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Diagnostic Service Call Sample Script
A proven phone script: "The diagnostic fee is $149. We will come out, identify the issue, and give you a written quote to repair. If you approve the repair today, we waive the diagnostic and apply it to the total. If you choose not to repair, the diagnostic covers our time and gives you a documented assessment." The script names the fee, sets the deliverable expectation, explains the waiver option, and reassures the customer that they receive value even if they decline the repair.
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Electrician Business Operations
Running an Electrical Contracting Business Course
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Diagnostic Service Call Sample Script
After completing a diagnostic visit at a customer's home, what written deliverable should you provide to the customer?
After completing a diagnostic visit, you should only provide your written problem description and line-item quote to the customer if they agree to move forward with the repair.
In an electrical contracting business, providing a written deliverable after a diagnostic call is a key professional practice. Match each component or policy of the deliverable with the primary business purpose it serves.
You have just identified the cause of a customer's electrical issue during a diagnostic visit. Arrange the following actions in the correct order to successfully apply the written deliverable policy before leaving the job site.
An electrical business owner is auditing customer complaints regarding diagnostic fees. The audit reveals that when customers decline immediate repairs, technicians simply pack up and leave after giving a verbal explanation of the issue. By analyzing this workflow gap, the owner realizes that to properly justify the fee, build trust, and provide the customer with a reference for future decisions, technicians must be required to produce a ____ deliverable containing the problem description and a line-item quote before leaving.
A new electrical contracting business owner is reviewing how her three technicians handle the end of diagnostic visits. She wants to choose the approach that best justifies the diagnostic fee, builds customer trust, and gives the customer a useful reference for future decisions.
• Technician A: Verbally explains the problem in detail, texts the customer a total repair price, and leaves. • Technician B: Writes up a document describing the identified problem and listing each repair item with its individual price, then hands it to the customer before leaving—regardless of whether the customer approves the work. • Technician C: Only prepares a written problem description and quote when the customer agrees to proceed with the repair, to avoid wasting time on paperwork for jobs that won't happen.
Which technician's approach should the owner adopt as the company standard?
You are designing a professional template for your company's diagnostic reports. To construct a deliverable that justifies your fee and provides a complete reference for the customer, arrange these sections in the correct order for the final document.
An electrical business owner is reviewing the diagnostic reports provided by her technicians. One technician's typical deliverable to the customer is a simple note stating: 'Diagnostic visit complete. Found issue with kitchen outlets. Total repair: $425.' Evaluate the effectiveness of this deliverable based on the goals of justifying the diagnostic fee and building trust.
After troubleshooting a customer’s kitchen lights, you determine the issue is a failed dimmer switch. The customer decides not to have you replace the switch today. To follow the professional standard for a diagnostic call, what should you do before departing?
A customer is hesitant to approve a $950 repair and tells the technician, 'I'm going to pay the $125 diagnostic fee now, but I want to call another company for a second opinion.' The technician is tempted to only provide a verbal explanation to avoid giving the competitor a 'roadmap' for the repair.
Evaluate the best course of action for the technician based on the professional standards of a diagnostic call.
Learn After
When using a diagnostic service call script, what happens to the diagnostic fee if the customer approves the repair on the same visit?
Match each phrase from the diagnostic service call script to its primary business purpose in communicating with the customer.
A technician diagnoses a faulty circuit and provides a written quote, but the homeowner decides they need to wait until next month to proceed with the work. Applying the rules of the diagnostic service call script, the technician should still charge the customer the diagnostic fee for today's visit.
Analyze the strategic structure of a successful diagnostic service call script. Arrange the following communication goals in the logical order they must be presented to effectively qualify the customer, set expectations, and minimize their hesitation to book.
An electrical contractor audits a technician's invoice for a service call. The customer approved a $400 repair on the spot, but the technician billed them $549 total ($400 for the repair plus the $149 diagnostic fee). Evaluating this billing against the standard diagnostic script, the contractor judges the invoice to be incorrect because the policy promises that the diagnostic fee is ________ if the repair is approved today.
You are expanding your business to offer a new 'Generator Readiness Audit.' Using the strategic structure of a standard professional diagnostic call, arrange the following script components to construct a professional phone offer that justifies the fee, sets clear expectations, provides a conversion incentive, and ensures the customer receives value regardless of the outcome.
According to the standard diagnostic script, what specific deliverable is the customer promised in exchange for the diagnostic fee if they choose not to proceed with a repair?
An electrical contracting business uses a diagnostic script that promises a 'documented assessment' of the problem even if the customer chooses not to proceed with a repair. What is the primary business objective for providing this specific written deliverable?
According to the professional diagnostic script, what two specific deliverables does the technician promise the customer will receive in exchange for paying the diagnostic fee?
A potential customer calls your electrical business and says, 'I have a breaker that keeps tripping, but I'm hesitant to pay a $149 diagnostic fee just for you to look at it. What do I actually get for that money if I decide the repair is too expensive right now?' Based on the professional diagnostic service call script, which response correctly applies the policy to address this customer's concern?