Valuing ourselves
David Andersen
david at davidandersenpianos.com
Wed Feb 13 09:14:24 MST 2008
I've been an acolyte of Ed Foote in the business realm for about 10
years because he KNOWS what he's worth, and raises his rates EVERY
SINGLE TIME he needs to, usually every 18 months. He's been in the
top 1/2 of 1% of earners in this craft for 30 years.
Let me ask you some questions:
1. Are you proud of your craft?
2. Do you think it takes as much focus and skill to function in the
high end of the pianotech world
as it does to function as a technician in the high end of home/small
business computers?
3. Do you think you're going to live forever?
4. Do you want to work with and deal with a**h**les on a daily basis?
If you sincerely and truthfully answered yes, yes, no, and no, then
GO TO THE HIGH END AND STAY THERE. Really. Quit bitching and
complaining about competition and taxes and driving and cheap
clients, and not enough money to go to conventions. If you're a
highly trained, honest, professional craftsperson and you're not
making $2,000 a week, it's you---you have a diminished perception of
yourself and your worth, and other people are picking up on and
responding to that. It's a classic problem in our craft. STAND UP.
Look at things in the cold light of day. Do you WANT to work on old
uprights that are falling apart owned by people that are cheap and
untrusting? I don't want to work on a nasty piano even if it's owned
by the Dalai Lama. I want to work on good, clean pianos owned by
people and venues that treat me well and pay me what I ask for
gladly and eagerly---because I take the work seriously, make a
radical positive change in the way their instrument sound and feels,
and they truly love and honor and respect that. It's important to
them, for a myriad of reasons.
Two other bitches, as long as I'm ranting.
1. DO NOT compare me to a plumber. My work is way, way different than
making a turd go through a pipe.
2. DO NOT complain about working on dog-ass pianos. If you stick a
pin in your house on a map, and draw a circle around it with a 50-
mile radius, I guarantee that unless you live in the wilderness,
there's a thousand good pianos (conservatively) in that circle
waiting for your magic touch. There are no excuses; just reasons why
you don't succeed. How you see yourself, how you FEEL on the inside,
has everything to do with how you're treated on the outside.
End of mad soliloquy. Out of breath. Must.....rest........
David Andersen
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