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| This 334 page estimating textbook contains hundreds of illustrations, examples, sample blueprints, and price catalog, plus Instructor Guide. Bid Checklist, Bid Notes and Questions, The Take-Off, Determining Bill of Material, Pricing and Labor, Extending and Totaling, Adjusting Material and Labor Costs, Bid Summary (Bid Recap), Project Management Basics, The Proposal, and Selecting Estimating Software. Text/workbook with answer key. |
Learn how to do your estimates quickly and accurately. Good estimates allow you to:
- Bid competitively and profitably, rather than choosing between getting the job or making money on it.
- Let your competitors have the jobs that lose money.
- Correctly price add-ons and scope changes.
- Manage the job against a budget.
- Review completed jobs against budget to see what went right or wrong.
Mike Holt's Electrical Estimating textbook/workbook shows you how to do take-offs, determine material costs, and estimate labor costs. You'll know how to determine your overhead, profit, and break-even. And you'll be able to do all of this quickly and accurately.
- Pages: 334.
- Graphics: 163.
- Includes quizzes and answer key.
Never again will you be in the position of negotiating prices with your customers based on guesswork and hope. Never again will you have to lose money on a job because your priced it lower than your cost of doing it. Never again will you sweat out an estimate, labor long hours over it, or keep redoing it until it's right.
The knowledge you gain from Electrical Estimating textbook/workbook will allow you to quickly perform accurate estimates every time. This means you can serve your customers faster and better from Day One. It also means you'll know up front what it takes to do a given job and how much you need to charge for it. You can watch your profits rise and as your stress goes down.
Mike Holt's Electrical Estimating textbook/workbook is a wise investment. Buy yours today, so you can start reaping the benefits.
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| Why should you make accurate estimates? |
An accurate estimate helps in many ways. For example:
- A sales rep can bid correctly on a project, rather than lose money by underbidding or lose the project by overbidding.
- A sales rep can accurately explain the bid to the customer, and perhaps be the only bidder able to do so.
- A project manager can use that budget to plan and manage projects profitably.
- Crews can order from the bill of materials in the estimate, to keep work flowing without stockpiling costly materials “just in case.”
- The company can manage cash flow much better. And cash flow is the lifeblood of every company.
Incorrect estimates can easily cause failed bids, failed projects, and cash flow crunches. A failed bid means you don’t get the work. A failed project means you got the work, but lost money on the job and perhaps lost future business with that customer. A cash flow crunch can kill your company.
Estimating is a way of seeing, in advance, what you need to correctly complete a given project
profitably. The costs include time, labor, and materials. If you know those costs and they are figured into your bid and price, then you can do with job itself correctly and profitably. You won’t face the choice between cutting corners and breaking even. Instead, you’ll be able to do the project to the quality standards you promised and your customer expects.
In some cases, the estimate can reveal that your company shouldn’t even take on this project. You can pass the disaster on to a competitor. You can’t do every possible job that comes along, nor would you want to. With accurate estimates, you can bid on those projects that are the best fit for your company’s resources and expertise and those projects that are the most profitable.
An accurate estimate helps you present the customer with an accurate bid. Bidding is a separate discipline, but it begins with an accurate estimate. You can win a bidding contest with an accurate bid, even if your bid isn’t the lowest and in some cases even if it is the highest.
Many bids are based on guesswork or the prices competitors charge, rather than on the actual costs plus profit. If you can show a customer why your bid is accurate, the confidence in your bid and your ability to deliver the project without cost overruns goes up. That may not guarantee you’ll get the job, but it does guarantee you’ll know what you’re getting into. And that is just one of the big benefits of making accurate estimates. |
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| These keywords may have brought you here: Electrical Estimating textbook/workbook, training in estimating, job planning skills, costing, bidding, mike holt, electrical training, learning estimating, accurate estimates, doing takeoffs, project estimating |
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Customer Reviews |
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    Great learning aid for estimating, 5.16.2010
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Reviewer: Darren Cox (Pittsburgh, PA)
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The book was very clear and gave me first a good understanding of the concept of estimating and then went into the details. Really, really helpful.
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    Good background, 12.27.2009
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Reviewer: Craig Hensley (Essex, MD)
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It's somewhere between a primer and a manual. I don't feel fully confident with estimating, though I now have a good general understanding.
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    Good resource, 12.27.2009
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Reviewer: Dale Truman (Indianapolis, IN)
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It made a lot of ideas about estimating clear.
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    May take us to new sales records, 12.9.2009
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Reviewer: Francie Durya (Boston, MA)
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We're very optimistic now having gone through this text. We were making some major blunders we won't be making, now. Thanks!
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    Extremley good, 11.11.2009
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Reviewer: Cody Woods (Culver City, CA)
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Coverage of the topic is excellent, explanations and illustrations are clear. I learned a lot from this book.
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View all 9 reviews
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