Why You Should Never Discount Your Work
It happens all the time. A customer gets two quotes, puts them side by side, and asks if you can match the cheaper one. Maybe they're polite about it. Maybe they're not. Either way, the implication is the same that your work and the other guy's work are basically the same thing, and the only real difference is the number at the bottom of the page.
It's not true. But if you discount, you're telling them it is.
Hiring a Tradie Isn't Like Buying a Vacuum
When someone buys a vacuum cleaner, they're buying a product that was made in a factory to an exact specification. Every unit is identical. Comparing prices makes complete sense you're literally buying the same thing.
Engaging a tradie is nothing like that. The quote might cover the same job on paper, but what actually gets delivered depends entirely on the person doing it. Their experience. Their standards. The pride they take in their work. Whether they cut corners when nobody's watching, or whether they treat your home the same way they'd treat their own.
No two tradies are the same. And no two quotes are really the same either even when they look like it.
The moment you discount, you've agreed with the customer's assumption that you and the cheaper quote are offering the same thing, and you were just hoping they wouldn't notice.
What Customers Are Actually Buying
Most customers aren't just buying a job done. They're buying certainty. They want to know that someone competent is going to show up, do the work properly, not create new problems in the process, and leave them feeling like they made the right call.
Their home is almost always the most expensive thing they will ever own. They've got real money tied up in it. Real pride in it. And when something goes wrong with it a leak, an electrical fault, a structural issue they're not in a calm, rational state. They're stressed. They want someone they can trust.
Trust is what they're buying. Not hours. Not materials. Trust.
And trust is not something you can put on special.
The Problem With Discounting
Beyond the obvious that it directly cuts your margin discounting sends the wrong signals at exactly the wrong moment.
Customers who pressure you into discounting before the job even starts are also more likely to be difficult during it. The ones who respect your price upfront tend to be better clients in every other way too.
What this Means in Practice
You make the comparison irrelevant.
If a customer is putting your quote next to a cheaper one and treating them as equivalent, that's a communication problem not a pricing problem. It means they don't yet understand what they're getting with you that they won't get with the other quote.
Your job, before you ever hand over a number, is to make that clear. Not through a sales pitch. Through how you show up from the very first interaction.
Turn up when you say you will
Ask the right questions before quoting understand the full scope, flag anything they might not have thought of
Write a quote that explains what's included and why, not just a number
Show them you've been here before and you know what they're dealing with
Make it obvious that you give a damn
When you do this well, the customer isn't comparing two prices anymore. They're choosing between someone they trust and someone they don't. That's a completely different decision and price becomes far less of the factor.
