Les,
So, at first reading, your competitor has matched the specification, just killed you on the costs.
There are a number of ways of them doing this.
1. Employ young cleaners/students to minimise wage bill, lower rate of NMW.
2. Employ other staff who are not aware of the NMW.
3. They plan to cut the cleaning specification without telling the client.
4. The competition is a small company and they are just taking a wage for this work.
5. The premises is primarily made up of hard flooring, and they are putting in machinery to cut labour costs.
6. The new contractor is a management company.
There are of course, many others!!!!!!!!
Is the site fully staffed by your own employee's at the minute?
Or do you undertake some or all of the cleaning on site yourself?
If the site is currently serviced by staff, TUPE will apply, so you may well lose your staff as well, the upside of this is that the contractor taking over will have to maintain current wages etc, if the figures are wrong as you suspect, it will not be long before the phone rings asking you to sort it out.
If you do some of this work yourself, the situation becomes a little more complex!
Anyone can quote a lower price, and in these financially stretched times clients must find ways of doing more for less especially within the NHS.
I assume that the total hours for this site are 40 hrs per week, so for the sake of arguement lets say that you pay £247.60 in wages (NMW) to this you obviously have to add on your costs, NI, Holiday Pay, Insurance & Equipment etc.
Some things to remmeber!
After 12 yrs onsite, especially without recieving any complaints etc, the site must be running pretty smoothly, so perhaps you may well be guilty of over engineering the site, and you could cut 10 minutes a day of actual cleaning time on this site, which you could utlise to either use on the periodic cleaning or cut your price to the client.
If the site is well setup, correctly managed and the staff are reliable, your profit should be in the region of 5% - 10%, perhaps this is a lot less than you currently recieve? Now, dont get me wrong, this must be sickening for you, but this is where looking at the long term picture may well be benificial.
If you know the other company that has given them a quote, do some research on them, nearly all firms have a reputation of one sort or another, this may well allow you to understand how they have submitted this price.
Regards,
Rob