra little things, like vacuuming out/deodorizing cases, or adding a touch of low strength locktite to output jacks. Of course I also provide a checklist and receipt of all the work performed. I also do follow up calls after a couple of days to ensure everything is still cool. But is there anything else I could do?
For the guys who don't actually DO the setups but get them done, what's the difference between a good experience and a bad one?
So I'm doing more and more setups on guitars. There's also several places that'll do the same in my area for roughly the same dollars. I want to stand out from the rest, and so, my question is: how do you go "the extra mile"? Is there something you do as part of your standard setup that others might not (that you're willing to share?)
For my setups, currently, after checking what the clients needs and wants, I do the normal relief, action @ bridge and nut, intonation, electronics check and clean, fretboard clean, frets polished, body cleaned, tuners lubed, bridge cleaned, new strings fitted, strap buttons secured, all screws checked blah blah - what I'd consider "the basics". But I don't want to JUST do the basics, I want to provide a service that stands out. So I also do a couple of extra little things, like vacuuming out/deodorizing cases, or adding a touch of low strength locktite to output jacks. Of course I also provide a checklist and receipt of all the work performed. I also do follow up calls after a couple of days to ensure everything is still cool. But is there anything else I could do?
For the guys who don't actually DO the setups but get them done, what's the difference between a good experience and a bad one?