articlehaul.com articlehaul.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
Add Your Link
 

Self Help

Healthcare & Medicine

Education & Learning

Travel & Accommodation

Online Shopping

Adventure & Sports

Drink & Food

Research & Science

Finance & Investment

Careers & Employment

News & Media

Relationship & Lifestyle

Health & Hygiene

Family & Home

Recreation & Entertainment

Vehicles & Automotive

Art & Culture

Computers & Networking

Politics & Government

Property & Estate

Teens & Kids

Indoor Games

People & Communities

Companies & Business


 

Index Page –› Self Help –› Positive Attitude Skills
 

Cleaned Up or Cleaned Out?

 

I need your help. I did a good deed recently, but I was gripped by second thoughts. I want to know if you think I should have done this. Here is what happened:

In preparing our condo for sale, we had already moved most of the furniture out and I called Sears to clean the carpets in the living room, bedroom and den. Sears Lady took my name and address, we set a date (not THAT kind of date!) and she said that Mr. carpet Cleaner would call me to set up a time. Which he did. And then he confirmed. And then he came.

Mr. Carpet Cleaner (not his real name) was pleasant, but quiet, and went about his business. When he was done, I had planned to give him a ten dollar tip. Don't salivate too much - these are just Canadian dollars. But on a $69.95 job, ten dollars is a nice tip, especially since I was sure that Mr. Carpet Cleaner did not make all of that $69.95.

After completing the paperwork, Mr. Carpet Cleaner handed me the invoice to sign. I glanced at it and noticed a ten dollar "unscheduled cleaning" fee. I asked him about this, and he told me it was because the price I had been quoted was based on three rooms, but that he cleaned four, including the dining room.

Dining room? What dining room? We don't have a dining room. Well, actually we do, he pointed out. The living room wall is four inches indented (that's right, a whole four inches) at the pass-through window from the kitchen, making it a dining room. Now I have never before seen a four-inch wide dining room, especially since the whole condo living room (including our newly discovered dining room) was no bigger than a typical living room in a modest house. And it was less work to clean than most because we had already moved all the furniture to our new house (with a much bigger living room, but still no dining room - maybe I should invite Mr. Carpet Cleaner over to find me one).

I hesitated, with all my alarms wailing like sirens. I am just winding down a decade-and-a-half career as a consumer advocate. My job has been to battle greedy corporations and sanity-starved governments in the name of consumer protection. Grrrr.

I signed the invoice handed it back to Mr. Carpet Cleaner, paid the fee, and gave him that ten dollar tip just as I had planned. I figured he was loyally following corporate policy, and if I had a tangle it was with Sears, not with Mr. Carpet Cleaner. He still was probably not making that much.

When I handed him the tip his eyes lit up. I told him I figured he wasn't getting rich on me. He quickly told me he would be making $14 from the visit, so I had almost doubled his income. Plus he had to provide his own vehicle and pay the gas, and he had to invest in his own cleaning equipment and soap. Which means I paid Sears the remaining $55.95 - oops, I mean $65.95 - just so that Sears Lady and I could set a date. If the economics sound a bit like the escort business, we can leave that for another column.

So did I do the right thing? Did I do a good deed or was I just a floor mat for a greedy corporation? Of course, I want to believe it was a good deed, foot prints on my back would clash with my limited fashion sense. But do I need a reality check? Please let me know at David@TheHappyGuy.com

Author: David Leonhardt
 
Author Bio:

David Leonhardt

David Leonhardt is a website marketing specialist and an SEO consultant. He also publishes A Daily Dose of Happiness and is author of Climb Your Stairway to Heaven: The 9 Habits of Maximum Happiness. Prior to his online career, he was one of the best-known consumer advocates in Canada.

This article can be searched using: positive attitude, positive ownership attitude, positive attitude quotes
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How To Deal With People Who Dislike You
 
Reach Your Goals - Start A Round Robin
 
Motivation: The Power of Vision
 
Enhance Your Creativity
 
Getting Organized for Achievement
 
Overwhelmed? Try the Red Zone Tactic
 
Quality Leadership
 
You Can't See Your Own Eyes
 
Top Five Journal Exercises
 
Potential
 
 
 
 
 

Top 15 Goals Quotations

Examine your own personal goals and find methods to achieve your desires with these valuable quotati ... - Danielle Hollister
 

Managing Monsters in Meetings - Part 5, Dominant Participants

The strongest contributors in your meetings can also prevent others from participating. Here's how t ... - Steve Kaye
 

Valuable Lessons: Past and Present

Rough times are some of life's most generous teachers. When viewed from a wide perspective, these di ... - Steve Brunkhorst
 
 

Firewords: A Dangerous Necessity in Your Life?

The old wild days of entrepreneurship. - Graham Harris and Julie Harris
 

Ensuring Effective Teamwork in Organization

This article will provide brief overview about the process of ensuring effective teamwork that inclu ... - Verena Veneeva
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehaul.com All Rights Reserved.