P
Pebbs
Stef,
Theres more than the cost of the m2 rate to consider on a large scale contract. You have to take on board a multitude of responsibilities. Firstly you have to make sure all your insurances are in order, if they are not then you have to make a budget allowance for those. Next you have to check if there are any prelims on the contract, mainly for site supervision, pre-contract meetings. They will expect you to produce method statements, safety returns done on a daily basis (by your site supervisor) inductions, weekly progress meetings, you need a programme of works before you accept any contract. Check that the working hours are normal, if they are not you have to make allowances for out of hours work. Who will be in charge of getting the materials to the work areas, if its you, your going to have to make allowances for labourers. All your equipment has to be pat tested with the certs. OMG the list goes on and on. The one most important thing I always ask is this...are the works of a continuous nature? If they are not, then your going to have lads standing around whilst waiting for the trades ahead, that is the killer on large contracts. They always say we hope so...well hope is not good enough, unless you can slot your lads onto another contract your scuppered. You have then to calculate all these things into your costing sheet, before you even think about how much your going to charge for the meterage rate. Always build in the 7.5% into the overall cost, they will always hold back their 5% retention, for at least a year after the job is completed and you will always get calls to go and do snags after completion of the works. The 2.5% is for the MCD, but some main contractors will try and go for 5% discount.
The biggest killer is always going to be the payment terms, if you are one day over that application date, they will bang it into the following month. So that means you could be waiting 12 weeks to get paid. So your cash flow has to be monitored at all times.
My advice to you is this, go with your gut feeling at the meeting, if you get a bad feeling, go with it. I have worked with a lot of main contractors over the years, some are ok, some are scum of the earth and then some are decent. Unfortuntely the decent ones are few and far between.
Always check out who you are dealing with reputation wise, and run a credit report, ask around, ask a lot of questions, this is your livelihood, you hit one bad contract and it can wipe you out.
Good luck
Lynn
Theres more than the cost of the m2 rate to consider on a large scale contract. You have to take on board a multitude of responsibilities. Firstly you have to make sure all your insurances are in order, if they are not then you have to make a budget allowance for those. Next you have to check if there are any prelims on the contract, mainly for site supervision, pre-contract meetings. They will expect you to produce method statements, safety returns done on a daily basis (by your site supervisor) inductions, weekly progress meetings, you need a programme of works before you accept any contract. Check that the working hours are normal, if they are not you have to make allowances for out of hours work. Who will be in charge of getting the materials to the work areas, if its you, your going to have to make allowances for labourers. All your equipment has to be pat tested with the certs. OMG the list goes on and on. The one most important thing I always ask is this...are the works of a continuous nature? If they are not, then your going to have lads standing around whilst waiting for the trades ahead, that is the killer on large contracts. They always say we hope so...well hope is not good enough, unless you can slot your lads onto another contract your scuppered. You have then to calculate all these things into your costing sheet, before you even think about how much your going to charge for the meterage rate. Always build in the 7.5% into the overall cost, they will always hold back their 5% retention, for at least a year after the job is completed and you will always get calls to go and do snags after completion of the works. The 2.5% is for the MCD, but some main contractors will try and go for 5% discount.
The biggest killer is always going to be the payment terms, if you are one day over that application date, they will bang it into the following month. So that means you could be waiting 12 weeks to get paid. So your cash flow has to be monitored at all times.
My advice to you is this, go with your gut feeling at the meeting, if you get a bad feeling, go with it. I have worked with a lot of main contractors over the years, some are ok, some are scum of the earth and then some are decent. Unfortuntely the decent ones are few and far between.
Always check out who you are dealing with reputation wise, and run a credit report, ask around, ask a lot of questions, this is your livelihood, you hit one bad contract and it can wipe you out.
Good luck
Lynn