This extended walkthrough shows the EstimateIn10 flow from quick job notes to an organized draft estimate, then gives the review-and-send step enough time to actually register.
https://t.co/HXeBWd7y0M
#EstimateIn10#ConstructionTech
This product walkthrough shows the EstimateIn10 flow: quick job notes in, organized draft estimate out, then a fast review before you send it.
https://t.co/HXeBWd7y0M
#EstimateIn10#ConstructionTech
@SustateSystems The invisible tax on every service business. Those three callbacks probably wiped the margin on that whole job and nobody even had a number to point to.
@Austin_Maginnis 100% this. The estimate and sign-off phase is where all of it gets set up or falls apart. Client approves a clear scope before work starts and half those payment fights never happen.
@SustateSystems Verbal approvals without a scope update are one of the most reliable ways to lose margin. The change order has to hit paper the moment it happens not at closeout.
@walls_jason1 Master electrician shipping real products with AI is legitimately the best story in this space right now. The domain knowledge you have is what makes it actually useful for tradespeople.
@SustateSystems Good point. Fast estimates get you in the door but the real margin protection happens after. Most owners conflate the two and then wonder where the money went.
@SustateSystems Classic case where the estimate was probably solid but nobody tracked actuals against it once the job started. Every warranty call and material overage chips away silently until close-out.
@DnaroseIvy@live_free_603@colemarabito The contractors who respond fast win the job before everyone else even calls back. Honestly the follow-up speed matters more than price most of the time.
@summaslabs And a huge chunk of that is writing estimates. Talk into your phone on the drive home and have a full line item estimate ready to send by the time you get back. https://t.co/rujGenYvwB
@gogopaschal Speed kills too. Most contractors I know lose the job before the proposal ever looks bad because a competitor texted a price the same day. Format matters but getting it out fast matters more
@rrmathome The creative part is the best part. Building something real that a homeowner will actually use every day. The part that kills the momentum is all the paperwork that comes after.
@gogopaschal Getting the estimate out fast is part of it too. A slow quote gives them 3 days to cool off and call someone else. By the time you follow up the lead is already cold.
@gogopaschal Speed of getting it out matters too. If they asked Friday afternoon and don't see anything until Monday they've already called someone else. I started talking through jobs on the drive home and having the estimate ready before I'm back at the shop. Changed everything.