Mark-up (was Steinway parts)

paulrevenkojones at aol.com paulrevenkojones at aol.com
Tue Feb 19 23:37:41 MST 2008


 David:

You, and some others, continue to overblow the loss/gain aspect of this way of doing business. My "estimates" (simply another word for a proposal) are as close to the real cost we see involved, parts and labor. Any under- or overages are miniscule in the grand scheme of things--the cost of a total restoration. If we discover a way to do something differently at the time we're doing the work, it can cut both ways for us. For example, we began to work with agraffes differently many years ago which added about 60 hours into our jobs but which did not get costed into the then current contracts. We wanted to do it, we couldn't in conscience not do it knowing the good results we were getting, so we took the hit for a while. On the other hand, we discover some "efficiencies" or "better" (faster) way to do something, and we are able to increase the profitability of the work.? But don't inflate the differences, David; we're really talking figurative nickels and dimes. But it took a long time to get to this balance point, and we have been steadfast in trying not to learn (the skill of estimates, or the skills of restoration) on the backs of our clients. 

You make it sound devious and a bit mean-spirited. It's neither. It is calculated! We know to a dime what our time is worth and how much time it takes today to do something; we constantly recalculate it. Since we do not buy or sell pianos, we do not have the economic impulse to speed or corner-cutting. The best among us who do buy and sell don't either--they insist on quality and the proper attention to detail.? More comments below.



-----Original Message-----
From: David Love <davidlovepianos at comcast.net>
To: 'Pianotech List' <pianotech at ptg.org>
Sent: Tue, 19 Feb 2008 10:22 pm
Subject: RE: Mark-up (was Steinway parts)










A set contract with a stipulated fixed price (a bid) is not, by definition,
an estimate.

A contract is by definition a contract. A stipulated fixed price is not a bid. A stipulated fixed
price is the firm result of an estimate/assessment/proposal/bid.  A bid is an offer to 
work at a certain price. An estimate may be a bid or a stipulated fixed price. A stipulated fixed price
included (by law)in a contract may have a foundation in estimating, proposing, assessing, however
you want to parse the language. The reality is that the "Estimate of Costs" form we use and call so, is 
referenced in the Contract under the cost and terms of payment as a binding attachment and will not (and cannot)
be deviated from, contractually. 

?Paul states that the losses and gains balance out.  So that
suggests that when he ends up ahead he keeps it and when he ends up behind
he eats it. 

Do you discount your tunings when you're done in an hour and a half instead of 
an hour and three quarters? Yeah, we all find something else to do if we're charging 
a price based on a per hour analysis. And again, I talking about chump change against a 
multi-tens of thousands of dollars contract. 

 That's good for the person for whom he eats it, not so good for
the person from whom he keeps it.  What you're doing then is simply
overestimating the job and returning it under the estimate for things you
don't end up having to do. 

Hmmm, never done that. Maybe I should....no. I don't think so. That's pretty base behavior 
in my book. 

That's something different.  That's ok if you
want to do it that way and I can see the benefit of simply saying we
approach the job assuming we will do everything and it costs $X.  On many
jobs, I now do it that way and I do everything, meaning, I don't try and get
by with not doing some procedure just because I can get away with not doing
it.  Do the job right and be thorough.  However, there are often times when
someone is trying to hit a budget on a project.  You end up trying to do
what's necessary for their benefit but you discover in the process that you
can't really get away with skipping some procedure you thought you might
have a chance to. 

We constantly lose work to those who are willing to do what the client wants based
solely on budget. We set a price, don't deviate, don't negotiate, and if the client (with 
whom we spend a lot of time explaining procedures--even to the point of making a 
"rebuiling your piano"video many years ago at our cost and never selling it for any profit) if
the client can't afford it, then we don't do it. 

 Do you eat it?  Or do you go back and say, hey we did the
best we could to come in on your budget but we think this procedure really
needs to be done and here's why...  And, btw, that possible contingency
should, ideally, be outlined in the "Estimate/Proposal".  

Those "contingencies" are dealt with in discussion with the client, and again, we either reach
agreement or not. If not, we move on. There's plenty of work. :-)

Paul



 


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