I've worked a cabinet shop, done trim carpentry and woodworking, as well as doing it on my own when people call from time to time and was wondering if there are any other trim carpentry guys here and if so, how do you charge (in general)---by time or by 'lineal foot'? I'm speaking of the typical baseboard and crown molding and door casing for the sake of this post.
For a long time, I charged hourly, but lately, I've been wanting a more sure, accurate way to estimate (since that's what the customer always wants to know!!) and was working on coming up with a pricing structure based on lineal feet and number of corners. It seems like this would closely reflect the time too, since that's where the time comes in. Also, I'm thinking there should be a premium for ceilings over 8'!
Part of my re-thinking this involved a recent job where an artist basically wanted a framed (on the back), large piece of Masonite to use as a 'canvas'. She informed me that she may be ordering more at various sizes in the future, so I wanted to come up with a 'pricing structure' relating to the size right off the bat, and settled on a price 'per foot of perimeter', since that's where the work lies, mostly. I don't think 'square foot' pricing accurately reflects actual work, at least on small jobs like this. To make a simple illustration, compare building a frame on a piece of Masonite like the one I mentioned, on a 1 x 1' square and a 3 x 3' square-----should the 3 x 3' really cost 9X as much?? It's still 4 fairly short pieces of wood and 4 joints and probably takes a minute longer to do, if that. Seems unrealistic to me, hence the perimeter distance method I settled on and am 'extrapolating' to trim carpentry jobs.
Any general thoughts or advice on this from you trim guys? Thanks.
For a long time, I charged hourly, but lately, I've been wanting a more sure, accurate way to estimate (since that's what the customer always wants to know!!) and was working on coming up with a pricing structure based on lineal feet and number of corners. It seems like this would closely reflect the time too, since that's where the time comes in. Also, I'm thinking there should be a premium for ceilings over 8'!
Part of my re-thinking this involved a recent job where an artist basically wanted a framed (on the back), large piece of Masonite to use as a 'canvas'. She informed me that she may be ordering more at various sizes in the future, so I wanted to come up with a 'pricing structure' relating to the size right off the bat, and settled on a price 'per foot of perimeter', since that's where the work lies, mostly. I don't think 'square foot' pricing accurately reflects actual work, at least on small jobs like this. To make a simple illustration, compare building a frame on a piece of Masonite like the one I mentioned, on a 1 x 1' square and a 3 x 3' square-----should the 3 x 3' really cost 9X as much?? It's still 4 fairly short pieces of wood and 4 joints and probably takes a minute longer to do, if that. Seems unrealistic to me, hence the perimeter distance method I settled on and am 'extrapolating' to trim carpentry jobs.
Any general thoughts or advice on this from you trim guys? Thanks.
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