You stare at your phone. You have three tabs open for local movers. You dial the first number, anxious and defensive. The dispatcher answers.
You immediately demand a price, rattling off a list of furniture while bracing yourself for a high-pressure sales pitch. You feel entirely combative.
Here is what’s actually happening – and it’s not a negotiation.
THE HIGH-FRICTION PENALTY
When you call a moving company defensive and demanding, the dispatcher flags your file immediately. In the moving industry, “difficult” customers cost time, and time is the only inventory they sell.
A defensive caller signals a high-friction job. They anticipate arguments over boxes, delays on moving day, and disputes over the final bill. Because of this, they will instinctively quote you a higher rate to cover the anticipated headaches.
This is why treating the quote call like a hostage negotiation ruins your budget. You are signaling to the dispatcher that you are a liability, not a partner.
THE PREFERRED CUSTOMER SCRIPT
You need to trigger the dispatcher’s “preferred customer” reflex.
When they answer, say this exact phrase: “Hi, I have a fully finalized inventory list, and my boxes are already packed and staged. I’m looking for a straightforward quote.”
That specific sentence tells the dispatcher you are a highly organized, low-friction customer. It signals that your job will be fast, easy, and profitable.
THE ENDING
Most people call movers, bracing for a fight, and end up paying a premium for their own anxiety.
Change your opening script. Signal that you are the easiest job on their board, and watch the quote drop instantly.