A. I don’t bid jobs
that are not referred by a previous client or
someone who knows us. And I don’t bid on
jobs that have more than three other contractors
looking at it. I always do a long phone interview
first."
— Sue Cosentini
"When we’re asked to bid, we indicate
that we may be interested in meeting the potential
client at the construction site to discuss the
project. If there’s mutual interest, we
will prepare a quotation. But we don’t bid
— it’s not in the best interests
of the homeowner."
— Bill Gaver
"We are trying to break the habit of detailed
bidding. As a design-build firm, we will give
preliminary pricing, but if we are not selected to
develop the project, we bow out."
— Mike Weiss
"We bid for architects, but only if there are
three or fewer bidders, and only if we have the
opportunity to meet the owner in person."
— Randy Polombo
"We avoid open bids because, although people
often say they are not going to select on price,
they do. In their mind, they believe they will get
the same project in the end, so they take the lower
bid. Most of our work comes from architects and
referrals. If they’re getting bids from a
company whose work is not comparable to ours, I
won’t bid. It takes time and money to bid
a job. If you know in advance you won’t be
the low bid, and if you don’t have the
chance to explain the difference in quality,
there’s no sense in bidding."
— Glenn Farrell