I was just looking over some of my 'after' photos of a deck I restored a couple of months ago and compared them to how the deck looked prior to me taking on the job. Then I remembered some of the conversation the homeowner was recounting she had with the other two guys bidding - who were less than half my prices. And I realized why so many trades have gone by the wayside where as deck restoration as some 'immunity' from the sleaze-blobs out there.
What I realized is that the quality of our work is commensurate with how 'pretty' the final outcome is. It's that simple. Making a deck that has horrible products applied to it - has weathered horribly - has the mysterious 'black' that is almost impossible to remove. And then you hand back a deck that is immaculate - that impresses folks. These other guys bid so cheap, and it's nearly impossible for them to deliver a quality product - decks are unforgiving - you can't just slop stain on and make 'em look good. It requires attention to detail - and good understanding of your chemicals and a dedication and readiness to invest in very expensive equipment sometimes.
Can the 'sleaz-ball' still do quality work? Of course he can, but this is a probability game. And the probabilities are stacked against him - take rattle snakes for instance. We have 'em in New England, but the weather is not conducive for a healthy population - so you don't have to worry about running into them like you do in southwest. A walk through the forest is a probability of life and death - the but the probability is so nil I never worry about it. Same with deck restoration - I know there are some guys that can equal my quality for less than half my money - but the probabilities are stacked against him. Perhaps there someone who is a laid off engineer and can get 20 websites off his own server and put my own domain down - but unlikely.
This is what makes it difficult in the painting trades - sometimes there is very little noticeable difference between a superb job and a hack job. I have to go do an estimate for someone that resided one side of their home. There are guys that will slap paint on it and call it a day. Where as I know a full TSP/bleach wash is needed. Some guys will go ahead and caulk the cracks with the cheapest caulking known to mankind. I won't caulk before all those bare wood cracks have been primed. Heck I love to reprime factory primed siding - because it gives much more life to a project. In the end - my job won't look different - but it will be twice as expensive. Who do you think the homeowner will go with?
I was just looking over some of my 'after' photos of a deck I restored a couple of months ago and compared them to how the deck looked prior to me taking on the job. Then I remembered some of the conversation the homeowner was recounting she had with the other two guys bidding - who were less than half my prices. And I realized why so many trades have gone by the wayside where as deck restoration as some 'immunity' from the sleaze-blobs out there.
What I realized is that the quality of our work is commensurate with how 'pretty' the final outcome is. It's that simple. Making a deck that has horrible products applied to it - has weathered horribly - has the mysterious 'black' that is almost impossible to remove. And then you hand back a deck that is immaculate - that impresses folks. These other guys bid so cheap, and it's nearly impossible for them to deliver a quality product - decks are unforgiving - you can't just slop stain on and make 'em look good. It requires attention to detail - and good understanding of your chemicals and a dedication and readiness to invest in very expensive equipment sometimes.
Can the 'sleaz-ball' still do quality work? Of course he can, but this is a probability game. And the probabilities are stacked against him - take rattle snakes for instance. We have 'em in New England, but the weather is not conducive for a healthy population - so you don't have to worry about running into them like you do in southwest. A walk through the forest is a probability of life and death - the but the probability is so nil I never worry about it. Same with deck restoration - I know there are some guys that can equal my quality for less than half my money - but the probabilities are stacked against him. Perhaps there someone who is a laid off engineer and can get 20 websites off his own server and put my own domain down - but unlikely.
This is what makes it difficult in the painting trades - sometimes there is very little noticeable difference between a superb job and a hack job. I have to go do an estimate for someone that resided one side of their home. There are guys that will slap paint on it and call it a day. Where as I know a full TSP/bleach wash is needed. Some guys will go ahead and caulk the cracks with the cheapest caulking known to mankind. I won't caulk before all those bare wood cracks have been primed. Heck I love to reprime factory primed siding - because it gives much more life to a project. In the end - my job won't look different - but it will be twice as expensive. Who do you think the homeowner will go with?
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