Growing your successful electrical contracting business means you need to win jobs consistently.
While there’s no single way to guarantee you’ll win all the electrical jobs you bid, you can improve your electrical estimating process by practicing the following seven habits of effective estimators. And better process will improve your percentage of jobs won as well.
Develop a Macro view. Visualize the entire room, including the elements and fixtures in the ceiling and behind the walls, how it’s wired, where the lighting will be. Once you’ve taken the Macro view into account, think about the Micro view, including switches, components, and other parts that will be installed.
Here are 4 ways to expand your ability to visualize the job before you bid:
Reduce your risk of missing an important element in your estimate, such as a floor, a circuit, or any other key piece of the job. You can avoid costly mistakes by highlighting within the drawing. If it’s not highlighted, you didn’t count it. It’s that simple.
How should you identify a good electrical estimator?
It may seem counterintuitive, but your best electrician is not necessarily your best estimator. And your estimator doesn’t need to be an electrician, although they do need to be able to visualize the details in the drawings. (See Habit number 1 above).
Here are a few guidelines to follow to ensure that you bid on jobs that make sense for your company and that justify the effort:
Assess the type of project and assign different mark ups for different types and sizes of jobs.
Small, difficult jobs should have a higher mark up than a larger project.
Look at your bidding history to determine where the market is.
Keep your team busy, but not too busy. Make sure they have enough to do without overworking them.
Keep your ego in check. Don’t take the job at someone else’s price.
Electrical estimating software is faster. You’ll be able to create at least twice as many estimates as you were able to do manually because of automation. For some types of bids, you could work 3 or 4 times as fast.
Electrical estimating software is also more accurate. Using electrical estimating software reduces bid errors because software doesn’t make math mistakes. However, if you enter the wrong numbers, you’ll receive wrong results. (Remember habit number 2: highlight every electrical element as you count it.)
Finally, electrical estimating software is versatile. It’s useful for all sizes and types of jobs, and you should use your estimating software for all of your bid work.
Teaching yourself new software may help you remember certain processes because you problem solve as you learn. However, for proficiency beyond basic operations, it might benefit your company to learn all the advanced features and shortcuts.
Training helps you understand all the features and shortcuts in your estimating software. Ultimately, you’ll save time and prevent errors.
Electrical estimating training is easy, efficient, and helps you learn the best methods and processes.
Skilled estimators develop good habits so that they can reduce errors and turn in winning bids as much as possible. For a review of how to do an electrical estimate right, please read our Complete Guide to Electrical Estimating.