u/Ill_Bumblebee8915

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago

Been watching contractors struggle with this for years.

When a customer asks "how long will this take" don't just give them the work time.

Tell them the real timeline. The permit wait. The material delivery window. The weather buffer.

Saying "3 days of work but realistically 2 weeks start to finish" sets way better expectations than just "3 days."

Saves so many headaches later.

reddit.com
u/Ill_Bumblebee8915 — 11 days ago