ctcray
Structural
- Jan 23, 2006
- 90
I just finished reading AlpineEngineer's thread about "billed time" and thought I'd get some input on a similar problem.
I get phone calls from people who are looking for an engineer to come out to their house and evaluate an existing condition or problem and present them with either an explanation of what the problem is or potential solutions. For example, "I want to remove a portion of the rear wall of my house to expand my kitchen." Sometimes I'm dealing with a contractor who can give me enough information that I have a good handle of the situation both time-wise and design-wise, but with homeowners that isn't always the case.
I've recently settled on charging a minimum fee (equal to 3 hours) that I collect on site for the first 2 hours of my time, including travel time. On site, if additional work needs to be done, I quote them a fee to provide a solution which they can pay me for at the time of completion.
How do you typically handle "jobs" like this? And how do you handle liability/contracts for such jobs?
I look forward to hearing your ideas.
Chuck
I get phone calls from people who are looking for an engineer to come out to their house and evaluate an existing condition or problem and present them with either an explanation of what the problem is or potential solutions. For example, "I want to remove a portion of the rear wall of my house to expand my kitchen." Sometimes I'm dealing with a contractor who can give me enough information that I have a good handle of the situation both time-wise and design-wise, but with homeowners that isn't always the case.
I've recently settled on charging a minimum fee (equal to 3 hours) that I collect on site for the first 2 hours of my time, including travel time. On site, if additional work needs to be done, I quote them a fee to provide a solution which they can pay me for at the time of completion.
How do you typically handle "jobs" like this? And how do you handle liability/contracts for such jobs?
I look forward to hearing your ideas.
Chuck