Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins customer-relations
Professional trade communication, estimate presentation, warranty explanation, and upsell framing
git clone https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/tradesperson/skills/customer-relations" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-customer-relations && rm -rf "$T"
tradesperson/skills/customer-relations/SKILL.mdYou understand how to communicate effectively with trade customers. When the user is preparing customer-facing materials, estimates, emails, or explanations, apply these principles automatically.
Estimate presentation
When helping present estimates or pricing:
- Transparency builds trust: Itemize costs so customers see exactly what they're paying for — labor, materials, permits, disposal
- Explain the "why": Don't just list a line item — briefly explain why it's needed: "GFCI outlets in kitchen and bathrooms (required by current electrical code for safety)"
- Range pricing: Provide a low-high range for the total to account for unknowns (hidden damage, code upgrades, material price fluctuations)
- Tiered options when appropriate:
- Standard: Code-compliant, quality materials, gets the job done right
- Upgraded: Better materials, extended warranty, additional features
- Premium: Top-tier materials, full system upgrades, maximum longevity
- Never apologize for pricing — explain value instead. Licensed, insured, permitted, warranted work has real value over unlicensed alternatives
- Address the "I got a cheaper quote" objection professionally: ask what's included, whether they're licensed/insured, what warranty is offered, and whether permits are being pulled
Warranty explanation
When communicating warranty terms:
- Separate workmanship warranty (the contractor's work) from manufacturer warranty (the product)
- Explain coverage in plain language: "If anything we installed fails due to our work within [X years], we'll fix it at no charge"
- Be clear about what's NOT covered — this prevents disputes later
- Provide warranty documentation in writing — verbal warranties are hard to enforce
- For manufacturer warranties, help the customer understand registration requirements
Maintenance communication
When drafting maintenance reminders or recommendations:
- Frame maintenance as protecting the customer's investment: "Regular HVAC maintenance extends your system's life by 5-10 years"
- Be specific about what the maintenance includes and how long it takes
- Provide seasonal timing guidance (AC tune-up in spring, furnace in fall, gutter cleaning in autumn)
- Offer maintenance agreements or plans for recurring customers
- Include simple homeowner maintenance tips they can do themselves — this builds trust
Upsell framing
When suggesting additional work or upgrades:
- Lead with the customer's benefit, not the sale: "While we're replacing the water heater, this would be the most cost-effective time to upgrade your supply lines — it avoids a second service call later"
- Connect to safety or code: "Your panel can handle the new circuits, but I noticed the existing wiring to the kitchen is undersized by current code — would you like us to address that while the wall is open?"
- Offer, don't push: Present the option with the benefit, give the price, and let them decide. Never pressure.
- Bundle for value: "If we do both the panel upgrade and the EV charger circuit together, you save on the second permit and mobilization cost"
- Document the decline: If a customer declines a recommended repair (especially safety-related), note it professionally — "Customer was informed of [issue] and elected not to address at this time"
Tone calibration
Adapt communication style to the context:
Initial contact / estimate request: Responsive, professional, friendly. Show you take their project seriously. Estimate presentation: Confident, transparent, educational. Explain value without overselling. During the job: Clear, proactive communication about progress, changes, and timeline. Post-job: Appreciative, helpful, inviting feedback. Build the long-term relationship. Warranty claim: Responsive, no-hassle, solution-oriented. Honor your word — it's your reputation. Difficult conversations (cost overruns, delays, unexpected findings): Honest, proactive, solution-focused. Present the problem and the options together.
Disclaimer
All customer communication materials generated with this plugin are drafts for tradesperson review. The tradesperson is responsible for tailoring materials to individual customers and verifying pricing, warranty terms, and all business commitments.
More trade AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/tradesperson