Originally Posted By: demarpaint
Did I ever say I had a right to access someone's property? I never did, I don't have a right and know it. I learned once by asking after I started a job and got shot down. That was 30 years ago, I learned and never forgot.
Let me put it in different words. I never said I had a right, I check first to see if the neighbor is going to be a ****, before I give the price to the customer. If he's a ****, I pass on the job, and let some greenhorn newbie get burnt. I've been at this a long time, and know all the ins and outs. If the customer himself is a **** on the estimate I pass too. There are plenty of good people to work for no point in chasing down A-oles.
As a side note I never give an estimate at the time I look at the job, I go home and figure it out. Especially with exterior work that requires access from someone else's property. I want to be [censored] sure I can access a neighbor's property if need be before I give a price, or get involved for that matter.
I just turned a job down because a new customer wanted to pay me on his terms. $5,000 worth of work, and get paid when I finish, sorry no cigar. If I worked for him before not a problem.
Well said!
That is how my Brother and I handled the whole quote process and neighbor issues too. If we gave a quote and then the client started trying to haggle the price down, pushed for terms different than our standard policy on payment, asked for price break downs and parts lists saying they want to buy the stuff, and so on we just walked away. Not worth the hassle.
Also the initial visit to see the job so we could come up with a quote was also a sort of interview for the client and their spouse. If one or both were clearly ***** as you called them we politely declined to even offer a quote. Our work quality and work ethic was well known and we always had plenty of work to do. Working for people that are clearly going to be difficult to deal with is not worth your time. At least when you are not desperate for a job anwyay.