Stay in Your Lane

In the swimming pool, spa, and broader ancillary industries, the pressure to deliver fast, cost-effective outcomes can sometimes override caution, collaboration, or compliance. As a consultant working closely with businesses across design, construction, supply chain, manufacturing, and aftersales service, I’ve seen first-hand how preventable issues arise, often from a simple, but critical, misstep: operating outside your professional lane.

These issues aren’t always the result of gross negligence or willful disregard. In most cases, they stem from a desire to be helpful or resourceful, to find a quick fix, close a sale, or “just get it done.” Whether it’s a designer giving structural advice, a pool builder offering legal interpretations, or a service technician installing something outside their scope of expertise, the intent may be good, but the outcome can be costly.

Why It Matters

When professionals take on responsibilities beyond their training, qualifications, or insurance coverage, they expose themselves and their clients to significant risk:

  • Financial Loss – Rectification work, fines, and lost business from errors can be expensive.

  • Reputational Damage – One poor decision can damage years of hard-earned credibility.

  • Legal Liability – Giving unqualified advice or signing off work you're not licensed or trained for can open the door to litigation or regulatory issues.

This is especially true in areas governed by strict legislation, such as contract law, barrier compliance, electrical installations, structural elements, Work, Health and Safety or product certification. Regulations are evolving, and staying informed requires time and diligence. The risk isn’t just about what you know, it’s also about what you’re allowed to do.

Examples I See Too Often

  • A sales consultant offering technical installation advice that conflicts with Australian Standards

  • A builder who installs a  pool barrier who does not have a copy of the appropriate Standard and does not check with an expert

  • A technician making compliance statements on waterproofing or drainage, which lie outside their trade

  • A business owner providing warranty advice without understanding the statutory obligations under the Australian Consumer Law

In each case, these missteps could have been avoided with a single phone call, a quick check of the regulations, or a referral to the appropriate expert.

The Smarter, Safer Approach

Stay in your lane. Not because you don’t know enough, but because you respect the complexity of the industry and value collaboration over assumption.

Here's what that looks like in practice:

  • Ask questions before offering opinions on unfamiliar topics.

  • Refer clients to qualified professionals when the issue falls outside your expertise.

  • Document limitations in your quotes and reports (e.g. “This advice does not constitute legal or engineering certification.”)

  • Keep your CPD up to date and seek advice from industry associations when unsure.

  • Engage specialists, consultants, certifiers, engineers, or legal advisors as part of your service model.

A Culture of Professional Boundaries

Success doesn’t come from knowing everything, it comes from knowing your scope and building a trusted network. Clients appreciate transparency, not guesswork. In fact, being honest about what you don’t do, and pointing them to the right person, builds more credibility than trying to be a one-stop shop.

The next time you're tempted to "just give it a go" outside your domain, pause. Pick up the phone. Ask the question. Or defer to someone who lives and breathes that discipline. You'll not only protect your business, but you’ll also elevate the standard of the industry you work in as a whole.

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