Posts Tagged ‘leads’

The ABCs of Your USP

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

What is it that makes your company so special? What sets you apart from the competition? The easy answers are hard work, dedication, and quality. But these are not the most unique characteristics of a successful company. In fact they are the backbone of every successful company, and in a slow market many successful, quality companies are competing for the same jobs, wooing the same clients.

That means that contractor-seeking homeowners are likely bombarded with lines like, “We do quality work” or “I have years of experience” or “I am honest, I work for you!” Nowadays it takes more than a smile and a handshake to get work. It takes some creative selling. So the question becomes: What is your unique selling proposition? Your USP?

The USP is not new to marketing. Today a number of businesses and corporations search for and use their USP to the fullest extent. And in a highly competitive market it is vital that you realize and utilize your company’s unique selling point. A recent post from Qualified Remodeler offered some good advice for contractors seeking out their own USP.

That advice includes something that many of you are likely already doing — contacting past clients. But instead of contacting them simply to maintain a relationship and check on past work (an increasingly important approach in its own right), you can use them as a marketing research tool. Surely there is some reason that those past clients chose you in the first place; something about your company that somehow appealed to them more than your competition.

So the deal is to call some of your favorite, most successful clients past, of course check up on the finished project and offer any assistance needed, but also schedule a rendezvous (i.e., dinner, lunch, etc.) where you can probe them as to why they hired you. As Qualified Remodeler suggests, do this with about five of your favorite clients and look for a theme to arise, the odds are good that you will find one. This may very well by your company USP. (more…)

Pitfalls of Low Bidding

Monday, June 15th, 2009

As I’m sure the vast majority of you are aware, the depressed home construction market has spawned a good deal of low bidding, even going so far as to spurn undercutting between contractors, forcing many qualified contractors out of seemingly solid leads. In such a climate it may be easy to fall into the web of low bidding. Indeed it is often hard to lay blame when considering the desperation that many contractors feel — contractors who were thriving just a few years ago.

Low bidding is not without its pitfalls, however, and it is vital that no contractor bid lower than his or her means allow, especially within the realm of remodeling.

Pitfall #1: Losing Potential

Low bidding can easily lead to taking a loss. A contractor, in the oft mad drive for work, might look at a job — quickly measuring up the job and the homeowner — and feel confident enough to bid lower than normal for the work. The general gamble here is that the job will run smoothly and according to plan, despite experience of the opposite. We often counsel homeowners to be prepared for just about anything when “opening up” their home. In this case, the same advice is useful for remodelers seeking to outbid the next guy — simply having work does not necessarily spell success.

Pitfall #2: Labor and Manpower

Labor is another key issue. You, the contractor, are responsible for paying your employees, whether the job is over budget or not. Low bidding combined with unforeseen circumstances can spell disaster for your job, finances, reputation, and that all-important relationship with employees. Furthermore, should circumstances send the job behind schedule, you won’t have the resource to recruit the manpower to get it done in a reasonable amount of time.

Pitfall #3: Reputation

Reputation. Low bidding is often looked sternly upon by other contractors and trades within the community. It may seem like the short road to ongoing work, but in the long run it can be more damaging than helpful. In tough economic times all contractors are forced to lower their bids, there is no denying that; we all have mouths to feed, and that includes homeowners. But on top of all the other risks involved in low bidding, which can also hurt your reputation, tarnishing the company name is not one to ignore. (more…)

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