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Old 12-02-2014, 11:49 AM
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Originally Posted by Munssey View Post
Ironworks, Blake, Ron... Excellent points!

Communication, communication, communication right?

One thing I try to constantly remind myself to run like a checklist is the communication to customers on how this process will go, what is expected of them by when and what exactly we will be doing so they can get the understanding that it's an involved process.

So this might be a good conversation for this topic. Best practices to keep project management and the discipline to run it like a business instead of a hobby. I'd love to hear what others think should be\ not be in the list from either an owner\ operator or a customer's prospective.

Three documents that I find are life savers but take some discipline to use and I have had to evolve into what I use today:

1. Written Detailed Estimate of Work (to outline all the details discussed before hand). Not just 'build part x' but build it for this customer, using these materials and then amend with a start and estimated end date when possible after timing has been agreed on and the Estimate turns to a contract. I am not only surprised by how many shops dont do this but am uncomfortable when I have work done and they do not supply me with this as a customer. I always feel like a surprise is in my future and make it a point to connect with the manager of the project so they know I really appreciate knowing of changes up front instead of waiting until the end and get hit with it. I'm a big boy, I can take bad news... just less gracefully if it's at the end when the bill shows up.

2. MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) I explain this as the 'rules to the game'. Since Monopoly can be played different in every household, it's best to agree on the rules before the dice are rolled. That's usually where we discuss what is expected of the customer as far as engagement, payment schedule, how to access their customer page for project updates and... the change orders (which is #3).

3. Change orders - If something changes from the written detailed estimate that was signed, it must have a change order stating what changed in work, time and\ or price. Very simple to do, and cheap insurance for the customer to make sure they understand and are happy.

Does anyone agree? What else is there that might compliment or even replace any of these?

Learning hat is on.
So my question is who pays for the Written Detailed Estimate? Our main customers would tell me just to get to work and communicate with them as the process unfolds what is happening. I talk with customers as much as they want and open the door for the dumbest questions, Because if its a question for them its not dumb. They need to understand the process and they have to see they are being treated fairly.

How can you expect a guy to give a spot on Estimate on a project of this precision when the can't build air craft carriers or bridges on time and exactly on budget?

We are working on 55 Chevrolet and we put a new quarter panel on one side and not the other. I now know it would have been much less work to have put a quarter panel on both sides due to the stamping differences from the original quarter panels and the repo unit. It was a major visual difference. MAJOR. How do you budget for that? Whose fault is that? We are hired to build perfect cars with very imperfect parts that are marketed to Just bolt right on cars that were not perfect when new and perform perfectly. And just because a parts fits perfectly on one car does not mean it will fit perfectly on the next car.

The biggest thing I have learned is you have to be able to charge a customer a fair amount of money to be able to keep the ball rolling. You also have to take your licks when you screw something up. No one builds everything perfect every time. The way to win a customer is with integrity and knocking money off the bill with out them asking because you screwed something up does that.

The only way to fix a lack of communication is with the communication the customer wants and needs to hear to understand. But you can explain it to them all day long and it does not mean they understand you, even if they say they do.
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