The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor

   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,311  
That’s not really a fair way to do it. They should get all proposals at the same time, not get yours and then decide they want more. There is always a chance someone spills the beans and tells someone what yours is.
I’m pretty sure thats what happened. I, thinking I was not in danger of losing the contract, did the right thing and presented my 2025 Proposal (unchanged from 2024) thinking that would all but guarantee me 2025.

It happens.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,312  
Nobody much cares about anything other than price. I sent in my norma proposal in January. They shopped it around from January to March
So the person bidding against you gets to know your bid and can price their bid accordingly. How in the **** is that a fair and honest system? If it's a bid system, all bids should be in by a certain date and remain closed until all opened together in public.
Unfortunately prior performance means absolutely nothing, all about the buck.
Never forget, I had been with the dept. for three years or so and we had a hydraulic supplier that would bust their butt for you for a $2 odd ballfitting. They lost the next tender, found out it was from their competitor hiring a 'person' than was working at the current suppler. We figure they had all the prices from him, couple months later that person was gone.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,313  
Most government agencies are required to do fair bidding in most cases. An HOA is probably not bound by those rules.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,314  
So the person bidding against you gets to know your bid and can price their bid accordingly. How in the **** is that a fair and honest system? If it's a bid system, all bids should be in by a certain date and remain closed until all opened together in public.
I don’t know if they “exposed” my price to others, but what I do know is they shopped around for another price until they found one 15% cheaper. Anything 10% + cheaper must be accepted. We have plenty of folks running around pretending to be legitimate mowing service companies that are not, but they’re cheaper than us.

We cut their fields and their large HOA lawn areas. So we lost both the fields and the lawns.

Unfortunately prior performance means absolutely nothing, all about the buck.

Yes. Mowing is just mowing to the Customer. Price is everything since they are all budget-centric. New HOA presidents like to impress the other residents by slashing costs.
Never forget, I had been with the dept. for three years or so and we had a hydraulic supplier that would bust their butt for you for a $2 odd ballfitting. They lost the next tender, found out it was from their competitor hiring a 'person' than was working at the current suppler. We figure they had all the prices from him, couple months later that person was gone.
Yeah, people will sell you down the road for a couple bucks.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,315  
Most government agencies are required to do fair bidding in most cases. An HOA is probably not bound by those rules.
Some HOAs have by-laws requiring them to rebid every 3 or 5 years. This could be what happened. Funny thing is, I haven’t raised my prices in 5 years since they hired me, so the price they hired me on 5 years ago is the same.

So now they decide to find a lower price????? I mean haven't we all seen just about everything go up 25% in the last 5 years????
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,316  
This type of stuff happens a lot in my skid steer business, seems like in the last year or two everybody has went out and bought one and seems willing to work for beer money to get the job, but most of them won't be in business long because when the first big breakdown happens they won't have the money to fix it, I haven't cut my prices because I can't work for free but my stuff is payed for, so I can survive. I do very few tractor bush hogging jobs anymore because of the race to the bottom pricing.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,317  
It's business, and anytime it's a decision by committee, the contract is at risk, unless you 1) have an inside track, 2) have a unique solution or offering or 3) your bid is the lowest cost/risk solution.

Then this case "mowing HOA fields" is a limited risk in the view of the buyer, it becomes a price war with limited differentiation between the sellers, they will choose the lowest price. The difference is the new supplier can bid low to get the contract, then to only raise the price next year, unless this is a 3-5 year fixed price contract.

Your differentiation is 1) you have performed as required or better, 2) your costs have increased, however you have kept the same contract price for 5 years, absorbing XX% increase in fuel, labor, machine maintenance costs, and insurance etc,

.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,318  
re: lowest bidder. I'd be really really nervous about flying if I discovered the plane was built by the lowest bidder.
Wonder what the HOA committee is gonna think if the lowest bidder decides to mow when the ground is muddy because he has a better paying job next week?
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,319  
Well guys, I promised I share the “Life of a Custom Mowing Contractor” with you and sometimes, there’s difficult setbacks.

Every year, I must submit Proposals for large property/HOA’s so they can review my price & terms. Sometimes, they are required get other bids every 3,4,5 years.

Sometimes those other bids are lower.

Yesterday, I got bad news that I lost a long time Customer. About $12,000 worth of mowing. Worst part is they have informed me very close to mowing season, so I have no time to go out and hunt down some replacement work.

There’s good days and there’s bad days. Or as my buddy says: “Thats life in the big city”
I've learned over the years to not get too upset about things that don't work out. Years later I come to realize that the man upstairs was actually looking out for me. Usually with something quite a bit better in mind. Now I just say thanks to Him for steering me clear of some unknown obstacle in life.
 
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   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,320  
I've learned over the years to not get too upset about things that don't work out. Years later I come to realize that the man upstairs was actually looking out for me. Usually with something quite a bit better in mind. Now I just say thanks to Him for steering me clear of some unknown obstacle in life.
At any given time, we are right where we are supposed to be, and while we don't often understand, it is by design.
 

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