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K M. Kerr
K M. Kerr

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Your Competitor Sent the Quote While You Were Still Measuring. Here's What They Know.

The call came on a Tuesday morning. Mrs. Johnson needed her entire downstairs painted — ceilings, walls, trim, the works. I told her I'd have a quote to her by end of day.

I didn't send it until Thursday night.

She'd already hired someone else by Wednesday afternoon. Not because they were cheaper. Not because they were better. Because they showed up, measured, and sent the quote before I'd even finished my lunch break on Tuesday.

That one stung. It should have. I'd been painting and renovating in the Bahamas since 1992, and I was losing jobs not on quality, not on price — but on speed.

Here's what I've learned in over three decades of running Kerr's Painting & Renovations: the contractor who gets the quote in their hands first wins more often than the cheapest contractor. Every time.

The Real Problem Nobody Talks About

Most tradesmen think their problem is pricing. They believe they're losing bids because the other guy is cheaper. Sometimes that's true. But more often, the real problem is this:

You're slow.

Not on the job site. You're fast there. You're slow in the back office. The estimate that takes you 45 minutes to measure, another 20 to calculate, and another 15 to format — that's 80 minutes per quote. If you're bidding three jobs a week, that's four hours gone. Four hours you could have spent on a job site earning money, or at home with your family.

And here's the part that should keep you up at night: while you're still punching numbers into a calculator, a competitor who uses modern estimating software has already sent three quotes and booked two of them.

What The Uninformed Contractor Does

They show up with a notepad and a tape measure. They scribble dimensions on a scrap of paper. They go back to the truck, drive home, sit at the kitchen table, and spend an hour building a quote from scratch — every single time.

Then they email it as a plain text message or a Word document that looks like it was typed in 2003.

The homeowner opens it. Then they open the competitor's quote — a clean, professional PDF with line items, clear scope of work, and a company logo. Which one do you think they trust with a $15,000 renovation?

What I Do Now

About a year ago, I hit a wall. I was spending more time quoting than painting. That math doesn't work for any business. So I started looking for a solution.

I found QuoteIQ.

Here's what changed:

1. I measure on-site and the quote builds itself.
I walk the job with my phone. Room dimensions, surface conditions, material needs — it all goes into QuoteIQ as I go. By the time I'm back in the truck, the quote is 80% done.

2. I send quotes before I leave the driveway.
Under two minutes to finalize. Not twenty. Not forty-five. Two. The homeowner gets a professional PDF with my branding, clear line items, and a scope of work they can actually understand — before I've even pulled out of their street.

3. I stopped losing jobs to faster competitors.
When you're the first quote in someone's inbox, you set the standard. Every quote that arrives after yours gets compared to yours. That's a position you want to be in.

4. The back office runs itself.
QuoteIQ tracks which quotes are pending, which are accepted, and which went cold. I don't have to remember to follow up — the system reminds me. That alone has recovered jobs I would have forgotten about.

The Math That Matters

Let's say you bid 10 jobs a month. If the old way took you 80 minutes per quote, that's over 13 hours a month just on estimating. At $75 an hour — which is conservative for a skilled tradesman — you're burning roughly a thousand dollars a month on paperwork.

Now let's say the new way takes 10 minutes per quote. That's under two hours a month. You just recovered 11 hours — nearly a full day and a half — every single month.

And if sending quotes faster wins you just one extra job a month that you would have lost? That's thousands in additional revenue. The software pays for itself on the first job you don't lose.

Here's The Bottom Line

I didn't build QuoteIQ. I'm just a painter who got tired of losing work to people who weren't better than me — just faster on the paperwork.

If you're a contractor, handyman, pressure washer, or painter who's still building quotes the old way, ask yourself this: how many jobs did you lose last month because your quote arrived second?

I use QuoteIQ for every estimate now. It cut my quote time from 20 minutes to under two. I'm not speculating. I'm reporting.

Try QuoteIQ here

Stop letting your paperwork cost you jobs.

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I put 34 years of job-site experience into this. No courses to buy — just the guide.
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