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In pest management, there’s a dangerous middle ground that doesn’t get talked about enough — the space between poor service and excellent service. It’s what I call “good enough” pest control. It’s not sloppy. It’s not negligent. But it’s also not solving the real problem. And over time, it’s costing our industry more than we realize.
What “good enough” looks like in the field
If you’ve been in the field long enough, you’ve seen it: a technician treating baseboards out of routine, a follow-up completed without a true inspection or bait placements that don’t align with actual activity.
Nothing is technically wrong. But nothing is truly targeted, either.
The result is predictable — callbacks, recurring issues and customers who begin to lose confidence in the service.
Results over process
Customers don’t evaluate pest control the way professionals do. They don’t see product selection, dilution rates, or treatment strategies.
They see one thing: results. You can follow every label instruction and apply every product correctly, but if the issue persists, the customer perceives failure.
How the industry gets here
This issue rarely stems from lack of effort. In most cases, it’s the result of operational pressure and routine.
Common contributors include tight scheduling, treating visible activity rather than identifying root causes, over-reliance on standard service patterns and lack of structured feedback from callbacks.
From application to investigation
The most effective technicians don’t just treat — they investigate. They focus on identifying the source of the issue and addressing it directly.
“Good enough” service may seem efficient in the moment, but it often leads to increased callbacks, reduced customer retention and added strain on technicians. The goal is not perfection — it is complete, informed and intentional service.