Lyrical said:
I was taught a lesson by one of the wealthiest businessperson I ever met (a car dealer). In business, you need to decide if you are going to be the guy who lets business come his way, or the guy that is aggressive and goes after it. I want to control my destiny and my demand, I don"t want to be sitting around waiting for the phone to ring.
Yeah, that"s definitely something we"ve got to improve on. We"ve been too reliant on our reputation and existing relationships, and are suffering for it right now. Barely picked up any work from last July-November because our estimator quit, leaving me to try to administer the company as well as tender projects, so we were only bidding 1/2 as many projects or less than we would have otherwise. And unfortunately basically everything we DID bid, we either didn"t get because some idiot was stupid low (at or below our cost), or the project simply didn"t end up going ahead.
Thankfully we"ve picked up several projects in the past month or two; 88, 138, and 120 suite condos. Unfortunately even though they"ve already begun digging the parkades, we won"t be needing to man up on them for a few months, so we"ve had to lay a ton of guys off as other projects have finished. We"ve gone from 60 field guys in November down to 30 right now. Probably will hover around there for the next few months before things start to pick up.
We"ve also been training a new estimator over the past couple months. Slow and frustrating, but I"m hoping he"ll work out okay in the long term. That will allow us to pursue a lot more work and hopefully allow us to smooth out the yo-yo"ing we"ve been doing the past couple years as projects start and finish. We"ve had to let a lot of pretty good guys go, unfortunately, and ones that we"ve invested a lot of time in training as they worked their way through their apprenticeships. Unemployment is below 5% right now, so hopefully they won"t have much difficulty finding new work.
Aside from bidding, we"ve got to do a lot more "business development", which quite honestly right now we don"t do any of. The big thing with construction is bidding on work that general contractors have construction management, meaning they haven"t given a lump sump price to the owner for the project, but will instead charge a mark-up on the total project costs. So instead of an owner having 5-10 generals bidding on a job, and each subtrade having 10-20 competitors bidding, you bid to the CM who might have only invited 3-5 people or less. Sometimes the CM will just outright give the job to a preferred subtrade provided they meet the owner"s budget. However most CM contracts stipulate that the CM must seek out a minimum number of prices for major trades. But on the flip side, some generals will tell you "hey, we have this CM, we want you to do it. Who else should we call to get a couple other numbers?" *wink* Then you call up your competition, remind them of the favor they owe you, and feed them a number. Ah the joys of construction. No wonder the mob loves it.
It"s huge not having to beat the shit out of 10 other mechanicals to try to get a job, because generally if there"s that many guys on it, the one who wins the bid is the one who is going to make the least or lose the most money on the job.
2011 ended up being a better year than 2010, but our net margin after overhead was still only 4%. That"s just not worth the stress.