Just a comment.
As a "newbie", I KNOW that I need advice. I ask questions of the LFS folks - and I don't go back to the stores that have dirty tanks that seem overcrowded (If I think it's overcrowded - it's really overcrowded!). A problem that I run into is that if I ask a question I get one answer. I might ask the same question to another employee at that same store. And I get a different answer - sometimes very different.
Now what should I do? I get a book - I get on the net, and ask more questions - and still get a variety of answers. If there seems to be one reply that is popular - that's what I go with. Call me stupid - but I am trying.
As far as the business - I can reply to that. My family has owned a business for over 30 years. No, not a fish store - but a private business none the less. And customers can be difficult - that doesn't change because of the product. (Personally worked for 12 years as a technical consultant for a medical company helping people who had big time problems that ran into the hundreds of thousands of dollars)
The thing that sets a business apart from the competition is the service. Current technology is so advanced that many of the products are of similar quality and functionality - so the only thing to make a business unique is the service provided.
Employees with a know-it-all attitude doesn't help, and doesn't bring people (and their money) back. Everyone has run into that, whether it be at a computer store, stereo shop, or the receptionist at the doctor's office. Some folks think that because they "work" at a type of store - they should be
thought of as THE authority in that business. SOME people that work at Best Buy feel they should be treated as if they were Bill Gates, music store employees think they are rock-stars, salon employees have the most unique hair/make-up, and the secretary at the doctor's office diagnosis the patient. And SOME folks that work at the LFS think they are Jacques Custeau.
But not everyone is like that - as a consumer it is your job to be informed and use common sense. Find the store that has what you want, what you need - has top notch service, and then price. If you think about it, that goes for just about everything you buy - food, clothes, cars, and hopefully pets.
This has gotten much longer than intended - I wish you were at a LFS near me, but you may want to cut SOME of your customers a break. It might be that, because they are "newbies" they haven't even learned what questions to ask yet!!! Even though you are very busy - and sounds like you have more than your hands full - try to think of customers as individuals. They are not all alike either.
Thank You for caring about your product. Bet you keep a great department. Keep up the good work.
When I didn't think I could handle one more ignorant, raving customer who had caused their own problem - I tried to remember "If I teach one person something useful today, all the rest of it was worth it." Difficult, but helpful.
As a "newbie", I KNOW that I need advice. I ask questions of the LFS folks - and I don't go back to the stores that have dirty tanks that seem overcrowded (If I think it's overcrowded - it's really overcrowded!). A problem that I run into is that if I ask a question I get one answer. I might ask the same question to another employee at that same store. And I get a different answer - sometimes very different.
Now what should I do? I get a book - I get on the net, and ask more questions - and still get a variety of answers. If there seems to be one reply that is popular - that's what I go with. Call me stupid - but I am trying.
As far as the business - I can reply to that. My family has owned a business for over 30 years. No, not a fish store - but a private business none the less. And customers can be difficult - that doesn't change because of the product. (Personally worked for 12 years as a technical consultant for a medical company helping people who had big time problems that ran into the hundreds of thousands of dollars)
The thing that sets a business apart from the competition is the service. Current technology is so advanced that many of the products are of similar quality and functionality - so the only thing to make a business unique is the service provided.
Employees with a know-it-all attitude doesn't help, and doesn't bring people (and their money) back. Everyone has run into that, whether it be at a computer store, stereo shop, or the receptionist at the doctor's office. Some folks think that because they "work" at a type of store - they should be
thought of as THE authority in that business. SOME people that work at Best Buy feel they should be treated as if they were Bill Gates, music store employees think they are rock-stars, salon employees have the most unique hair/make-up, and the secretary at the doctor's office diagnosis the patient. And SOME folks that work at the LFS think they are Jacques Custeau.
But not everyone is like that - as a consumer it is your job to be informed and use common sense. Find the store that has what you want, what you need - has top notch service, and then price. If you think about it, that goes for just about everything you buy - food, clothes, cars, and hopefully pets.
This has gotten much longer than intended - I wish you were at a LFS near me, but you may want to cut SOME of your customers a break. It might be that, because they are "newbies" they haven't even learned what questions to ask yet!!! Even though you are very busy - and sounds like you have more than your hands full - try to think of customers as individuals. They are not all alike either.
Thank You for caring about your product. Bet you keep a great department. Keep up the good work.
When I didn't think I could handle one more ignorant, raving customer who had caused their own problem - I tried to remember "If I teach one person something useful today, all the rest of it was worth it." Difficult, but helpful.