well, my home stringing business grew exponentially over the last few years, over 1,000 frames a year, also in charge of a club now. if what you say is true, someone is bound to realize my tension is off right? and tell all their friends that my string jobs are shitty... lol best of luck lil raven man
@@j1mster3 ive been thinking of starting a small stringing business on the side. Do you have any recommendations for getting started and growing clientele?
@@DoodleBotTennis be patient, keep stringing and learning and improving, i know that sounds generic but it always works. my growth over the past 5 years was fuelled mostly by referals, online ads help a bit in the begining but dont rely on it, other peoples words or opinion about your work spreads much faster and far more convincing than what you will ever say to others about yourself. often times one customer realizes how good the service was and tells all their friends, maybe half will end up using you and it just snowballs. also i give out free overgrips and dampeners which makes me stand out from my rivals ontop of the fast reliable service i already gave them. lastly start small, dont have high expectations, i started to save money for myself mainly and it went from freinds to their friends and the rest was history, i didnt plan this, it just naturally came in past 10 years a mix of luck and hard work and smart work. best of luck.
What kind of machine do you use?
siboasi s616
Horrible string job. Definitely not gonna be the tension it should be at with the way you do it. 😂
Why? Could you specify?
well, my home stringing business grew exponentially over the last few years, over 1,000 frames a year, also in charge of a club now. if what you say is true, someone is bound to realize my tension is off right? and tell all their friends that my string jobs are shitty... lol best of luck lil raven man
@@j1mster3 ive been thinking of starting a small stringing business on the side. Do you have any recommendations for getting started and growing clientele?
@@DoodleBotTennis be patient, keep stringing and learning and improving, i know that sounds generic but it always works. my growth over the past 5 years was fuelled mostly by referals, online ads help a bit in the begining but dont rely on it, other peoples words or opinion about your work spreads much faster and far more convincing than what you will ever say to others about yourself. often times one customer realizes how good the service was and tells all their friends, maybe half will end up using you and it just snowballs. also i give out free overgrips and dampeners which makes me stand out from my rivals ontop of the fast reliable service i already gave them. lastly start small, dont have high expectations, i started to save money for myself mainly and it went from freinds to their friends and the rest was history, i didnt plan this, it just naturally came in past 10 years a mix of luck and hard work and smart work. best of luck.