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HomeBlogI Used to Dismiss 'Small' Orders. Then I Paid the Price.

I Used to Dismiss 'Small' Orders. Then I Paid the Price.

Posted on June 4, 2026 · By Jane Smith

I Used to Believe Small Orders Weren't Worth My Time

I'll be honest with you. In my first year handling procurement for a mid-sized dealership chain, I internalized a pretty bad mindset. I thought that if a customer was asking about a foil shaver or a glass cutter just to get into the outdoor grill ecosystem, they weren't serious. I figured they were tire-kickers who would eventually go compare prices with Solo Stove.

And I was dead wrong.

The way I see it, the biggest mistake a dealer can make is creating a hierarchy of clients based on order size. I'd like to share some hard-learned, expensive lessons about why that mindset is bad for business (and for your bottom line).

Why I Changed My Mind: $200 vs. $20,000

It took me three years—or rather, closer to four when you count the recovery period—and losing a few valuable accounts to understand the real dynamic. I used to believe the budget-friendly customer (the one asking 'is quartz cheaper than granite?' for a countertop) was a drain on my time. I was dismissive.

I only believed the advice that 'every lead is a potential partner' after I ignored it on a deal involving a customer looking for napoleon fireplace remote not working solutions. They were frustrated. They wanted a cheap fix. I offered a cheap replacement instead of a proper diagnosis. They left. A year later, they placed a $15,000 order with our competitor.

Lesson 1: The 'Penny-Wise Pound-Foolish' Trap

I once saved about $45 by not providing a proper consultation for a small order of napoleon perdis primer (which, by the way, is a primer for Napoleon's color line, not a specific paint). I told the client just to grab any generic primer. They did. The job failed. The paint chipped.

Ended up spending $450 on rework and a replacement part. The customer, who was building out a small showroom, took their entire equipment package to another dealer. Net loss: about $450 in immediate costs, plus an estimated $2,000+ in lost future sales. I saved a few bucks on my time, and it cost me everything.

This pattern is the classic 省钱代价 (Penny-Wise, Pound-Foolish) scenario. I was so focused on being 'efficient' with small clients that I created a bigger mess.

Lesson 2: The 'Small' Problem is Often a Sign of a Big Opportunity

When someone calls and says 'my napoleon fireplace remote not working,' it's easy to think, 'Oh, just a cheap remote.' But a broken remote is a symptom. It often means the unit hasn't been serviced, the gas valve is acting up, or there's a deeper control board issue.

I had a customer bring in a fireplace for a $30 remote issue. I was about to dismiss them (ugh). But I actually listened. It turned out the remote was the least of their problems—they were building a whole new house and needed a complete HVAC and fireplace setup. That $30 question turned into a $12,000 order for heat pumps and a new fireplace insert.

Small doesn't mean unimportant—it means potential.

Lesson 3: The 'Easy' Fix That Backfired

There was a time I oversimplified a solution for a customer with a foil shaver. I just said 'buy a new one.' But the real issue was they didn't know how to clean it properly. They went online, saw people comparing napoleon vs weber shavers (yes, it's a weird search), and assumed our product was junk. They didn't return to us for accessories or the premium grill they were saving up for.

The mistake affected a $3,200 order for their dream grill that never happened. I had failed to provide the education that a smaller client needs. I assumed they were just trying to be difficult.

The Counter-Argument: 'But My Time is Money'

Now, I can hear someone saying, 'Seth, you're being naive. I have a team to run. I can't spend 30 minutes on a $50 problem.'

I get it. I used to say the same thing. But here's the nuance: You don't ignore the $50 problem. You treat it with the appropriate level of service, but you don't treat the person like a second-class citizen.

I'm not saying you should give away premium consulting for free. But calling me about a glass cutter that broke is not a reason to be rude. It's a reason to connect that customer to the $30 replacement part, or show them how to sharpen theirs. You invest a small amount of trust, and you earn a reputation for being the expert who helps, not the gatekeeper who judges.

I know a dealer who kept a checklist of 'client risk' factors. He would mark down 'low value.' But he never checked the 'potential for growth' box. In my first year, I made a classic mistake: I let my ego decide the value of the order, not the value of the customer.

My Final Verdict: Don't Be a Jerk to the Little Guy

After 5 years of handling orders, I've come to believe that the 'best' vendor isn't the one with the lowest price. It's the one who treats the $200 order with the same respect as the $20,000 order. The guy asking 'is quartz cheaper than granite?' might be a contractor building his first spec house. The guy with the broken remote might be a homeowner who will inherit a mansion next year.

Personally, I'd argue that ignoring a small client is one of the most expensive decisions you can make. It costs you a reputation you can't buy back. You don't have to be their best friend, but treat them like a human being. Ask them about their project. Share a tip. The payoff isn't always today, but it's almost always tomorrow.

And for the record, I keep a file of all the 'small' clients who ghosted me. I use it to remind myself that small is not insignificant.

Jane Smith
Jane Smith
I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

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