A consistent window cleaning quote starts before the calculator. It starts with a field record that captures the work clearly enough to review later. When the walkthrough lives only in memory, small items can disappear between the property and the f...
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A window cleaning price book and a modeled cost floor answer different questions. A price book asks what your current unit rates produce for the scope you counted. A modeled cost floor asks whether the job can support the time, operating costs, paym...
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A completed window cleaning job contains more useful pricing information than a vague memory that the day felt good or ran long. An estimated-versus-actual review turns that experience into a record you can examine before the next similar quote. The...
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Recurring window cleaning route planning becomes easier to review when cadence and due windows are recorded separately from the route day itself. Cadence describes how often an account should receive service. A due window describes when the next vis...
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A minimum job price is most useful when it reflects the whole service commitment, not only the minutes spent touching glass. A small window cleaning job may still require scheduling, loading, travel, parking, setup, service, cleanup, payment handlin...
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A window cleaning quote can look complete while still hiding small pieces of work. Screens may be included mentally. Tracks may be described as “light cleaning” without a count. Access may be reduced to a short note even when it changes setup, movem...
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A lost window cleaning quote is a result, not an automatic instruction to lower your price. The customer may have changed the timing, reduced the scope, chosen another provider, decided to do the work themselves, or stopped responding. If you record...
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