The call came on a Tuesday. A property manager I'd been chasing for six months finally had a project — a full interior repaint of a 14-unit building. She needed the quote by Friday. I was on a job site until dark every day that week.
I got the quote out Sunday night. Monday morning she told me they'd already signed with someone else. Someone who sent their number Friday afternoon.
That job was worth $12,400. I lost it because I couldn't turn an estimate around fast enough.
I've been painting and renovating in the Bahamas since 1992. In 34 years, I've learned that speed kills — but not the way most contractors think. Speed doesn't kill quality. Slow kills your business.
Here's what nobody tells you about estimating: the contractor who responds first doesn't always win. But the contractor who responds last almost always loses. Every hour your quote sits unfinished is an hour your competitor is closing your job.
I used to spend 20 minutes per estimate. That doesn't sound like much until you're doing eight quotes a week while running crews, ordering materials, and putting out fires. Twenty minutes becomes two hours when you factor in interruptions. Two hours becomes two days when you're exhausted.
The math is brutal. If you miss one $5,000 job per month because your quotes are slow or unprofessional — that's $60,000 a year walking out the door. And that's conservative. I've seen contractors lose three times that.
What the uninformed contractor does: Scribbles numbers on a notepad, types them into a Word template from 2008, emails it three days later, and wonders why the phone stopped ringing.
What I do now: Walk the job, enter the numbers into QuoteIQ on my phone before I even get back in the truck, and hit send. Under two minutes. Professional PDF. Line items. Company logo. Done.
This is exactly why I started using QuoteIQ. It's estimating software built for contractors — not accountants, not project managers sitting in an office. Tradesmen who need to quote fast and look professional doing it.
Three things changed when I switched:
1. Quote time dropped from 20 minutes to under 2. I'm not exaggerating. Once your material prices and labor rates are in the system, you're just punching in quantities. The math does itself.
2. I stopped losing jobs to faster competitors. When a client gets three quotes and yours arrives first — clean, professional, itemized — you've already set the standard. The other two quotes are competing against yours, not the other way around.
3. My close rate went up because I looked more professional. A typed PDF with your logo and clear line items signals something a handwritten estimate never will: this person runs a real business. Clients pay more when they trust the operation.
The software pays for itself with one job. Literally one. If you're doing any volume at all, the time savings alone cover the cost in the first week.
Here's the thing about this business. You didn't learn your trade to sit at a desk typing estimates at 9 PM. You learned it to do the work. The estimating is necessary — but it shouldn't be what keeps you from growing.
I use QuoteIQ because it lets me quote faster, win more, and get back to what I actually do. If you're still handwriting estimates or using some clunky template from 2012, you're leaving money on the table. Probably more than you realize.
→ I use this on every quote now: https://admin-quoteiq.web.app/register?via=keith-kerr
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