I got a request if possible. Could you show a video of pressure washing a pretty nasty oil stain? I'm looking at getting one cleaned and I'm just curious as to the process and how much can be pulled out.
890 9th iphone 9th 9999 9th 98 Iowa 89998 Iowa Iowa 8 ion 9 o oovcvh 899 9th 99 I 988 9th 998 9th 8909 I 98 o 99999 9th o 999 ion 9 9th Iowa iphone 8 o 80990 I 8
I'd say if you're a beginner it's better to do a flat rate based on sq ft etc. Say $300 for a house wash up to 2000 sq ft etc. Being a beginner things take alot longer, a 2 hr job might take you 5 hrs. I know when I started out I didn't know how many hrs something would take but once I got it ironed out I was at around $100 n hr, that's gone up since. Just my opinion. Good content though. âïž
The way he's telling you to quote is essentially the same thing, if you do "hourly" by just estimating how long you think it will take you and charge them that instead of your actual hours then it's essentially the same thing as a flat rate.
From a consumer perspective, Id rather deal with somebody who charges a flat fee or by the sqft. In the service industry I feel charging by the hour can be suspect as there are people out there that will take longer than necessary to charge more. Not saying all people who charge by the hour do that & im sure some people who charge by the hour are some of the best out there, Iâm just putting this out there for a different perspective & to see how many other consumers think the same way that I do.
The idea, I think, is that you don't disclose that you are basing it on an hourly. You simply think in your mind "I think it'll take 3 hours, and I'd like to make 30 an hour," and then you simply quote the customer $90. If it takes you longer than you expect, you simply still charge the 90 you quoted and deal with making less per hour than you hoped.
If you can't trust the people you hire to do a great job in a timely manner then you should go with a different company, or do it yourself so it isn't an issue.
And that's for you as the client to say. If you want a flat quote, let you prospective contractor know, and they'll either give you a quote (which might be higher than their hourly rate would cost, so they don't lose our if their estimate is imperfect), or else you won't come to an agreement with them and you move to another contractor, they move to another prospective client. I charge by the hour in both my gardening and my contracting work, because I feel a transparent hourly rate and estimating project hours promotes mutual respect to the highest degree. If I tell my prospective client that I charge $40, $50, $65, or so on for a certain type of work, we both understand what we're putting in and what you're getting back, and if they don't trust I'll be efficient then they don't trust me enough to be the match for them. If I disappoint them, they don't need to ask me back. Apologies for the ramble, that was not intended. Had more to say than I knew, I suppose. Have a lovely day : ]
3 Ways To Quote 1. Hourly 2. Square Footage 3. Flat Rate Pricing Varieties Depends 1. Were You Live 2. Lead Flow 3. Overhead Cost 4. Time To Complete Job
Simple last 2 summers Sent my 2 older boys out to 3 diff neighborhoods told them to charge $75 "2 doors to the street" front door and garage door down to the street. They made good money but really got excited when people added to the job. That's where they got better money already there and set up working then people see how good it looks then start thinking how about this or doing that and it turned a $75 dollar job into 250 300 simply by adding up.people don't like big numbers up front but add on's make ya feel like your getting a deal.
I really appreciate your videos, as someone learning a trade I like these borderline business lite courses that are genuinely useful once I start my own business.
I don't ever intend on being a pressure washer bc I have a job, but I love this channel because even if you're not interested in being a pressure washer, a lot of his advice is adaptable. Also, his advice is high quality.
Contact any local associations such as neighbourhood watch or some local hobby groups and offer a discount by the more houses you get with upto a 25% cap. So if you get 70 homes in an area all close to each other then that saves on gas and makes it easier to expand based on word of mouth. By the time you're on house 40 I guarantee you'll have 5 more houses asking you to do their drives.
Yes. I did same with my tree service business. It works. Sometimes I would be in the same neighborhood for a month. It was dangerous work so I would never except a beer or any alcohol until days end. Then and only then I would eat the delicious sandwich and beers. And then, in a semi buzzed state go and give a estimate on neighbors trees. "Sure I can take down that tree for $1200. !!!! A 10,000$ job! I am not a good business man.
God willing 2022 will be the year I start my business thanks fella!! Iâm up north in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania so once spring time comes IT GO TIME BABYđȘđŸ
Uh when I started my cleaning business I charged a flat rate so customers wouldnt think I was dragging my ass to milk more. Oney and as I got better and J built a reputation I started charging hourly because I felt I was worth it. But you are suggesting hourly for a novice. This is interesting. What did you earn your first couple of freelance jobs? When did you make the transition.
Don't start a business doing anything unless you're exceptional at it. People pay for skills and they'll pay good money for it. And when you start don't do hourly pay. It screws you over for being efficient with your work. Charge based on the sq ft and the difficulty of the job. You'll make way more than essentially screwing yourself for being good at your job and homeowners don't like to be charged by the hour when you're really slow. Just pisses them off.
Never charge an hourly rate. Youâll screw yourself. Go by the size, time you figure, and neighborhood. Give them a price and thatâs it. If they ask how long will it take? Ask them why? Do you need to go out? Oh no we were just wondering theyâll say. You say it all depends, some take longer than others and shit up. Theyâre asking how long it will take so they can figure an hourly rate on you. Give them a price and stick to it. If itâs $195 stay with it. Theyâll say how about $160? If you budge at all then they know you will move on everything else
I own a business and I would NOT recommend starting with an hourly rate. People in general are bad at estimating time and a new business owner doesn't have enough experience to even close to accurately estimate the time a job would take. By square foot would be a more accurate and consistent way to charge.
Hourly rates are stupid. Why? I just would take just forever with an hourly rate of 1$. If I take 100h to do the job, great, 100$ it is. If my hourly rate is 50$ and I'm very good and I take 1 hour because in fact it was a small place to pressure wash oh boy. The better you do the job the faster you are finished so a better worker is punished for it's fast work. Charge based on sqare foot is way better! Not only does a faster pressure washing job mean more money per hour because you can get to you next client faster, it will satify the customer, and you'll be happy. Charge by how much effort it will really be not just hourly. You should be priced in terms of effort. Fixed base price (because you got to go to the client to do the job) + a rough square foot price is fine (larger areas are more work). That is how the money starts flowing in and the customer is happy too!
I agree. Nobody is going to hire you to take magnitudes longer for the same price and quality at best. This wouldn't get you any job. If you just told them a cheap price and then spent a week there, they won't rehire. Tell a customer your rate, and they'll ask how long it will take. Tell them a price. But yes, you should use sq ft * (effort + material + tooling) based on the nature of the job.
Just curious do you do a final rinse once you are done washing? Or is the pressure washing alone enough? Inquiring as some of these jobs it seems the dirty water pools really bad in places and like it would just settle and redirty the cleaned area, but maybe not?
The only really heavy thing is the compressor, then maybe coiled hoses. If you're lucky enough to have a hitch on you vehicle and long hoses, you can rig a way to connect the compressor to the vehicle.
Lift a 2500psi display model in store. That's the primary luggage. You'll get an idea if it's a good fit for you. It's not rough like roofing, so if it seems much, a person without medical issues can get into shape for it. But you might need to carry small ladder equipment if you're having trouble getting in range at a decent angle on verticals.
Yeah the flat rate hourly debate. I've done both. I've had customers happy and unhappy with both. No customer got complaints when a job took longer than quoted in the flat rate... But God forbid you finish early because of your experience knowing the best (that you know) way to do it effectively. Or by the hour, customer wants the job Done but doesn't consider what it will actually take $$ to complete. Then the customers who expect professional results at a DIY price.
if you charge hourly should the estimated price and time be shared with the customer and on the contract? they could probably accuse you if wasting time to make more money if they only see the hourly rate rather than the estimated final cost
Depending upon your laziness and your greediness if you're very lazy I imagine you're going to charge a higher price if you're very greedy you're also definitely going to charge a higher price. I charge by however difficult the job will be to do I say it's this much they say yes or they say no then I either work or I go home
Iâm a beginner Iâm 17 currently and starting it when I turn 18 so I can put the LLC in my name and insurance etc I was thinking doing .90 cents to 1 per linear square foot and double on 2 story houses any opinions on this?
I pull weeds for a living. Some people want quotes and I have no confidence in my ability to calculate. I've tried doing the hour charge X hoe many hours I think it's going to take and severely underestimated. Fml.
If I finish the job in 1hr & put the rate at $40, that's not good. A job should be doable in 1hr at least for just a driveway. So then you're hurting yourself instead of using a flat rate right?
Good luck getting jobs as a beginner at an hourly rate, or even after that. Nobody wants to pay by the hour, that's just an invitation to milk the customer. If you are a professional (and you want to be seen as such), you should KNOW how long it will take and give your flat price/bid. The few jobs you underbid are the cost of learning that goes into your business, like any other unexpected costs you encounter and learn from.
Great videos. Iâm looking to grow my pressure washing business but Iâm stuck on how to build with adding employees and the best approach for that. Should I secure the jobs first and then contract the work out each week or have folks on payroll. The payroll element seems hard to do if the work would vary from day to day and week to week.
U can do 2 things to clean your driveway.wait for it 2 rain or go to a big box store n rent a pressure washer.dont waste your money hiring someone 2 do it.its not fucking brain surgery.
Dumb advice. Buy your own. Don't rent every time you need one, and have one available for friends and family. Work hard and smart, next thing you know you'll be getting a business license. It's like you missed the point of this entire channel.
150-200/hr for pressure washing is crazy!đ thatâs what a welding truck charges around me ainât no way pressure washing and welding are the same value
@@braydenw3381 well I'm being paid it so I don't know what to tell you. I don't fall below 80$/hr unless I really fuck up and spend too much time on a job.
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I got a request if possible. Could you show a video of pressure washing a pretty nasty oil stain? I'm looking at getting one cleaned and I'm just curious as to the process and how much can be pulled out.
How much would a pressuer washer coat in ireland
99999099
890 9th iphone 9th 9999 9th 98 Iowa 89998 Iowa Iowa 8 ion 9 o oovcvh 899 9th 99 I 988 9th 998 9th 8909 I 98 o 99999 9th o 999 ion 9 9th Iowa iphone 8 o 80990 I 8
99999999999999899999989999999999998
I'd say if you're a beginner it's better to do a flat rate based on sq ft etc. Say $300 for a house wash up to 2000 sq ft etc. Being a beginner things take alot longer, a 2 hr job might take you 5 hrs. I know when I started out I didn't know how many hrs something would take but once I got it ironed out I was at around $100 n hr, that's gone up since. Just my opinion. Good content though. âïž
The way he's telling you to quote is essentially the same thing, if you do "hourly" by just estimating how long you think it will take you and charge them that instead of your actual hours then it's essentially the same thing as a flat rate.
@@YoungAmbitionYA No, I don't think I will đ
$100 an hour?
Hahahahahaha
@@stahl1624 Well yeah, if it takes him an hour to do something it might take someone else 5 hours then he can charge more
Iâd rather pay $100 for an hour of perfect work than $300 for eight hours of crap.
From a consumer perspective, Id rather deal with somebody who charges a flat fee or by the sqft. In the service industry I feel charging by the hour can be suspect as there are people out there that will take longer than necessary to charge more. Not saying all people who charge by the hour do that & im sure some people who charge by the hour are some of the best out there, Iâm just putting this out there for a different perspective & to see how many other consumers think the same way that I do.
The idea, I think, is that you don't disclose that you are basing it on an hourly. You simply think in your mind "I think it'll take 3 hours, and I'd like to make 30 an hour," and then you simply quote the customer $90. If it takes you longer than you expect, you simply still charge the 90 you quoted and deal with making less per hour than you hoped.
If you can't trust the people you hire to do a great job in a timely manner then you should go with a different company, or do it yourself so it isn't an issue.
And that's for you as the client to say. If you want a flat quote, let you prospective contractor know, and they'll either give you a quote (which might be higher than their hourly rate would cost, so they don't lose our if their estimate is imperfect), or else you won't come to an agreement with them and you move to another contractor, they move to another prospective client.
I charge by the hour in both my gardening and my contracting work, because I feel a transparent hourly rate and estimating project hours promotes mutual respect to the highest degree. If I tell my prospective client that I charge $40, $50, $65, or so on for a certain type of work, we both understand what we're putting in and what you're getting back, and if they don't trust I'll be efficient then they don't trust me enough to be the match for them. If I disappoint them, they don't need to ask me back.
Apologies for the ramble, that was not intended. Had more to say than I knew, I suppose. Have a lovely day : ]
This video went way over your head aye?
3 Ways To Quote
1. Hourly
2. Square Footage
3. Flat Rate
Pricing Varieties Depends
1. Were You Live
2. Lead Flow
3. Overhead Cost
4. Time To Complete Job
Simple last 2 summers Sent my 2 older boys out to 3 diff neighborhoods told them to charge $75 "2 doors to the street" front door and garage door down to the street. They made good money but really got excited when people added to the job. That's where they got better money already there and set up working then people see how good it looks then start thinking how about this or doing that and it turned a $75 dollar job into 250 300 simply by adding up.people don't like big numbers up front but add on's make ya feel like your getting a deal.
My New Years resolution is to start my business! Canât lie watching your vids give me motivation! Thanks bro
Do it man. I've only done a few jobs. The washer has already paid for its self. Wish I would have started years ago.
@@biglipsjim hey i just got a pressure washer, how did u manage to get ur first few jobs? Also do u quote online
@@eclipseXyZ make a fb biz page and pay to put up and add. Or flyers also work good
@@dayindayout93 oh ok thanks a lot, by any chance do u live in the north?
Well? How are we doing? Did you start? I hope so!
Anyone else only watch these for how satisfying the cleaning is?
I really appreciate your videos, as someone learning a trade I like these borderline business lite courses that are genuinely useful once I start my own business.
Lead flow dictates price you can charge in every business!! That's a great tip.
I don't ever intend on being a pressure washer bc I have a job, but I love this channel because even if you're not interested in being a pressure washer, a lot of his advice is adaptable. Also, his advice is high quality.
@@YoungAmbitionYA retail im assuming
Contact any local associations such as neighbourhood watch or some local hobby groups and offer a discount by the more houses you get with upto a 25% cap. So if you get 70 homes in an area all close to each other then that saves on gas and makes it easier to expand based on word of mouth. By the time you're on house 40 I guarantee you'll have 5 more houses asking you to do their drives.
Yes. I did same with my tree service business. It works. Sometimes I would be in the same neighborhood for a month. It was dangerous work so I would never except a beer or any alcohol until days end. Then and only then I would eat the delicious sandwich and beers. And then, in a semi buzzed state go and give a estimate on neighbors trees. "Sure I can take down that tree for $1200. !!!! A 10,000$ job! I am not a good business man.
Good luck to the 23k people who want to get into pressure washing businesses
You can literally do this anywhere, anytime. 23k isnât that much lol there could be 3-4 business in just a town of 100k people.
No way I'm going to $40 per hour. I'll be at $80-$120 per hour.
Watching these is just so satisfying
God willing 2022 will be the year I start my business thanks fella!! Iâm up north in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania so once spring time comes IT GO TIME BABYđȘđŸ
Start preparing before then! Get your license going and get the equipment started. Maybe even throw some fb adds up. Good luck!
After watching few of your videos, I'm kind of thinking of starting my own business too.. thanks mate
I personally have started with charging by sqft. Its worked out pretty well for me
This guy is awesome. Keep up the good work
Very good advice thank you!đđŸ
Uh when I started my cleaning business I charged a flat rate so customers wouldnt think I was dragging my ass to milk more. Oney and as I got better and J built a reputation I started charging hourly because I felt I was worth it. But you are suggesting hourly for a novice. This is interesting. What did you earn your first couple of freelance jobs? When did you make the transition.
This is actually what I was wondering about. Thanks at least now I have a ideal
Don't start a business doing anything unless you're exceptional at it. People pay for skills and they'll pay good money for it. And when you start don't do hourly pay. It screws you over for being efficient with your work. Charge based on the sq ft and the difficulty of the job. You'll make way more than essentially screwing yourself for being good at your job and homeowners don't like to be charged by the hour when you're really slow. Just pisses them off.
I enjoy watching these although I am doing a different self employed job bye felting and doing art to sell this summer
Never charge an hourly rate. Youâll screw yourself. Go by the size, time you figure, and neighborhood. Give them a price and thatâs it. If they ask how long will it take? Ask them why? Do you need to go out? Oh no we were just wondering theyâll say. You say it all depends, some take longer than others and shit up. Theyâre asking how long it will take so they can figure an hourly rate on you. Give them a price and stick to it. If itâs $195 stay with it. Theyâll say how about $160? If you budge at all then they know you will move on everything else
Happens if you miss a customers job up
ThisMan out here making moves
I own a business and I would NOT recommend starting with an hourly rate. People in general are bad at estimating time and a new business owner doesn't have enough experience to even close to accurately estimate the time a job would take. By square foot would be a more accurate and consistent way to charge.
Thanks!
My man is a robot
Hourly rates are stupid. Why? I just would take just forever with an hourly rate of 1$. If I take 100h to do the job, great, 100$ it is. If my hourly rate is 50$ and I'm very good and I take 1 hour because in fact it was a small place to pressure wash oh boy. The better you do the job the faster you are finished so a better worker is punished for it's fast work.
Charge based on sqare foot is way better! Not only does a faster pressure washing job mean more money per hour because you can get to you next client faster, it will satify the customer, and you'll be happy. Charge by how much effort it will really be not just hourly.
You should be priced in terms of effort. Fixed base price (because you got to go to the client to do the job) + a rough square foot price is fine (larger areas are more work). That is how the money starts flowing in and the customer is happy too!
I agree. Nobody is going to hire you to take magnitudes longer for the same price and quality at best. This wouldn't get you any job. If you just told them a cheap price and then spent a week there, they won't rehire. Tell a customer your rate, and they'll ask how long it will take. Tell them a price. But yes, you should use sq ft * (effort + material + tooling) based on the nature of the job.
Yay youâre finally using that circle thing that Iâve been bitching about đ
Basically : you decide the price đ€Ł
The actual advice: how to price a successful business
Hey, what kind of surface cleaner are you using in this video?
Just curious do you do a final rinse once you are done washing? Or is the pressure washing alone enough? Inquiring as some of these jobs it seems the dirty water pools really bad in places and like it would just settle and redirty the cleaned area, but maybe not?
When you have to start turning down business because youâre too busy, itâs time to raise rates.
Go ahead and clean that roof while you are at it
Can a 5'1" woman do this? Meaning is the equipment heavy?
The only really heavy thing is the compressor, then maybe coiled hoses.
If you're lucky enough to have a hitch on you vehicle and long hoses, you can rig a way to connect the compressor to the vehicle.
Lift a 2500psi display model in store. That's the primary luggage. You'll get an idea if it's a good fit for you. It's not rough like roofing, so if it seems much, a person without medical issues can get into shape for it. But you might need to carry small ladder equipment if you're having trouble getting in range at a decent angle on verticals.
That dewalt spinning head doesnt work that fast for me. Idk maybe i gotta lube it or something but it slowed way down after the first use
Hey how much would you say youâve invested in your pressure washers?
Yeah the flat rate hourly debate.
I've done both. I've had customers happy and unhappy with both.
No customer got complaints when a job took longer than quoted in the flat rate... But God forbid you finish early because of your experience knowing the best (that you know) way to do it effectively.
Or by the hour, customer wants the job Done but doesn't consider what it will actually take $$ to complete.
Then the customers who expect professional results at a DIY price.
Do you use the customers water source or your own?
Customers water. Usually hooking to a tank on his own rig for machines that require higher water flow then the hose bib can supply
They have the infrastructure in place. It's understood that access is essential.
Always round up when quoting and tell this customers are happier when they end up paying more than the quote was.
I usually charge 30/hr but most my work doesn't last longer than 5 hours but my work is consistent with my clients
I do square footage and jsut measure their driveway on Google maps.
Do you bring your own water or use the customer's water?
Can you ask if he wants to sell the rv Iâll give you money if you can find out!
Where did I get the Dewalt power wash surface cleaner??
Cost base accounting âđŒ
if you charge hourly should the estimated price and time be shared with the customer and on the contract? they could probably accuse you if wasting time to make more money if they only see the hourly rate rather than the estimated final cost
I will quote 100 dollars per driveway just base if this thang black and itâs posed to be grey you should charge bout 150 a hour
Hey question how do you remove oil stains from a drive way? Concrete driveway by the way.
Use muriatic acid. They sell it at homedepot. Pour on the oil stain,let it sit for a few minutes then scrub. Rise afterwards
@@xxZerosumxx thank you brother I appreciate it because my landlord has been on my ass about the oil stains my car made
I used MA to strip paint from and clean aluminum, restoring a vintage Shasta trailer.
Bleach
Problem with hourly is that if your super efficient it hurts you.
What psi pressure washer should I buy?
Depending upon your laziness and your greediness if you're very lazy I imagine you're going to charge a higher price if you're very greedy you're also definitely going to charge a higher price. I charge by however difficult the job will be to do I say it's this much they say yes or they say no then I either work or I go home
Yes need job housekeeping
Hey, what surface cleaner is that?
Crazy, I've been planning to start a pressure washing business soon. I just so happened to run across your videos a month or so later.
Should i charge them before i start the job or after?
Iâm a beginner Iâm 17 currently and starting it when I turn 18 so I can put the LLC in my name and insurance etc I was thinking doing .90 cents to 1 per linear square foot and double on 2 story houses any opinions on this?
do you even need to presure wash the street ?
whatâs the background music??
Buddy of mine charges based on water used.
Does he have a meter for his washer, then?
How did you land this job ?
Shouldn't be based off of where you live unless you're talking about distance. We get screwed by everyone based off where we live because of the area.
I think he may be talking about the distance. I was thinking the same too lol
Wee need more tundra vids
I pull weeds for a living. Some people want quotes and I have no confidence in my ability to calculate. I've tried doing the hour charge X hoe many hours I think it's going to take and severely underestimated. Fml.
If I finish the job in 1hr & put the rate at $40, that's not good. A job should be doable in 1hr at least for just a driveway. So then you're hurting yourself instead of using a flat rate right?
Do you use your own water (tanker truck) or the houses water?
The houses water, make sure it's pointed out in the job contract beforehand.
or just add quotation marks.
why did i care so much. good information tho đ
This man out here inspiring people
Good luck getting jobs as a beginner at an hourly rate, or even after that.
Nobody wants to pay by the hour, that's just an invitation to milk the customer.
If you are a professional (and you want to be seen as such), you should KNOW how long it will take and give your flat price/bid. The few jobs you underbid are the cost of learning that goes into your business, like any other unexpected costs you encounter and learn from.
This guy sounds like Dave Franco
I'm a beginner and charge by the sq ft. Definitely way more buck for your time
Time and materials.
Great videos. Iâm looking to grow my pressure washing business but Iâm stuck on how to build with adding employees and the best approach for that. Should I secure the jobs first and then contract the work out each week or have folks on payroll. The payroll element seems hard to do if the work would vary from day to day and week to week.
I'm no expert but it sounds like you need to secure jobs on your own first before you hire anyone.
I want to do this job sir please
How much you make per hour?
U can do 2 things to clean your driveway.wait for it 2 rain or go to a big box store n rent a pressure washer.dont waste your money hiring someone 2 do it.its not fucking brain surgery.
Dumb advice. Buy your own. Don't rent every time you need one, and have one available for friends and family. Work hard and smart, next thing you know you'll be getting a business license. It's like you missed the point of this entire channel.
You will never lose money on a job you didnt get. Dont sell yourself short.
I charge 100 an hour but never tell them that. Its just a rate
Which company makes this steam machine. Give its web link.
It's not a steam machine.
i would need someone else to handle that stuff for me
I don't see any waste water recovery this will get you into huge fines in CA
what if you do the job quicker than you quote
If you did your best possible work, you gave yourself a deserved raise. Estimate and budget better with it.
How would you quote a Wendyâs sidewalk
Forever self employed
20-30$/hr ?
F that. I'm shooting for 150-200 and if I tell them that they'll flipp đ
150-200/hr for pressure washing is crazy!đ thatâs what a welding truck charges around me ainât no way pressure washing and welding are the same value
@@braydenw3381 well I'm being paid it so I don't know what to tell you.
I don't fall below 80$/hr unless I really fuck up and spend too much time on a job.
How to set price: just price it
He literally laid out the exact method how every industry prices service.
And I hate to say to some of you folks but if you need a video on TikTok to motivate you you gotta lot more fucking problems to deal with
Dead end job
Ah yes quote based on where they live. The nice house surcharge.
Was you washing in duck waiters?
Yeah bro thatâs how I used to roll when it was cold
I would be afraid to tell them I have to use their water. But they probably figure that huh
You should definitely tell them. Most companies will use a water tank, so do not assume ever that they will just let you use there water.
Prospective** customers
Lol if you let them go by an hourly rate theyâre going to take their sweet time milking you on that 10 min job.
And that's what?
No washer prices by the hour , thatâs horrible advice , sq ft is the only way
Yea you personally charge more then talk shit on the people who can't really afford it
How would you measure the square footage
Length x Width
Square feet if you're sane. WTS? This isn't geometry class.