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Hi Guys, After 15 years, I've decided that it might be an idea to increase the price on a commercial job I have. I found out, a few years in, that I originally picked the job up as a result of inadvertently submitting the lowest price. It’s one of the reasons I've kept the price static. It still pays good money, but obviously it has slipped somewhat in comparison with 15 years ago. So, what would you do? What kind of increase would you submit?Nick
10%.Don't ask, don't warn them, just add 10% to your next invoice and submit.You've been doing them for 15 years; they're not going to sack you for that.They'll just pay.
You can’t just increase the price without consulting them , plus that’s very unprofessional.
Quote from: Missing Link on January 07, 2024, 03:13:06 pm10%.Don't ask, don't warn them, just add 10% to your next invoice and submit.You've been doing them for 15 years; they're not going to sack you for that.They'll just pay.You can’t just increase the price without consulting them , plus that’s very unprofessional.
You can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.
You can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.If someone stuck my price up without telling me I might take the hump it's just not polite or proper is it.
Quote from: Stoots on January 10, 2024, 12:06:22 pmYou can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.Mostly because it feels a bit 'tedious' to explain to a domestic customer that their property is going up by a quid or two.For commercial, it also feels tedious. One owner of a medium sized business with around 40 employees (that I know socially from the local running club) once said to me that the window cleaning costs are a tiny fraction of their overall outgoings.Do they really want to be bothered with a notification about a £5 yearly increase?I just stick 'em up.
Quote from: Missing Link on January 10, 2024, 03:20:56 pmQuote from: Stoots on January 10, 2024, 12:06:22 pmYou can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.Mostly because it feels a bit 'tedious' to explain to a domestic customer that their property is going up by a quid or two.For commercial, it also feels tedious. One owner of a medium sized business with around 40 employees (that I know socially from the local running club) once said to me that the window cleaning costs are a tiny fraction of their overall outgoings.Do they really want to be bothered with a notification about a £5 yearly increase?I just stick 'em up.It’s just polite to ask before doing it , and I can assure you any commercial company worth their salt will need and want to know for the contract details .
Quote from: Splash & dash on January 10, 2024, 03:27:21 pmQuote from: Missing Link on January 10, 2024, 03:20:56 pmQuote from: Stoots on January 10, 2024, 12:06:22 pmYou can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.Mostly because it feels a bit 'tedious' to explain to a domestic customer that their property is going up by a quid or two.For commercial, it also feels tedious. One owner of a medium sized business with around 40 employees (that I know socially from the local running club) once said to me that the window cleaning costs are a tiny fraction of their overall outgoings.Do they really want to be bothered with a notification about a £5 yearly increase?I just stick 'em up.It’s just polite to ask before doing it , and I can assure you any commercial company worth their salt will need and want to know for the contract details .Any commercial company worth their salt ffs .What do you mean by Ask? Do BT/Sky etc ‘Ask’ you before increasing their price?
We’re just window lickers on here with customersSplash isa blue chip vision technician where all his work is done via multi million pound contracts that even increase the price for him 🤣🤣
Quote from: deeege on January 10, 2024, 04:20:59 pmQuote from: Splash & dash on January 10, 2024, 03:27:21 pmQuote from: Missing Link on January 10, 2024, 03:20:56 pmQuote from: Stoots on January 10, 2024, 12:06:22 pmYou can increase the price without notice but they are not obliged to pay it for obvious reasons. So why not just Inform them surely that's the right thing to do.Mostly because it feels a bit 'tedious' to explain to a domestic customer that their property is going up by a quid or two.For commercial, it also feels tedious. One owner of a medium sized business with around 40 employees (that I know socially from the local running club) once said to me that the window cleaning costs are a tiny fraction of their overall outgoings.Do they really want to be bothered with a notification about a £5 yearly increase?I just stick 'em up.It’s just polite to ask before doing it , and I can assure you any commercial company worth their salt will need and want to know for the contract details .Any commercial company worth their salt ffs .What do you mean by Ask? Do BT/Sky etc ‘Ask’ you before increasing their price?No they don’t but you and I aren’t huge firms so it’s polite to ask good customer relations