Slippage

  • Protect Your Company Against Construction Fraud

    Construction fraud has worsened in the troubled economy. Here's what you can do to protect your company.

     
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    Pricing Remodeling Jobs Just Right

    Get back to good estimating and job costing to offer accurate pricing on your jobs.

     
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    Having a complete picture of budgets projects

    When John Gemmi of Gemmi Construction, in Doylestown, Pa., started sharing each project's financial information with his four lead carpenters and helping them to understand their contribution to the bottom line, the leads began to actively participate in controlling costs and decreasing slippage.

     
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    Slippage, if consistent, will kill your year

    Any amount of slippage, if consistent, will quietly and effectively kill your year. Some slippage is just bad luck, but here are eight causes that you can control.

     
  • Mental Shift

    Soon after transitioning from cost-plus pricing to a fixed-price system, Art Stinson's Trace Ventures ran into trouble with slippage. Stinson says the Nashville, Tenn., company was mired in a cost-plus mentality that allowed for imprecise estimates, and unforeseen costs (if they weren't due to a...

     
  • Slippage in the permit process

    All remodelers are robbery victims. The thief is slippage, which is the amount your profit falls short of plan. The root causes of slippage are often simple — but that doesn't mean they're easy to find. And while some sources, like inconsistent labor productivity or poor change order management...

     
  • Slippage and Risk Ratio recalculations

    One factor affecting the numbers reported in the May issue was incomplete results. Since press time for the May issue, we've received additional data that change the slippage picture somewhat.The good news is that the median for all companies is -2.9%, meaning about half the companies performed...

     
  • Solving cost slippage problems

    Slippage occurs when something on the job causes unrecoverable costs to extend beyond the limits of the estimate. King has since refined and implemented several processes to help her company reduce slippage, most notably instituting a "post-mortem" review of costs at the completion of every job.

     
  • Big50 Averages: statistical highlights

    Although this year's class of Big50 remodelers displays great variety in size, business structure, target market, project focus, and geographic location, the averages tell a fairly consistent story. By this measure, small- and large-volume companies in this year's Big50 class performed about the...

     
  • Reader Panel: Profit Slippage

    Typical profit slippage -- the difference between estimated and produced gross profit--is 5% or more according to our survey.