Posts Tagged bidding lawn care

10 Reasons to start your [lawn care] business this year.

Start a Lawn Care Business by Cutting Grass for Residential Customers

A recent Wall Street Journal business article entitled “10 Reasons to Start a Business This Year” has piqued our interest and we want to pass the article along.

While this list of reasons to start a business contains several interesting elements such as “never getting laid off” and “giving yourself a raise”, the one item on the list that really jumps out at us is  #7. Consumers and businesses have started spending again.

In our informal surveys of residential lawn care customers and corporate landscaping accounts, we are finding that #7 is a trend in the need for lawn care services in 2011.  Potential customers are beginning to be willing to open their wallets to have their grass and overall landscaping looking good again.

If you are a lawn care contractor (or future business owner) this should be music to your ears.  And, if you haven’t started your business yet, this might be an excellent time to start your business and begin gaining contracts before the weather warms and the spring onslaught begins.  Getting your customers right now means you can hit the ground running once spring arrives and you will be miles ahead of your competitors.

If you are thinking about starting your own lawn care business, we hope you will read through our home page to learn more about our lawn care business training program.  This business training course contains a tremendous amount of information on how to properly acquire customers and how to bid jobs (large and small) correctly.  Just one good lawn care account will easily pay for this entire course.

We have it on sale right now before spring arrives.  Read more on our home page: www.StartALawnCareBusiness.com

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Bidding a lawn care job.

by: Lawn Care Business

How to bid a lawn care job.

Properly bidding a lawn care and landscaping contract involves a fine balance between covering your costs and knowing how much your customer will pay. Underbidding is one of the biggest problems that new lawn care business owners face.

The StartALawnCareBusiness.com estimating guidebooks give you extensive information and examples on how to bid lawn care jobs. Whether you are doing simple grass cutting or installing intricate landscapes, you must know how to properly bid your jobs or you risk going out of business. Below are 3 simple guidelines to follow.

1) Know your costs:

You should never bid on a lawn care job until you know your costs to perform that job. If you are bidding on a straight-up grass cutting job, your costs include: labor, equipment depreciation, supplies (gasoline, weedeater line, etc.) transportation costs, and office expenses (including all other expenses of operating your business.)
There are very few instances when you should ever do landscaping for less than your cost.


2) Know your customers:

Knowledge of your customers gives a good indication of the amount they are willing to pay for your services. A customer in an exclusive neighborhood with 30,000 square feet of finely manicure grass should be willing to pay more than $20/week to have the grounds maintained through the summer. It behooves you, as a lawn care business owner, to extract enough information from your prospective customer during your initial interview to help you determine the amount of money that customer is willing to pay for your services.

3) Know your competition:

Your competitors will always attempt to lowball and underbid your prices. Keep tabs on your competition. Learn what they are charging. Learn what tactics they are employing to steal away your customers. Counter their moves by providing top-quality services and charging fair prices for your lawn care / landscaping work.
 

These are just a few tips on pricing your lawn care jobs. In our 17 years of lawn care experience we have performed jobs from small $20 duplexes up to large 90 acre industrial complexes and multi-year government contracts. We have poured our pricing experience into the lawn care business program. If you are interested in learning how to properly price your jobs, our estimating guidebook and estimating calculators will help you give better bids.

Our Lawn Care Business program is on sale right now at:
www.StartALawnCareBusiness.com

 

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