So the other day (Which is code for "Sometime within this lifetime.") I had a customer who wanted a Car Chip Key. (I still work at a Hardware store cutting keys.) Great. We go through the usual Schpiel, "It's $80, okay? Great. Wait here while I ask my Manager for the blanks, because they're kept in the office. Okay, great, here we are. Now go pay for these boxes while I encode the security code onto them here, then I'll meet you back at the key desk and you'll show me the receipt and I'll cut the keys."
But after that, he has the balls (Oh so many balls...) to ask "And you guarantee these will work?"
To which I reply "Aye sir, these are the right blanks, yes."
Him: "No, that was not the question I had asked. Do you guarantee me that these keys will work?"
So at this point, I'm like, ... ... come on, I'm a human being, for the most part. My machine doesn't do it automatically. I make mistakes just like everyone else, though statistically speaking, I make some pretty damn freaking epic keys. o.o! So I can't make any promises. I don't want to say "Yes, I -will- make them perfectly" and then they don't work, despite my belief that they will certainly work. (I'd looked at the key grooves, and everything checked out just fine.)
So I reply "Well sir, being the keycutter here with the statistically greatest track record, I believe I can assure you that you will like the results." Neutral enough.
Not for him! ^_^ Nope. Otherwise there wouldn't be a thread about it.
Him: "That's not good enough! I want you to promise me that these keys will work!!"
... ...
... oooookay. Right.
Me: "My good sir I do of course promise you that I will do my best and (Interrupted)
Him: "NO! You WILL PROMISE ME That these keys will work! I don't care if you're the best keymaker here! I paid a lot of money for these keys and they had better damn work! Now are you going to make me keys that work or not!?"
Me: "Perhaps earlier, yes, but now I can no longer make you these keys. You have made me so nervous that my hands are shaking. When my hands shake, the quality of my keys suffer. Feel free to try asking anyone else, like this guy here *Motions toward the guy next to me who doesn't know how to make keys very well* I think he knows how to make this chip key." (Nobody else in the building had ever made a chip key before.)
And then I walk away and went on break. Pretty much had to. No idea what happened next, other than the other customers at the counter bursting into laughter, but after all this time, I'm still alive, so yay.
But after that, he has the balls (Oh so many balls...) to ask "And you guarantee these will work?"
To which I reply "Aye sir, these are the right blanks, yes."
Him: "No, that was not the question I had asked. Do you guarantee me that these keys will work?"
So at this point, I'm like, ... ... come on, I'm a human being, for the most part. My machine doesn't do it automatically. I make mistakes just like everyone else, though statistically speaking, I make some pretty damn freaking epic keys. o.o! So I can't make any promises. I don't want to say "Yes, I -will- make them perfectly" and then they don't work, despite my belief that they will certainly work. (I'd looked at the key grooves, and everything checked out just fine.)
So I reply "Well sir, being the keycutter here with the statistically greatest track record, I believe I can assure you that you will like the results." Neutral enough.
Not for him! ^_^ Nope. Otherwise there wouldn't be a thread about it.
Him: "That's not good enough! I want you to promise me that these keys will work!!"
... ...
... oooookay. Right.
Me: "My good sir I do of course promise you that I will do my best and (Interrupted)
Him: "NO! You WILL PROMISE ME That these keys will work! I don't care if you're the best keymaker here! I paid a lot of money for these keys and they had better damn work! Now are you going to make me keys that work or not!?"
*snap*
Me: "Perhaps earlier, yes, but now I can no longer make you these keys. You have made me so nervous that my hands are shaking. When my hands shake, the quality of my keys suffer. Feel free to try asking anyone else, like this guy here *Motions toward the guy next to me who doesn't know how to make keys very well* I think he knows how to make this chip key." (Nobody else in the building had ever made a chip key before.)
And then I walk away and went on break. Pretty much had to. No idea what happened next, other than the other customers at the counter bursting into laughter, but after all this time, I'm still alive, so yay.
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