Uh-oh….. I have to agree with dd on this one….. must be a full moon.
If you’re a shop doing $250,00 to $300,000 a year, you should be capable of figuring your quotes, bids, estimates… whatever you call them on a piece of paper, calculator and pencil. Pencil because you’ll probably be erasing things a few times. The quoting software just makes it look nicer. It also might get done a little faster.
For the most part, jobs are like dd said….. time, materials, overhead, profit and taxes. Whether you’re putting a quote together for a $50,000 pylon, a way-finding system in a hospital for $150,000 or a $750 MDO sign with installations….. you have to figure it all in. Once you figure the line items out, you can plug them into your software program [
which is what we do] or just write up a quote. The end result is exactly the same.
If you have each and every item possibly available in the market and every screw, nut and bolt figured in along with extenuating circumstances….. a quoting program might work, but I’ll bet everyone still adjusts them to meet certain requirements.
I agree that a software package will do wonders, but I don’t know of a single shop that relies solely on their software and doesn’t do much of the figuring on a separate pad of paper beforehand. Heck, I have all kinds of notes and special line items just for that very reason.