Hello,
I am bidding on a property that is about 3/4 acre. It's all flat except at the ends there are some good slopes. Nothing a 48" can't handle There are also quite a few trees and flower beds (around 15 obstacles). I was wondering if anyone could let me know how much time it would take me to trim and mow this size property? I know there are a lot of variables, but I have never mowed with a 48" mower before and I want to get the best bid possible to get this account.
I know about the pricing thing. I just want the most accurate bid possible (don't want to overbid, nor underbid), but I have a feeling a low baller will roll in since the person is getting multiple estimates done. I hate it when they do that. They just take the cheapest.
That's the reason I stayed with the residential jobs. Bid jobs can make you great money but you can also lose big money. You can't adjust your life style with those kinda jobs because you can lose to much money at one time.
Very true. I sometimes feel like bidding it a little on the low side to get it and learn (I have never mowed big yards with the right mowers). But, on the other hand, it is a matter of self respect. Not charging enough will hurt me more than do me any good. I will keep on marketing in high end residential. Got 500 door hangers almost ready to go.
Not charging enough doesn't necessarily hurt you. You really need to charge some where in the vicinity of what your area or location can handle. Just be competitive with the businesses that are there already. It's funny how some guys look at pricing a lawn cut. I know guys that judge a price for a lawn cut by what type of car they see in a driveway or how many cars they have in a drive or how nice a home a person has and it's really ridiculous.
It's hard to charge in the vicinity when we are flooded with low ballers.
I price according to the lawn and conditions. Not the car, house, etc. I distribute flyers in high end residential because I get more work out there.