threeputt
New Member
Quick story. Just this week the winning bid was announced for a job we had bid on. It was a large quantity of signs for the municipality in which I live.
We had previously been the winning bidder on another project three months ago for this same municipality. Graphics on 28 busses.
Well, you guessed it, our bid was not accepted. (they have to accept the lowest qualified bid) Our bid was four times what the winning bid was. I was dumbfounded. We poured over the spec sheets like crazy. Shopped for good deals on the materials. The .080" aluminum alone (they even spec'd the alloy number) was $2K. The job required 2.6 rolls of 54" Printable Reflective vinyl at 2K a roll.
The signs were irregular shape requiring cutting, drilling, etc. blah, blah, blah. Bid packet 29 pages long.
When I was shown the winning bid (it wouldn't even cover the cost of the Reflective vinyl - at cost) I realized that there must be some serious markup when they sell through distributors and those distributors then "step" on it, finally selling it to us users. (who in turn then sell to the client)
The company that won the bid is a big outfit that does pretty much only street signs for cities and towns. So they must get the material at a much, much lower cost than we are able to. Same goes for the aluminum too.
We had previously been the winning bidder on another project three months ago for this same municipality. Graphics on 28 busses.
Well, you guessed it, our bid was not accepted. (they have to accept the lowest qualified bid) Our bid was four times what the winning bid was. I was dumbfounded. We poured over the spec sheets like crazy. Shopped for good deals on the materials. The .080" aluminum alone (they even spec'd the alloy number) was $2K. The job required 2.6 rolls of 54" Printable Reflective vinyl at 2K a roll.
The signs were irregular shape requiring cutting, drilling, etc. blah, blah, blah. Bid packet 29 pages long.
When I was shown the winning bid (it wouldn't even cover the cost of the Reflective vinyl - at cost) I realized that there must be some serious markup when they sell through distributors and those distributors then "step" on it, finally selling it to us users. (who in turn then sell to the client)
The company that won the bid is a big outfit that does pretty much only street signs for cities and towns. So they must get the material at a much, much lower cost than we are able to. Same goes for the aluminum too.