RLM2000
Civil/Environmental
- May 22, 2006
- 22
I have been wondering what other firms/project managers do in this situation:
You have a private client, you give an estimate based on some preliminary drawings or ideas, and the estimate ends up being off target (low and to the left).
Most of our estimates are time and materials, and there is no specific language in most contracts tying us to a percentage of the estimate.
In all situations we try and let our clients know early that we will be going over budget, and in all situations try our hardest to make the best fee estimate we can. Sometimes we just gut shoot it and the recourse is almost always painful.
How do you guys deal with these issues. Do you take hair cuts based on bad bid information and classify the loss as "education"? Do you fight with your clients to get the fee budget increased?
Of course there are almost always extraeneous conditions with every job. i.e. You are realizing that the budget is spent about the time the client is telling you to work overtime to get the project on the street.
You have a private client, you give an estimate based on some preliminary drawings or ideas, and the estimate ends up being off target (low and to the left).
Most of our estimates are time and materials, and there is no specific language in most contracts tying us to a percentage of the estimate.
In all situations we try and let our clients know early that we will be going over budget, and in all situations try our hardest to make the best fee estimate we can. Sometimes we just gut shoot it and the recourse is almost always painful.
How do you guys deal with these issues. Do you take hair cuts based on bad bid information and classify the loss as "education"? Do you fight with your clients to get the fee budget increased?
Of course there are almost always extraeneous conditions with every job. i.e. You are realizing that the budget is spent about the time the client is telling you to work overtime to get the project on the street.