You would never be able to work for my customers. And oh by the way, I often make 40% gross profit. How would you feel if your supplier asked you to pay for 50% of the material cost before they ordered the material?Originally posted by celtic:
I would accept no less than 40% before work starts...maybe 25% at signing, another 15% when they are ready to start (40%); .....
If there is a big ticket item, I put in my proposal that it needs to be paid for upon delivery to the site (sometimes upon delivery to the suppliers warehouse). I don't usually ask for a deposit, but do expect prompt payment on invoices presented. I invoice upon milestone completions (rough in). I make sure to spell out the terms in the proposal, and a discussion of this is appropriate (prior to signing).Originally posted by voltage37:
How do most of you get you draws?
You may view this as an indication of financial instability, but the reality is it is an indication of being "burnt" one time too many.Originally posted by hardworkingstiff:
The terms you advocate would indicate you do not have the financial stability to perform this work.
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It also transfers all financial risk to the customer.
IMO, that is seldom a good idea - why would you want ALL the risk?I don't usually ask for a deposit
Personally, I think you're pretty arrogant and a bit out of line.You would never be able to work for my customers.....you better be about 20%-25% lower ..........Personally, I don't want to work at a 20% discount.
I've heard it called "front loading", and just about everyone does it. By the time you get paid and have retainage held back, I think it keeps you about on par with job progress.Originally posted by dduffee260:
...at times I try pad certain items on a project so we can get a little ahead in a sort of way.