Bobcat T66 Brush Cutting. Client Loved It!
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- Опубликовано: 21 мар 2023
- The client loved the brush cutting that we did on his property, so he brought us back for a second round! This time we opened up a larger section in the back of the property.
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Thanks again Nick, you are easy going and enjoyable to watch.
Nick, outstanding job…keeping groceries on the table
Thank you!
Great video just subscribed love the bobcats skid steer but the electrical problems are ridiculous
Thanks for watching! Bobcat really does try to do as much as they can to pack a lot of options into their machines. It is pretty nice, but comes with the price of electrical issues unfortunately.
Ive heard guys say they charge 125 an hr here. How do you guy bid jobs?
Nick, is that a family cemetery? Is it part of the property you are brush cutting, or is it just next to the property? I always love a good brush cutting video. 😊
I believe just next to the property. I am not 100% certain, but I think it belongs to the church behind it. Thanks for watching as usual. I love brush cutting as well. Very satisfying!
If you’re wanting to push it out of the way, shut your mower off! Jeez
Hi Nick, I enjoy your videos and the work that you guys do !!! I started a landscaping crew this past June, I previously had 22 years in the Aerospace industry, all along that career I did lawn care and some landscaping, would you be willing to share some bidding advice? I can send you my email address privately if that works,
Thanks again and keep the videos coming !!!
Thanks in advance
Congratulations! I bet transferring from Aerospace to business ownership has been quite a change!
To be honest about bidding; we still don't even have it figured out. We have been at this since 2012 and there are jobs that we bid properly and everything goes to plan, and then there are jobs that do NOT go to plan! Really, you need to figure out all of your operating costs and overhead, add what you think would be a comfortable profit, and boom, there is your daily cost. We bid every single job with one final price. We never do any hourly work. We have found a dollar amount that we need to make each day that we spend working, and we just multiply that by how many days that we figure each job will take.
Of course different machinery may pull a different day rate, but we account for all of that in the bid. We have learned a ton of great lessons by failure....and trust me, we have failed a LOT! Take some time to sit down, figure out those costs and overhead, then figure what you need to profit on top of that to be comfortable. That is the best advice that I can give!