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Someone is going to get emotional during a home inspection. It might be a client who is stressed, an agent who is defensive, a contractor who disagrees, or a family member who wants to argue about a minor detail. When that moment hits, raw logic is not always the best tool. Control is.
We start a Quick Tips mini-series with a simple, practical conflict resolution technique: deliberate breathing before you answer. I walk through the exact pattern I use and why it works in the real world, not just in theory. The short pause sets expectations for your pace, the long exhale helps lower your heart rate, and the calm tempo can actually slow the other person down too. It is a way to de-escalate without giving ground on your report.
We also talk about the hidden costs of “winning” arguments in the home inspection business: bad reviews, damaged vendor relationships, and the slow drain of stress you carry home. Money matters, but peace is currency too. When you remember you work for yourself and you answer on your time, you stop getting pulled into someone else’s arena.
If you want better client communication, fewer escalations, and a steadier presence on site, hit play. Subscribe, share this with another inspector, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
Check out our home inspection app at www.inspectortoolbelt.com
Need a home inspection website? See samples of our website at www.inspectortoolbelt.com/home-inspection-websites
*The views and opinions expressed in this podcast, and the guests on it, do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Inspector Toolbelt and its associates.
By Ian Robertson5
3333 ratings
Someone is going to get emotional during a home inspection. It might be a client who is stressed, an agent who is defensive, a contractor who disagrees, or a family member who wants to argue about a minor detail. When that moment hits, raw logic is not always the best tool. Control is.
We start a Quick Tips mini-series with a simple, practical conflict resolution technique: deliberate breathing before you answer. I walk through the exact pattern I use and why it works in the real world, not just in theory. The short pause sets expectations for your pace, the long exhale helps lower your heart rate, and the calm tempo can actually slow the other person down too. It is a way to de-escalate without giving ground on your report.
We also talk about the hidden costs of “winning” arguments in the home inspection business: bad reviews, damaged vendor relationships, and the slow drain of stress you carry home. Money matters, but peace is currency too. When you remember you work for yourself and you answer on your time, you stop getting pulled into someone else’s arena.
If you want better client communication, fewer escalations, and a steadier presence on site, hit play. Subscribe, share this with another inspector, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
Check out our home inspection app at www.inspectortoolbelt.com
Need a home inspection website? See samples of our website at www.inspectortoolbelt.com/home-inspection-websites
*The views and opinions expressed in this podcast, and the guests on it, do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Inspector Toolbelt and its associates.

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