For the most part, to ,me anyway, the price of the house is irrelevant, around here there are a great many million pound plus houses, hell 100m from me a neighbour has just sold her house for £234k...not a million is it? But it's a small house, just a 2 bed terrace in truth with just enough room to park her car!
If I do a price for some little old granny on a state pension I'll do my best to keep the price very tight, I'm well aware that just 50p will make a difference to her.
On a large, well to do house then it will be at the other end of my charging scale so to speak.
I do one house that were it sold it would be well in access of 500k, possibly more than a million...I charge them £25.00, 3 floors all georgian windows, front only - 20 windows with an average of 12 quite large georgian panes per window - I'm there and gone in 20 minutes.
Were it some little old granny in there living on a state pension I'd be a fiver cheaper is all.
Yesterday I priced up a huge building, a private nursing home.
I walked around it a few times as I puzzled out how best to price it up, I would normally break it down into £1.00 segments, but there were only about 80 such segments...£80 would be ridiculously cheap though...
So I did as someone said here in an earlier reply, I broke the building down into separate sections instead and asked myself "How much would I want for this chunk?"
So I priced it in £15 to £25 chunks, it still only came out at £150 tops, so I added an extra £50 for good measure, unofficially I've got the job, hopefully it will be no more than a few hours work.
Not got time now, but I'll stick the photo's i took of it on here...
I priced this self same place up with tosh some little while ago, at that point they wanted inside and out done and they found the price too tasty for them!
If this place was a private house, owned by some mega rich millionaire I'd probably be charging another £50 on top again.
Nursing homes are on a budget, can be hard to get a top price, cheapest gets and so on.
when you look at the building you have an impression of a vast amount of windows so you know instinctively that you are going to be able to charge a considerable amount of money to do the job.
On other houses that may be in the million pound plus bracket, they may not necessarily have huge amounts of windows, and again, instinctively you'll know at a glance that it'll be perhaps 30 or 40 minutes work.
Just like another window cleaner who is a friend of mine does, I've now started charging a £1.00 a minute per minute worked (think about it)
On expensive properties, this seems to work well.
I'm not talking about what you may perceive as your hourly rate, thats a very different thing.
time I was at work...
Ian