Softus...I think thats what I'm saying...there should be an industry wide expectation.
I appreciate that refusing to give a written quote when someone is just gathering various prices is a choice you make as a businessman. But surely if you got the job on a verbal quote...which was my last point that you didn't understand...and having read my words I can see why
.....any request for a written quote before starting is not then unreasonable...I would suggest that in todays world the people who provide that written quote on getting the job win more business than they lose...
As for allowing someone to start work based on an estimate billy bob.....thats fine if you state to the customer that there are a number of unknowns so a fixed quote is not possible...and they accept that risk...which is where this comes to a head. Why is it that people feel they are being ripped off by the plumbing trade...accurate or not...but that is a clear perception that every poll says that is what "people" feel. Its because of the cowboys out there who only provide estimates because they are lazy, incompetent and don't know how to estimate a job, or just looking for an opportunity to make a few extra quid on top. Maybe a minority for sure but it happens more often than is healthy. If you state, which you should to give the cust at least some idea, the estimate may vary by, say, 20 % how often do you think it does precisely that ? How often do people charge less than the estimate ?
Not accusing you of that...as if...but why should the customer take all the risk....once again, good paperwork protects the installer as much as the customer. Good practice is always to build a decent risk budget in any work....size of budget depends on the complexity of the job...say 5% for a straightforward boiler like for like swap....more for a whole house heating job. But if someone who claims to be experienced can't even do that then they really shouldn't be let out without their guardian....
One thing I do know as a fact...and I fully understand the pressures...that if there were less legal cases involving installers and customers then your insurance rates would drop. Its all about no surprises....
I appreciate that refusing to give a written quote when someone is just gathering various prices is a choice you make as a businessman. But surely if you got the job on a verbal quote...which was my last point that you didn't understand...and having read my words I can see why
As for allowing someone to start work based on an estimate billy bob.....thats fine if you state to the customer that there are a number of unknowns so a fixed quote is not possible...and they accept that risk...which is where this comes to a head. Why is it that people feel they are being ripped off by the plumbing trade...accurate or not...but that is a clear perception that every poll says that is what "people" feel. Its because of the cowboys out there who only provide estimates because they are lazy, incompetent and don't know how to estimate a job, or just looking for an opportunity to make a few extra quid on top. Maybe a minority for sure but it happens more often than is healthy. If you state, which you should to give the cust at least some idea, the estimate may vary by, say, 20 % how often do you think it does precisely that ? How often do people charge less than the estimate ?
Not accusing you of that...as if...but why should the customer take all the risk....once again, good paperwork protects the installer as much as the customer. Good practice is always to build a decent risk budget in any work....size of budget depends on the complexity of the job...say 5% for a straightforward boiler like for like swap....more for a whole house heating job. But if someone who claims to be experienced can't even do that then they really shouldn't be let out without their guardian....
One thing I do know as a fact...and I fully understand the pressures...that if there were less legal cases involving installers and customers then your insurance rates would drop. Its all about no surprises....
