We are trying to move away from time and materials based quotes and towards a fixed price model for product engineerng services.
I don't understand how a company can possibly get away from an hourly model. The hours have to fit into the component, somehow. (otherwise, how can you quantify the other factors?) If you have an office, and pay staff, everything - down to the last KW of electricity fits in to the profitability model.
How do you base a business model on an unknown hourly rate? Doesn't that kind of leave you in the dark when it comes to predicting customer conversion? (accepted quotes) I mean, if you're not telling someone upfront how much it costs per hour, you're either gonna screw them, or yourself - or so it seems to me.
I could see charging flat rates, if you were outsourcing your work to a country whose exchange rate was 1/10 of ours. But not doing work in-house.
Say I know how to implement my cad system to produce information in a faster means than than most any one else.
Forgive me for saying this - I mean it with all due respect - but I think that this is a cocky, and dangerous attitude/assumption when you are in business. Competition breeds innovation. What you THINK that you can do faster, better, and cheaper today, will be the "old thing" for your competition tomorrow. Always look to improve, but never count yourself "ahead" of the competition.
It reminds me of what my father used to tell me. He said, "Son, you might think you're tough - but there's always someone out there who can kick your a**" Never were more true words spoken...
The client doesn't know or care I only took a week and the competition is left scratching their head as to how I was able to get the job and blow them away.
The question that you have to ask yourself, is WOULD they care, if they knew that you were charging them a week's wage, when you could do it in a day? I'd rather charge exactly the time that it takes, (with my mark-up component) and ride the wave of referrals that comes with doing the job correct, and in a an expedious fashion.
Being in an engineering field isn't about doing things the fastest - it's about doing things the BEST. If you're going to charge a price, my opinion is that you should charge a premium, but only use the time that it really takes. Your WORK is your reputation - NOT your price.
Clearly stating what your price is, quoting accurately, and ALWAYS sticking to your quote, is what it's all about. I state very clearly to my new customers, that my quotes are set in stone - they only change when the customer changes his requirements. I honestly believe (from experience) that the more visibility that your customer has to your pricing scheme, the better relationship you will have. Yes, quotes take time. But I have won contracts that others have lost, just by providing a line item justification of my time useage.
Your mileage will, undoubtedly, vary. Be careful not to stick yourself in a corner. Once you adopt a pricing strategy, you will gain and/or alienate clientele, based on the change. New schemes are a risk, so weigh the decision carefully, knowing that you may lose clients (and may not gain new ones) in the process.
---
CAD design engineering services -
Catia V4,
Catia V5, and
CAD Translation. Catia V5 resources -
CATBlog.