Every tradie has had a difficult customer conversation. The kind where someone says something that gets your back up, and your first instinct is to get defensive or walk away.
But here's the thing most of the time, what a customer says and what they actually mean are two very different things. They're not tradies. They don't know how to articulate what's really bothering them. So it comes out sideways.
The tradies who handle these moments well aren't the ones who are best at arguing. They're the ones who can hear what's underneath the complaint and respond to that instead.
Here are four of the most common ones, and what's really going on.
THE CUSTOMER SAYS
"You're price is too high. I've got another quote that's cheaper than yours"
WHAT THEY REALLY MEAN
I'm not a tradie, and I don't have the knowledge to evaluate these quotes properly. You haven't given me a clear enough reason to justify the difference in price so right now, cheaper looks like the smarter choice.
THE CUSTOMER SAYS
"Are you sure you can do this job for me?"
WHAT THEY REALLY MEAN
I don't know you. I'm about to hand over real money and let a stranger into my home. I need to feel confident that you've done this before and know exactly what you're doing and right now I'm not there yet.
THE CUSTOMER SAYS
"I've looked on Google at other jobs, and mine doesn't look like that. Are you ripping me off?"
WHAT THEY REALLY MEAN
I'm trying my best to understand something I know nothing about. I went looking online because I wanted to make sure I was getting the right thing. What I actually need right now is for you to sit down with me, explain what you've done and why, and help me understand it properly. I'm not trying to catch you out I just need to feel sure.
THE CUSTOMER SAYS
"You're running late and you didn't let me know. That's unprofessional."
WHAT THEY REALLY MEAN
This job matters a lot to me. I've rearranged my day around it, I'm spending money I've thought carefully about, and I need to know I made the right decision hiring you. When you don't communicate, I start to worry I didn't.
The Pattern Behind All of These
Look at those four scenarios again. They're all different on the surface pricing, competence, punctuality, quality. But underneath every single one, the same thing is going on.
This is worth sitting with, because it changes how you respond to difficult conversations. If a complaint is really just uncertainty in disguise, then arguing back or getting defensive makes it worse. You're not addressing what's actually going on.
What actually works is stepping back, listening properly, and figuring out what the customer needs to feel certain. Sometimes that's information. Sometimes it's reassurance. Sometimes it's just five minutes of your time to walk them through what you've done.
What this Means for Your Business
Most disputes don't start on site. They start earlier in a quote that didn't explain enough, a phone call that felt rushed, or a job that was finished without anyone taking five minutes to walk the customer through the outcome.
The tradies who get referrals, repeat business, and five-star reviews aren't the ones who never have difficult conversations. They're the ones who handle those conversations well because they've learned to hear what's really being said.
That's a skill. And like most skills, it gets better with practice.
Start by assuming that every complaint has a legitimate feeling behind it, even if the words aren't quite right. Respond to the feeling, not just the words. You'll be surprised how quickly the conversation changes.
