sfav8r
Senior Member
- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area
OK, we're at that awkward stage in our business where I now do estimates for jobs that I will not do myself. In the "good ol' days" I would go do an estimate for say a new service. I would snap a picture and scribble a few notes. If we got the job, I would be on the site and know exactly what needed to be done.
Now, we have the problem that I go do the estimate, we get the job and the guy that shows up for the job has never seen it before. So my question is, how do you guys that have already been through this handle it? Do you do a really detailed estimate so that every fitting, length of conduit, etc. is noted so that the guys know exactly what materials to bring, the length of the feeders, etc.? This sounds nice, but then if I go into that much detail on every quote we're spending a lot of time on detail for jobs we won't get.
Also, how do you communicate the plan of exactly how the install was estimated? I have been experimenting with taking digital photos and marking them up with the proposed installation, but so far it takes a lot of time.
Anyway, you get the idea. I'm just curious how others have solved this problem.
Now, we have the problem that I go do the estimate, we get the job and the guy that shows up for the job has never seen it before. So my question is, how do you guys that have already been through this handle it? Do you do a really detailed estimate so that every fitting, length of conduit, etc. is noted so that the guys know exactly what materials to bring, the length of the feeders, etc.? This sounds nice, but then if I go into that much detail on every quote we're spending a lot of time on detail for jobs we won't get.
Also, how do you communicate the plan of exactly how the install was estimated? I have been experimenting with taking digital photos and marking them up with the proposed installation, but so far it takes a lot of time.
Anyway, you get the idea. I'm just curious how others have solved this problem.