Finding it hard to get my head around this and would be interested in the views of people in the building/construction industry on this one.
I need a job done on my house - new bathroom, install understairs loo, improving insulation, new boiler, new doors and windows, some plastering, sanding, painting and redecorating. Pretty straightforward, no architect involved, in and out in 6 - 8 weeks. I asked 6 builders to quote for the work ( planned to ask 4 and then got 2 other recommendations at the last minute). Last month, all 6 duly arrived at the house when they said they would, had a good look round and a fairly detailed chat about what needed to be done. They all said they would have quotes to me within 3 - 4 working days. One guy I didn't much like and I think the feeling was mutual. The rest I thought seemed very interested in the job and we seemed to get on pretty well.
A month later - and I had only one quote!! Having spent time and money (in phonecalls - am living abroad at the minute) trying to chase the others up, eventually I gave up. Another week on and 1 more quote arrived in (the excuse was 'sorry but there was the builders holidays the week before and after Easter'. Hello? I am a civil servant, who the public seem to believe has a thousand days a year paid holidays and I had a total of two days off over Easter and worked all day Easter Monday with no question of overtime or a day off in lieu!)
What am I missing? The impression in the media is that building contactors are desperately competing to work and trying to stay in business. The job in question is in town, not wildly complicated, not likely to go way over budget or schedule. I think I am a pretty straightforward person to deal with - I was fairly clear about the basic stuff we wanted done without being wildly overprescriptive. I made it clear we had a reasonably tight budget but that we were looking for durable good quality solutions without going overboard.
What really surprised me is that the builders who didn't quote never even got back to me when I emailed and left voicemail messages. Fair enough if anotehr job came up - it takes two minutes to call and say 'thanks for the message, we actually have a big job going at the time you need someone so we won't be quoting. Nice to have met you and give me a call if you have any other work you need quoting for'.
CAn anyone enlighten me?
I need a job done on my house - new bathroom, install understairs loo, improving insulation, new boiler, new doors and windows, some plastering, sanding, painting and redecorating. Pretty straightforward, no architect involved, in and out in 6 - 8 weeks. I asked 6 builders to quote for the work ( planned to ask 4 and then got 2 other recommendations at the last minute). Last month, all 6 duly arrived at the house when they said they would, had a good look round and a fairly detailed chat about what needed to be done. They all said they would have quotes to me within 3 - 4 working days. One guy I didn't much like and I think the feeling was mutual. The rest I thought seemed very interested in the job and we seemed to get on pretty well.
A month later - and I had only one quote!! Having spent time and money (in phonecalls - am living abroad at the minute) trying to chase the others up, eventually I gave up. Another week on and 1 more quote arrived in (the excuse was 'sorry but there was the builders holidays the week before and after Easter'. Hello? I am a civil servant, who the public seem to believe has a thousand days a year paid holidays and I had a total of two days off over Easter and worked all day Easter Monday with no question of overtime or a day off in lieu!)
What am I missing? The impression in the media is that building contactors are desperately competing to work and trying to stay in business. The job in question is in town, not wildly complicated, not likely to go way over budget or schedule. I think I am a pretty straightforward person to deal with - I was fairly clear about the basic stuff we wanted done without being wildly overprescriptive. I made it clear we had a reasonably tight budget but that we were looking for durable good quality solutions without going overboard.
What really surprised me is that the builders who didn't quote never even got back to me when I emailed and left voicemail messages. Fair enough if anotehr job came up - it takes two minutes to call and say 'thanks for the message, we actually have a big job going at the time you need someone so we won't be quoting. Nice to have met you and give me a call if you have any other work you need quoting for'.
CAn anyone enlighten me?