On the Job
Deliver consistently excellent service that earns repeat business and referrals.
What Customers Actually Want
Customers want three things:
- Quality work (the job done well)
- Reliability (show up when you say you will)
- Pleasant experience (easy to work with)
Notice that "cheapest price" isn't on the list. Most customers will pay more for someone who delivers all three.
Your goal on every job is to nail all three. Consistently.
Before You Arrive
Confirm the Appointment
The day before (or morning of), send a quick confirmation:
"Hi John, just confirming I'll be there tomorrow at 10am for the lawn service. See you then!"
This:
- Reduces no-shows
- Shows professionalism
- Gives them a chance to reschedule if needed
Know What You're Walking Into
Review the job details before you arrive:
- What service?
- Any special requests or notes?
- Gate codes or access instructions?
- History with this customer?
Have Everything You Need
Check your equipment and supplies. Nothing kills efficiency like realizing you forgot something.
Quick checklist before leaving:
- Equipment for this job type
- Fuel/charged batteries
- Invoice/payment capability
- Business cards
- Water and snacks for yourself
Arriving at the Job
Timing
Arrive on time or early. Not 15 minutes late with an excuse.
- 5 minutes early: Perfect
- On time: Good
- 5 minutes late: Acceptable (text if possible)
- 10+ minutes late: Apologize
Being consistently on time builds enormous trust.
First Impression
The customer's impression forms in the first 30 seconds:
- Clean, presentable appearance (work clothes are fine, but clean)
- Friendly greeting ("Good morning! I'm here for the lawn service.")
- Confident body language (smile, eye contact, firm handshake if offered)
Confirm the Scope
Before starting, confirm what you're doing:
"Just to make sure we're on the same page—today I'm doing the mow, trim, edge, and blow. Anything else you want me to look at?"
This prevents misunderstandings and opens the door for add-on services.
Documentation
Before Photos
Take photos before starting work. Every time.
Why:
- Shows the starting condition
- Protects you if something was already damaged
- Creates great before/after content
What to capture:
- Overall view of the area
- Any existing damage or issues
- Problem areas you're addressing
During Work
Occasionally document:
- Unusual conditions you discover
- Damage that was hidden (under debris, etc.)
- Quality of your work in progress
After Photos
Take photos when you finish:
- Overall view showing completed work
- Specific areas that look great
- Comparison angle to your before shots
Organizing Photos
Use a system to keep photos organized:
- Create folders by date or customer
- Cloud backup (Google Photos auto-uploads)
- Tag or name photos so you can find them
This documentation protects you and provides marketing content.
Doing the Work
Quality Standards
Define what "done" looks like for your services and hit that standard every time.
Lawn care example:
- All grass cut to consistent height
- Edges crisp along sidewalks and beds
- Trimming complete around obstacles
- Clippings blown off hard surfaces
- Trash picked up and disposed of
Cleaning example:
- All surfaces dusted and wiped
- Floors vacuumed and mopped
- Bathrooms sanitized and shining
- Kitchen appliances cleaned inside and out
- No streaks on glass/mirrors
The "Would I Pay For This?" Test
Before calling a job complete, look at it with fresh eyes.
Would you be happy paying for this result?
If yes, you're done. If no, fix what's bothering you.
Efficiency Without Rushing
Fast is good. Sloppy is not.
How to be faster:
- Systematic approach (same sequence every time)
- Proper equipment (right tool for the job)
- No wasted movement
- Don't redo work (do it right the first time)
Signs you're rushing:
- Missing spots
- Leaving debris behind
- Cutting corners
- Feeling frantic
Find the balance. Efficient and thorough.
Interacting with Customers
When They're Home
Many customers will be home during your service. Some will chat. Some will hover. Some will ignore you.
The chatty customer:
- Be friendly but don't let conversation kill your productivity
- "I should probably get back to it so I can finish up for you!"
The hovering customer:
- They're probably anxious about quality
- Explain what you're doing as you go
- Invite questions
- Do excellent work and they'll relax
The absent customer:
- Same quality whether they're watching or not
- Leave a note or text when done
- Communicate any issues you encountered
Communication During the Job
If you discover something unexpected:
- Stop and communicate immediately
- Don't proceed with major changes without approval
"Hey John, while I was mowing I noticed your back fence has a broken section. Did you want me to skip that area, or can I carefully work around it?"
Asking for the Upsell
If you notice something else that needs attention:
"While I'm here, I noticed your gutters are pretty full. I can clean those out for $75 if you want. Might save you a ladder climb."
Not pushy—just helpful. Many customers appreciate the proactive offer.
Finishing the Job
The Final Walk-Through
If the customer is available, walk them through the completed work:
"Here's what I did today—mowed everything, trimmed around the trees and beds, edged the sidewalk and driveway, and blew all the clippings off. Everything look good?"
This:
- Shows them the value they received
- Gives them a chance to catch anything you missed
- Opens the door for positive feedback
Clean Up
Leave the property cleaner than you found it:
- Pick up any debris
- Return anything you moved
- Close gates you opened
- Clean up any messes from your work
Never leave a customer wondering "did they forget to clean up?"
Collect Payment
If collecting payment on-site:
"All done! That's $55 for today. Cash, card, or I can text you a quick invoice?"
Get paid before you leave when possible.
With Home Guild Pro, you can send the invoice in 30 seconds and they can pay from their phone while you're standing there. Easy for everyone.
Confirm Next Service
For recurring customers:
"Same time next week work for you?"
For one-time customers:
"This should stay looking good for about a year. I can put you on my list to reach out when it's time again if you'd like."
Ask for Referral/Review
We covered this in Module 4, but here's the reminder:
"If you're happy with the work, I'd really appreciate a Google review. And if you know anyone else who needs lawn care, I'd love the referral."
Consistency Is Everything
The goal isn't to deliver amazing service once. It's to deliver the same solid service every single time.
Consistency means:
- Same quality every visit
- Same time every appointment
- Same professionalism every interaction
- Same process every job
Customers don't want surprises. They want to know exactly what they're getting.
Building Systems for Consistency
Job Checklists
Create simple checklists for each service type:
Lawn mowing checklist:
- Before photos taken
- Mow all lawn areas
- Trim around obstacles
- Edge sidewalks and driveway
- Blow off hard surfaces
- Pick up trash/debris
- After photos taken
- Customer notified/walkthrough
- Payment collected or invoiced
Use this every time until it's automatic.
Standard Operating Procedures
Document how you do each service. Include:
- Equipment needed
- Step-by-step process
- Quality standards
- Time estimate
This helps you stay consistent and makes training easier when you eventually hire help.
Action Steps
- Create a job checklist for your main service
- Set up your photo system (before/after, organized storage)
- Practice your arrival routine (greeting, scope confirmation)
- Define your quality standard (what does "done" look like?)
- Develop your closing routine (walkthrough, payment, referral ask)
- Review your last 5 jobs for consistency improvements
Next lesson: How to handle complaints, mistakes, and difficult situations professionally.