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When the economy and construction is booming, contractors may be able to get away with less-than-perfect management practices and financial controls. However, since the major housing correction about 10 years ago, plumbing contractors and businesses of all sizes have had to adjust and pay more attention to the internal side of their operations, especially key Read more

When the economy and construction is booming, contractors may be able to get away with less-than-perfect management practices and financial controls. However, since the major housing correction about 10 years ago, plumbing contractors and businesses of all sizes have had to adjust and pay more attention to the internal side of their operations, especially key financial factors. However, we all get busy sometimes and need a quick refresher. Here are a few key tips contractors can use to use to review and run your business operations more efficiently and successfully.

Estimate Jobs Accurately

For many projects, contractors must submit bids well in advance of the anticipated start date. However, the actual cost of materials, labor, permits, and other factors can change before the job is completed-and sometimes even before it starts.

Today, accurate estimating is more important than ever. Otherwise, you can underbid on a job and wind up losing money and profit in the end. While everyone today is anxious to win a job, there’s no point in sending out bids so low you can’t make a profit on the work.

Handle change orders quickly

Here’s another area where contractors can get yourselves into trouble unless you estimate your costs accurately and communicate the situation to your customer. Determine the extra costs and get the customer to approve the change order quickly. That’s the best way to be sure you don’t end up eating those costs.

Stay on top of billing and collections

In leaner times like this, customers can start falling behind on their payments. Tracking your account receivables and the incoming cash flow is essential in order to identify collection problems and take corrective action before it’s too late.

In fact, contractors are advised to strive to be ahead in their billing on progress payments – just in case the customer runs into a problem. That means billing a littler more than your incurred costs plus a share of the profit you expect to recognize from the job.

If payments do fall behind, be polite but persistent in your collection activities. Keep the lines of communication open and try to work with your customer to bring in at least a partial payment, if possible. If you call every one – two days with a gentle approach not in anger or force, you might be paid before another vendor who sits back quietly.

Pay your own bills on time

By regularly paying your bills on time, you may be able to negotiate better terms with your vendors or receive advance notice on special sales or inventory closeouts on materials you buy. In fact, if you have been doing this, have you asked your sales or supply contact for a discount or special? Maybe it’s time to leverage your loyalty and partnership.

Review each project’s financial results

Get into the habit of reviewing the actual financial results of every project after completion. Look at the original budget, the impact of any change orders and the actual costs. If the profit on the job was less than expected, try to determine the cause. And if there was a flaw in the estimating or budgeting process, the time to update the figures is before submitting the next bid, not afterward. You don’t always need to add a higher price on your next bid, many times you will find internal processes, using new technology, or using new installation processes or products that vastly reduce your expenses to make a higher profit.

Reduce your risks

Review your insurance policies with your agent on a regular basis and keep your coverage up to date. The number of construction-related lawsuits continues to grow and you need to protect your business. If you hire and subcontractors on projects, be sure to verify that they are bonded and insured to limit your own potential liability. In addition, setting your own safety procedures can vastly reduce your worker’s compensation claims and insurance rate by a substantial amount. This means you can use that extra cash flow as pure profit or allow you to earn more jobs with the ability to submit lower bids with the insurance savings. Having a quality safety policy and procedure in place is vital to your business but very few contractors take advantage of this opportunity.

Think Training

Plan training activities that boost morale while adding to the company’s base of skills. People generally work harder for a business when they feel the company is taking care of them. Keeping your employees up-to-date on installation techniques, new products and skills will give you an advantage over your competitors. Think long term and remember that market conditions are always changing.

Manage your overhead

Take a close look at your financial spreadsheet and analyze those monthly costs. There may be ways to cut your utility bills, reduce monthly bank fees, revamp your business cell phone plan, or your inventory procedures.

Think seriously about reducing any costs you can. Good cost-containment measures can make or break a business in leaner times.

I just finished up a year of traveling for business and have learned several lessons on the road. When I travel by plane, I am TSA Pre-check so I never need to stand in the long line waiting for the x-ray machines. There’s no need to pull my shoes off or take my computer out Read more

I just finished up a year of traveling for business and have learned several lessons on the road. When I travel by plane, I am TSA Pre-check so I never need to stand in the long line waiting for the x-ray machines. There’s no need to pull my shoes off or take my computer out of the bag. I recently traveled from Phoenix, AZ and when I got to airport I discovered the Pre-Check line was down. In addition, there were about 150 people in line with only three lanes open and a forth is sitting vacant. At the end of this line was a sign that said, “Questions? Tweet TSA, @askTSA.” So I quickly pulled out my phone and sent over a question via twitter that said, “Why do we not have all 4 lines working and why is Pre-Check shut down?”

Before I got through the line I already have an answer from TSA. They came back and said that they try to match the expected load with staff, but missed the fact that the colleges in AZ were out for the holidays that added to the additional traffic. They did say that they were working to get extra help and had a guy walking the line asking people if their flight was leaving in the next 30 min. If so, they would move that person to the front of the line. So they were pro-active in doing what they could to help out.

I went through the line and got my computer out along with my toiletries and proceeded through the scanner. I then put my toiletries back in my bag and walked away without my computer. I realized this tremendous error when my flight landed in Denver and was not feeling good about this turn of events. Once again, I pulled out my phone and tried the TSA twitter account again. This time I tweeted, “Help, left my computer at terminal 2 in Phoenix, what do I do?”

They tweeted back and asked the time I was at the terminal, the date, and which terminal etc. After I replied, they said someone would call me when they located my computer. A lady called the next morning and said she had my computer. I arranged for it to be picked up and everything was all right in the world. I realize the TSA group is not always our favorite friends when we travel but when I needed them most. They were there for me using the latest technology and responding to my needs.

I stayed at a Marriott hotel called the Epicurean, a boutique hotel and gave my rental car to a valet to park. When I went to check out, I gave the attendant my claim check and went back in to settle up my stay at the front desk. The attendant pulled up and parked my car outside and ran out to get another car. When he came back by I asked for my keys but he did not have them. They were in his hand when he locked up my car but left them in another car. So I immediately thought, “My rental car is locked and the keys may be anywhere in the parking lot or possibly on the way to the airport in someone else’s car.” In addition, he cannot remember exactly where he left them. I had a flight home in a couple of hours so I was a little frustrated.

Then enters Genevieve Wojick, the front desk clerk who had helped me check out. She had seen me out front and noticed that I had not left yet and came out to see if everything was OK. She was cool and calm and told me not need to worry, she would handle everything. She said she would arrange for the car to be towed or a second set of keys delivered to get the rental car back. She also would get me a ride to the airport and let the rental car company know what was going on and that the hotel would handle any extra charges and I would not miss my flight home.

As she was calling a cab, the attendant came running back in and said he found my keys! I was so impressed that she had the ability to work past this potentially huge problem and handled it with such a calm manner that provided comfort. She was the “voice of reason” for me during this problem. Marriott does a great job in hiring people to work their hotels and she is a testimony to going the extra mile.

After arriving at the airport, I put my phone down on the scanner to read my boarding pass as I boarded the flight. The United Airlines gate agent said, “Thanks for flying with United Mr. Hinshaw.” I listened in amazement as she called out the people behind me by name as well. That has only happened one time before in my travels and it sure makes an impression.

As I boarded the plane, a tall flight attendant named Sylvia welcomed me aboard. She had a distinctive accent and I asked her where she was from. She responded “Germany.” She saw a young mom coming down the isle with a baby and child seat that was having a hard time. Sylvia said, “Let me help you.” She quickly grabbed the child seat and walked her to her isle. Coming back, she saw an elderly woman about 5 foot tall looking up at the bins wondering how she would get her bag up that high. Sylvia took the bag and hoisted it up for her pleasantly without a problem. That made me feel good about flying United.

So how does this apply to you and your business as a contractor? Do you equip your front line (or actually any employee) to handle a situation when something comes up you didn’t plan on? I am confident that Genevieve’s hotel manager did not have a “what do we do when the keys are lost” drill. I’m quite certain the manager does have a customer service policy that says “Make a decision in the best interest of our customers and we’ll figure it out later!” He assuredly gives them the authority to make things happen, and in my case, it eased my mind completely. What happens when a routine plumbing install doesn’t go as planned? For instance, what happens when someone from your team steps through a ceiling or damages adjacent mechanical equipment? The truly impressive companies today have a system and policy in place to work through those opportunities when they occur, not if they occur. And I said correctly, opportunities not disasters. A real chance to show your customer whether you and your company have honest integrity to take care of them and own your own mistakes. A chance to build complete and total trust if handled respectfully and properly. Good companies actually plan on a problem arising, sort of like a fireman training for a house fire. They train to put out fires with an actual burning building, not just by reading a manual.

What can your team do to make that customer seem special? Make it a goal this year to do more than just what is on the proposal, make the customer feel like you are looking to serve them, not just make a profit. Then your customer will know that you and your company are going to do whatever is necessary to provide the best service and install the best products in their home or building. When you go the extra mile and deliver more than what they expected, most customers become raving life-long fans that tell others about your company. Your customers are your best marketing team if you please them. They tell neighbors, friends, and share it on social media like Facebook.

So sit down with the entire company and ask them how they can make customers feel better by doing business with your company. Don’t have time? You might want to make time because some of your competitors are doing that today. If not, your customer may simply decide to work with your competitor instead in the future. Or you may turn them into life-long partnerships that will make your business grow and keep your customers happy at the same time.

Gerber, an industry leader in high performing plumbing fixtures, has announced seven new hand hygiene sinks to benefit environments where hygiene and cross-contamination control is of concern – hospitals, doctors’ offices, schools, child care centers, industrial buildings, among others.Leading the introduction is the Monticello™ Hygienic Hospital Basin (Model NH-12-661; list price $800).  This sink offers Read more

Gerber, an industry leader in high performing plumbing fixtures, has announced seven new hand hygiene sinks to benefit environments where hygiene and cross-contamination control is of concern – hospitals, doctors’ offices, schools, child care centers, industrial buildings, among others.Leading the introduction is the Monticello™ Hygienic Hospital Basin (Model NH-12-661; list price $800).  This sink offers the industry’s highest level of cross-contamination protection.   Features include:Deep basin with sloped angles to minimize splashing, germ-pooling and contaminationOffset drain to reduce splashing and aerosolization from direct contact with water streamSealed overflow to eliminate hazards of germ collectionSeveral other Gerber sink options are now also part of the hygienic offerings:NH-12-654/658NH-12-834/838NH-12-474/478Each of these sinks has a sealed overflow to eliminate contamination risks and can be installed for ADA compliance (with the exception of NH-12-661, which is not ADA compliant).“According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) approximately 722,000 inpatients per year contract infections from the surrounding environment in healthcare facilities, which results in an increase in the cost of care,” says Eric Peterson, Gerber’s vice president of sales.  “Because of that, hospitals and medical facilities are heavily incentivized to reduce the risk of patient contamination and infection for inpatient care.  These sink options can make a significant difference in strengthening those environments and eliminating risk.”For more information on the Gerber brand or its products, visit www.gerberonline.com or call (866) 538-5536.

 
Source: Gerber Expands Hygienic Sink Solutions

Sioux Chief’s PEX Chair™ supports 3/8″ through ¾” PEX supply lines and keeps tube in place during the concrete pour. PEX Chair organizes tube in parallel or offset configurations making installations quick and easy.Rough plumbing manufacturer, Sioux Chief, recently added the PEX Chair™ slab organizer as part of its continuing effort to expand offerings of Read more

Sioux Chief’s PEX Chair™ supports 3/8″ through ¾” PEX supply lines and keeps tube in place during the concrete pour. PEX Chair organizes tube in parallel or offset configurations making installations quick and easy.Rough plumbing manufacturer, Sioux Chief, recently added the PEX Chair™ slab organizer as part of its continuing effort to expand offerings of versatile and innovative products.The PEX Chair is designed to support single 3/8″ through ¾” PEX supplies on residential or commercial, multi-floor construction projects. Multiple PEX Chair units can be connected in parallel or offset configurations by its interlocking tongue and groove feature. The raised midsection allows concrete to easily flow through and around the device, and its rear contour is designed for abutting to vent pipes. Other features include a rebar receiver for ground staking, as well as height adjustment for pre-cast deck over pours. The angled design and hook feature at the top of the unit makes it easy to install PEX without kinking and holds the tube vertically in place through the completion of the concrete pour.

Source: New Sioux Chief Product: PEX Chair™ | Sioux Chief Blog

tekmar today unveiled its new app and online tool to assist users in designing their own snow & ice melting solutions. Contractors, engineers, and distributors can use the app and online tool to enter their design parameters and instantly receive the specific information they need to specify the correct control solution, prepare a quote, and Read more

tekmar today unveiled its new app and online tool to assist users in designing their own snow & ice melting solutions.

Contractors, engineers, and distributors can use the app and online tool to enter their design parameters and instantly receive the specific information they need to specify the correct control solution, prepare a quote, and successfully complete an installation. The tool provides access to mechanical and electrical drawings (including packages for 28 different applications), a bill of materials, and manuals and literature on tekmar snow & ice melting controls.

The new app is available for Android devices at https://play.google.com/store.

The tekmar Snow & Ice Melting online tool is available at design.tekmarControls.com.

For more information, visit www.tekmarControls.com

 

Tekmar app for plumbing contractors