tomtrees58
Addicted to ArboristSite
can you sleep at night look be hind you at all times duck and move out of town tom trees
can you sleep at night look be hind you at all times duck and move out of town tom trees
Hey T-Dunk -
Don't get stressed about the negative feedback on this thread. You're just facing the brunt of the frustration honest tree guys (and gals) face in the industry with 'Chainsaw Cowboys' jumpin' out of every truck to make a quick buck. But I hope the message rings with some clarity - if you are an underbidder, you are absolutely setting yourself up for failure. As already noted, you will never make a living, and you'll get a reputation as a lowballer (great point from earlier) and people will expect those prices ("well you cut old man Johnson's elm for $200!")...you'll be in a continous cycle, working a hazardous job for little compensation, always trying to keep equip fixed, etc....my advice, is to work harder and smarter, not cheaper. If you are willing to educate yourself (trees, PPE, business, etc.) and plain old' work harder than the next the guy, you'll find success. Of course, what do I know - I'm just a part-time "Super Trimmer" (thanks lxt....)
...Well when I come in at say 2400, and some guy says 1500-I look like the thief and in the homeowner's eye that 1500 IS what that job is worth...
So you wish to stay with "very little overhead"? -not being sarcastic either.Tree - We have had opportunity to be on both sides of your example. We turn down a lot of jobs that would be better done by a bucket truck or crane. But when we do price a job, we look at what it really takes to do the job. We have bid on a few jobs requiring climbing and been beat by a guy needing to make the payments on his new bucket truck. We have also beat a previous low bidder because we have very little overhead. It's not always unfair bid practices. Sometimes it's simply the economics of your choice to maintain a fleet of equipment that may not be needed on all jobs.
We have had the frustrations of the local "hacks" also. I know what you mean about them. But there are legitimate bidding practices that, due to a variety of overhead costs, produce lower cost options for the customers.
Around here, certifications,PHC, etc. don't mean anything at all. So it wouldn't matter if i had all the certs. in the world and offered more than the competition, they'll usually go with the lowest bidder. I'd say about half the people around here would rather have it done safely and spend a little more (Those are the people i do the most work for) but the other half just want it done as cheap as possible.
Well when I come in at say 2400, and some guy says 1500-I look like the thief and in the homeowner's eye that 1500 IS what that job is worth. It doesnt matter if this guy goes out of buisiness eventually, he is still killing the biz for everyone else-and making it look like I'm a thief while at it. So all my years of trying to be fair and get as close to top dollar and still get work are negated, in short now I have to start learning to bid all over again??- based on what? How can you figure a bid against someone that has no idea what they are talking about? I try to bid so that can afford to run a real buisiness, would'nt it be so much easier if we all did.
I am not sure about you, Tree MDS, but I don’t base my estimate on anyone’s elses prices. I base my estimate on what it will cost me to do the job and make a profit. Maybe the job you discussed is a $2400 job to you, and a $1500 job to me. That makes me a low-baller? What if after paying all of my overhead (and remaining ‘legal,’) I still walk away with $600, but it takes me extra time. Then its a good job for me. By your logic, if Davey Tree bids the same job for $3200, are you a lowballer?? Its a ‘$3200 Tree’ to them....
I don't think you look like a thief because you quoted more, happens everywhere in all aspects of business. Sometimes I'll pay the lowest price, but other times I'll pay more because I like / trust the saleman(woman) more. Just the way it is in a capitalistic society (sans unions.)
To me, economics plays a major role in the dictation of pricing. Yeah, I’d love to charge what the “Big Dogs” charge for tree work, but that is not realistic for me, or to many consumers who choose ‘who will do the work for them. That $2400 tree job is only worth $2400 if you can sell it to the consumer; if you can’t then its not a $2400 tree job. Maybe it is a $1500 job, or maybe a $1350 job to a better salesman than you or me. I know that in a good majority of jobs I do, I am NOT the lowest offer.... Some people just price shop, and you’ll never get all those jobs. Others are just un-educated (on trees) just waiting for you to educate them and make them a life-long customer. Thats the way I see it.
To me, the lowballer is the guy who charges ‘pennies on the dollar.’ If that $2400 tree gets cutdown by some yahoos for $500 – yep, them’s probably lowballers. The guys who find out what you charge and then “beat” that price by a couple hundred – yep, lowballers. The morons from Arkansas chasing prices (see above) – yeah, I’d say they are lowballers too. But, I don’t worry about those guys, because they’ll be bagging my groceries in the near future, not doing tree work....
Tdunk, a little off topic here but how do you like the 362xp? what size bar do you run? I have a trusty ole 262xp thats getting a lot tired, I've allways run a 18" bar on it, that was one of the best/most reliable saws ever.
So you wish to stay with "very little overhead"? -not being sarcastic either.
What I'm saying is that having been at this awhile and knowing what others try to get per day, and knowing what I need to get per day, I break that down into an hourly rate and then try and figure out how many hours/days the job should take-based on that rate. That rate is pretty much the industry standard in my area for a real tree service thats legit and has all equipment/skills to compete, this is based on what it costs to run a real biz. I think that if I dont charge enough I'll never get anywhere, and never be able to buy new big toys when I'm older, you cant just tell yer customers "oh yeah, it just went up 400 a day, I bought a all wheel drive 80 footer"-ya gotta kind of work up to it.
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