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Unforeseen Circumstances
By Tim Baxter

Hello,  I'd like to weigh in on this as well.  I am not in agreement
with all of the folks who would prefer to make an estimate artificially
high for a customer to cover contingencies.  I would instead prefer
a situation where I have enough confidence and trust in my tech that
a "time and materials" represents the best value for everyone.  Then
I am only being billed for work actually done, and the tech gets fairly
compensated for work he has done -- "win/win" rather than "I win, you
lose."

As a mechanical music client, I understand the nature of the work and
am not looking to profit from a too-low estimate by the tech on the
front end (nor am I looking to be gouged for a too-high estimate to
cover stuff that _might_ happen).  The key is to have a level of trust
with your tech that you feel comfortable you are being charged fairly.
I have been fortunate to almost always have had people (mostly one guy
-- a shout out here to Kirk Russell, Wakefield, Rhode Island) doing my
restoration work, with whom I had this level of comfort.

All this being said, it may make sense for a tech to give a range
of possible costs at the start of a project.  And, believe it or not,
sometimes you still happen upon original work that doesn't actually
need replacing; this seems to happen sometimes with leather components
that were made with a higher-grade leather than is currently available.

Bob Taylor said this more eloquently in his 3/21 response to Ray Finch
[130321 MMDigest]:

"Many experienced rebuilders charge fairly for the hours needed to
complete the task at hand.  That removes guess work and establishes
a level of fairness to both the customer and the technician.  Advance
understanding of that is imperative to both."

My two cents.

Tim Baxter
Atlanta, Georgia


(Message sent Thu 28 Mar 2013, 08:05:38 GMT, from time zone GMT-0400.)

Key Words in Subject:  Circumstances, Unforeseen

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