Quote:
Originally Posted by mojojo213
Victoria Jolie is a one of many great examples of people who appreciate honesty! I gave her a Yes recommendation and she still contacted me asking if there was anything she could have done better or what I did or did not like. The girl gets utmost props from me for having a great attitude, I will most def be seeing her again!
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First ... you are my new hero! She has been on my Must See List since day one! Just wished she made it to Dallas, or I'd make it her way.
On the Reviews ... personally, I think we should all be honest, period.
I even suggested having a Open Review Forum but was slammed from here to yesterday. I understand some would perceive it to be detrimental to a Provider if she wrote a negative review about a Client, but is it really negative, or one persons thoughts on how something that never happened happened? I mean, we are all adults here, and frankly most of us have dealt with negative people at work, or someone saying "no" to us at least a few times in our lives. The key? Communication. Do we really have to get mean and hateful in a Review? There are always ways of saying things in such a manner that are not offensive ...
For me? I want feedback from a Provider after I've seen her ... just as Ms. Jolie wanted, I want to know if I could have done this or that better, if I said or didn't say something ... I will always be most respectful of her, and if I offended her in any way I'd want to know ... hell, maybe she is candid and says I am too fat, or don't have enough hair, or maybe she really wanted me to do this, or that, to her ... or maybe she really liked my personality, or they way I dressed, or what I did ... to me, those things are very important, and I suspect I am in the majority, but many won't admit it.
I'm sure there will be plenty that disagree with me, and some that don't, and still others that agree but prefer to not get involved but in the end ... I think the Provider-Client relationship should definitely include open lines of communication after a consulting session that never happened ... the more you trust and respect someone, the greater the experiences.