
For any project-based service business, the estimate is the financial blueprint of the job. It dictates the materials to be ordered, the labour to be scheduled, and ultimately, the profit to be made.
Yet, despite its critical importance, estimation is often treated as an isolated administrative task. Estimators work in silos, relying on static spreadsheets, outdated supplier catalogues, and gut feeling to price complex projects.
When estimation is disconnected from the reality of delivery and finance, accuracy plummets. And in a service business, an inaccurate estimate doesn't just mean a lost bid—it means winning a job that actively loses money.
Failing to see this connection creates a dangerous pricing blindspot.
The traditional approach to quoting is inherently flawed because it relies on static data in a dynamic environment.
When an estimator uses a spreadsheet, they are pricing based on what materials cost the last time the spreadsheet was updated. They are estimating labour based on a generic average, rather than the actual historical performance of the team.
This lack of a single source of truth creates a dangerous disconnect. The estimator might build a quote that looks profitable on paper, but when the operations team actually orders the materials at today's prices, the margin instantly shrinks. If the job takes 20% longer to deliver than the generic average suggested, the remaining profit is wiped out entirely.
This is the reality of 'guesstimation'—winning work that the business cannot afford to deliver.
To protect profitability, estimation must be treated as a connected operational workflow. Connected workflows create operational visibility, ensuring that the quote reflects the true cost of delivery.
CQ's estimation suite scales with the complexity of the job. For a web designer or architect, it might simply be a clean, professional quote with line items, markup, and a clear profit margin. For a landscaper, electrician, or construction firm, it becomes a full estimation engine.
Inside the connected system, the estimator builds the quote using live supplier pricing pulled in real time. They can use complex calculators for area and volume, and apply separate markup rates for labour, materials, and plant. When the quote is sent, the business already knows the exact intended profit on that job.
When the client approves, the lead turns into a live job with one action. The intended profit from the quote is now locked in as the financial target the project must track against. As the job is delivered, the business is managing against the profit target set at the quote stage. In real time, they can see actual costs versus intended profit, so they know immediately if the job is running over budget, not at the end when it is too late.
The impact of accurate estimation extends far beyond individual job margins. It allows the business leadership to make better decisions about growth and strategy.
When you know your quotes are accurate, you can bid on larger, more complex projects with confidence. You can identify which types of work consistently yield the highest margins and focus your sales efforts accordingly. You can stop competing in a race to the bottom on price, and instead compete on the reliability and professionalism of your service.
Accurate estimation and quoting is the foundation of scalable growth. It ensures that as the business takes on more work, it is actually generating more profit, rather than just more revenue.
A service business cannot outwork a bad estimate. If the initial quote is flawed, the delivery team will always be fighting a losing battle to maintain profitability. By moving away from static spreadsheets and embracing a connected, data-driven estimation process, businesses can secure their margins before the work even begins, ensuring long-term financial stability.
Accurate estimation is only possible when pricing, delivery and financial performance are connected. Explore our Financial Management & Invoicing and Project Management resources to see how leading service businesses protect margins as they grow.