Use this “Quick Quote Spreadsheet” To Estimate Design and Building Costs

October 5, 2009

Designers and Contractors all need to establish a design and building range of costs for each project. One method that is commonly used is the  “Quick Quote” method.

A “Quick Quote” is really nothing more than a guesstimate or swag (scientific wild a** guess) that helps define a scope of work and budget that is used to insure that your client is realistic in what they want to do.

I’ve developed a simple spreadsheet that can be used for this process. It’s simple and quick to use and will help you think through each project and produce a written document that you can work from. It’s not meant to replace your estimating system.

Download the: “Quick Quote” Spreadsheet (Right click and “Save As”)
View the article and video: “Does a Good Remodeling Plan Really Cost Your Client Anything?”
View the recorded webinar: “Top Ten Mistakes Chief Architect Users Make

View the 13 Minute video at ChiefExperts.com about:
How to use the “Quick Quote” spreadsheet

After you’ve had a chance to try it, please leave your comments and suggestions about how it works and what you would do to make it better.


ChiefExperts.com now offering 72 hours of Chief Architect training on DVD

June 2, 2009

In today’s economy it more important than ever to stay on top of your game and staying educated helps. I’ve been busy the last few months learning website techniques and rethinking how my membership site ChiefExperts.com can help.

In the last 2 years I’ve done a lot of online classes about Chief Architect as well as other construction industry topics. The content was growing and I had to find a better way to get it to those that can really use it. So here’s what I did.

The Chief Architect Training DVD

I’ve compiled and loaded 62 topics, 72 hours of training in 967 segments onto a Training DVD. (That’s right one DVD – “Thanks Technology”) and have created a Detailed Search-Able Indexso you can find what you want and get to it quickly. It works great. With that everything is also available online along with a bunch of other topics that I’ll soon start organizing. The DVD and a 3 month membership is only $295.00. You can learn how it all works here.

Free Training and Tutorials

If you’re still using Chief V10 there is over 21 hours of online training available for you. You can access it here for free and you don’t need a membership to view it. In fact the Chief Tips and Ttutorials and Other Tips and Tutorialsare also available for free.

Free Forum for Chief Architect Users

I don’t have any dilusions of trying to out do the ChiefTalk forum. Chief offers a great forum for all users to collaberate. If you haven’t checked it out you should. What I hope happens at the ChiefExperts.com Forum is that we can build a small community of loyal contributors that will share ideas, offer help and just get involved. Together we can help each other do better in our efforts to produce better plans and run a more profitable business. Please join in the conversation.

More Online and Live Classes Coming

In the last 3-1/2 years I’ve only done a couple of live, in-person clases. In fact those were done this year. It was great to be with real live people again. With that in mind I’m planning on offering a couple of in-person classes each month along with many new online classes. I’m still working on the schedule for the rest of 2009 but you can get an idea of what’s going to be available on my New Events Calendar. I’m wide open for feedback on what classes you would like and where you would like the live classes to be held. Let me know.

How can I help?

Like I said earlier we’ve all had to make changes in the way we do things. My goal is to make ChiefExperts.com an open community that everyone csn benefit from. I have the tools to bring many things to the Chief Architect and Design community. Let me know what you need or if you have something to contribute.

Dan Baumann


Understanding How Fear Influences Decision Making

March 25, 2009

Don’t Be Chicken Little

How have you changed the way you are making decisions today compared to when the economy was humming along?

Understanding how business people make decisions is a very complicated topic. There is plenty of subject matter here to write books about, so I am going to narrow our discussion into three areas.

  1. Understanding how fear influences decision making.
  2. How not to allow complacency to creep in.
  3. The Parkinson Principal and how to fight it.

As we have been traveling across the country delivering motivational and functional sales workshops there is a solemn sense of fear in most of the attendee’s faces. There are not too many smiles in the audience these days.

We wish the new seriousness was due to a heightened commitment to running their business right. The reality is that most owners are petrified of the rapidly shrinking construction activity! They are being consumed by – FEAR!

Even if your business is doing well, you can’t ignore the signs that so many others are in distress. Bad news is plastered everywhere! No news outlet has spared us of the gruesome details. Yes, the economy stinks to high heaven.

What is everybody afraid of?

Will they have a job? How they will survive? How they will pay their financial obligations? All legitimate concerns.

But FEAR and its close cousin, panic, will not help you. They hinder sound decision making.

Fear is simply an acronym for False Evidence Appearing Real. Many an intuitive entrepreneurial contractor who have historically made decisions based on facts have now resorted to inferior analysis and panic-driven decisions that produce poor or disastrous results.

How to offset the doomsday fear and minimize its impact on decision making.

Figure out how your company is going to out-do your competition. Figure out which financial actions will create flexibility now and in the immediate future. Figure out which financial steps will protect yourself against a patch of bad luck without going overboard and shutting off your ability to complete jobs.

For an example of a trap to avoid, contractors will be eager to purchasing equipment because there are some really good deals out there. A classic mistake. Do not increase your fleet unless you have the sales today or in the near term to support the addition of more equipment.

Examine where are you with your marketing and sales systems. Do you have a plan? Did you scale back your investment, expectations, and projections? Are you guaranteeing a shrinkage of sales by cutting back on your marketing and selling efforts?

Deal with facts not fear.

Don’t project or hope for situations that probably won’t materialize.Cut out excesses such as unnecessary overtime and shop time. If you must pare down your workforce, keep your very best people no matter what they cost you. You need to be able to gear up and ratchet down your human resource band-width quickly to remain cost competitive and profitable.

In the bestselling book, Who Moved My Cheese, the four characters all handle change differently. It is a quick, insightful story about change. There is one character, Hem, who refuses to leave the “cheese station” once the cheese is gone. Hem decides to stays in the empty “cheese station” and starves to death. Hem is afraid of change.

Be prepared to Move Your Cheese! Change can be good! Go through your customer files to mine golden nuggets from past satisfied clients you haven’t kept in contact with. Look for markets that are still prospering.

Right now, there is a very fine line between being profitable and losing money. A single isolated event could tip your company in the red. In today’s environment you MUST make sound, prudent, timely decisions.

This leads into the second phenomena; which we will call COMPLACENCY.

Complacency is the opposite side of the coin from fear – but it’s probably three times as deadly!

Often, a total lack of action to surrounding circumstances can lead to a venomous painful death. This would be our similar to my old friend “Hem” in the Who Moved My Cheese book.

One of the solutions is a continuous and sustainable sense of urgency.

Don’t mistake panic for a true sense of urgency. Panic is running around doing things hap-hazard that do not fire your bullets at the targets that make a difference.

Urgency focuses efforts on the critical success factors that need to be accomplished, while allowing you to win as a team.

You need to identify these success factors. And you need to act on them. Below I list a few that are universal to most contractors:

  • Master accurate job costing.
  • Increase lead generation by defining and expanding your marketing plan.
  • Maintain or increase sales by pre-qualifying your sales leads.
  • Cease chasing unprofitable jobs or ones that don’t fit your capabilities
  • Follow-up, follow-up, follow up with all your prospects and customers.
  • Curb all unnecessary spending.
  • Make sure you have the right people on your bus and drive it to success.

Now you have other success factors that I have not identified. Identify them and implement solutions for them too.

Time to introduce you to the Parkinson Principal.

The simple definition of the Parkinson Principal is: “work expands to fill the time available”. Think about the essence of that statement.

If you give an individual a task and a long deadline, how often is the task completed early early? How fast would the task have been performed if it was approached with a true sense of urgency?

If your workers’ attitude is “We are going to get paid for eight hours today, and the work could be accomplished in five, but we’ll take the whole eight hours.” you have fallen prey to the Parkinson trap.
Stop that mindset fast in its tracks!

As a contractor one of you biggest expenses you have is labor. If you build a sense of urgency in everything your team does, you can win big!

The companies that are agile, willing to make changes; even if they are out of your comfort zone, face their fears and operate with a united sense of urgency are going to survive. Many will even be stronger in the future. We Hope You Join Them!

Perhaps you want to have some other business people or trusted confidants to bounce your ideas or important decisions off of.

Especially if you feel fear or complacency are lurking in your mind or organization. I recommend that you carefully choose your counsel. Pick other intelligent people who are not doomsayers. Our consulting business is flourishing because business owners now more than ever realize they need assistance. Don’t be afraid to seek professional advice.

Remember, life is too short to be grinding away at a business
that doesn’t produce the rewards you deserve!

Reprinted with permission from:
Ron Roberts & Guy Gruenberg,


My First Blog

April 15, 2008

This is my first venture into the world of blogging.  It seems to be the way the world is moving, so why not. Plus, ‘my boss’ asked me to do it.  We wanted to see how easy it would be for contractors & designers, with limited internet experience, to start your own & I’m about as inexperienced a user as you could find.

I am amazed at how easy it was.  I tried a couple blogging sites & decided that this one, WordPress is the easiest to get up & going. 

A couple things I learned:

  • think about your username – that’s how you’ll be found – use your company name if possible
  • there are a lot of options – start simple & just jump in
  • play around – it’s easy to delete, change, or start over
  • if you don’t like writing – find someone in your company or family that does & use them
  • write about something you know – your business, the industry, you

Blogging is a great way to increase your company’s exposure.  It also gives your clients and potential clients a more personal glimpse into you & your business.   They get to know you better & when they have a project to be done, they’ll turn to someone they know & trust – you! 

At least that’s the idea & since it takes just a minimal amount of time & effort, why not?

So, give it a try & let us know how it goes.  I’d love to hear about your experience.  Good luck!!  Let us know if we can help. 

Have Fun!
Caron
www.ChiefExperts.com