Sometimes you walk away from a deal not because of the price, and not because of the workload, but because of the mentality behind the company you’re dealing with.
A service provider approached me with an offer. Their service is fully automated - it scans and processes a fixed maximum number of URLs on a monthly cycle according to different tiers. In this case, the tier I was interested in handled up to 75 URLs per month (the next tier was far more expensive and completely overkill). I had a one‑time backlog of 103 items, which meant that under that tier it would take two full passes before the backlog was fully cleared. I asked if they could take care of the remaining 28 links in the first month as a courtesy so I could start clean on their lower‑tier plan. Nothing outside what any flexible, customer‑centric company would do.
Their answer?
A rigid “no exceptions” stance - followed immediately by an upsell to a more expensive plan that conveniently solved the problem if I paid a lot more.
This wasn’t about workload. It was about a company that is all business, and no soul.
A company that would rather lose a customer than bend one inch.
And here’s the thing: loyalty doesn’t come from rigid policies.
Loyalty comes from the moments when a company shows you that you’re more than just an account ID. People stay when they feel valued, when they sense there’s a human relationship behind the transaction.
As an example, I’ve been with
BMT Micro as Winstep's payment processor for over 27 years.
In that time, I’ve had countless other payment processors try to poach me with better rates, bigger promises, and flashier dashboards. I ignored all of them. Why? Because BMT has always gone above and beyond whenever I needed them. They’ve been flexible, human, and genuinely invested in my success. I know all of their names. That’s what earns fierce loyalty - not a discount, not a feature list, but the feeling that you matter.
So no, it was never about the 28 extra links. It was about the mindset. Some companies build relationships, others build walls of policy and call it “business.”
I know which kind I choose to work with.