How to Set Yourself Apart in Your Contracting Business

An orange hard hat sits on top of a pipe.

Once you start your contracting business, your goal will be to set yourself apart from the competition. But how do you do that? Play to your strengths and make sure that you emphasize the things your customers are looking for. Here are a few things you can do.

Put Your Best Foot Forward
Starting a business and meeting with clients as a business owner can be a little nerve-wracking. If you want to secure the bid, however, you have to present an organized and confident demeanor. In all of your transactions, aim to put your best foot forward. This includes a variety of aspects, such as:

If you are still getting used to making presentations to prospective clients, ask friends or family members to help you practice. Give them a sample project and walk them through the steps. That way, when you need to do it for a client, it will feel much more natural.

Focus on Quality
However else you choose to market your services, put a focus on quality. Depending on the field in which you work and the types of projects you want, you may see companies setting themselves apart by the cost of the project or the time it takes to complete. While these aren’t necessarily bad values to have, you’ll soon realize that these aspects can easily fall out of your control. You can control the quality of the work you do, however. Make a habit of performing work to the highest quality that you can, and hire employees who value quality as well. Clients will be more likely to return to a company that does the job well, instead of merely cheaply or quickly.

Emphasize Service
Like quality, good service is a business value that you can’t really substitute in exchange for something else. It’s true that clients may hold different attitudes on what constitutes good service, but you should aim to approximate it in any case. No one wants to work with a business that never returns phone calls or takes forever to respond to emails. Similarly, clients don’t tend to enjoy working with a contractor who seems disinterested or annoyed by their projects. Instead, work to treat each client as if they are a high priority. You’ll be more likely to get good word-of-mouth advertising that way.

Stay Positive
If you’re in an area with lots of competition for customers in your field, it’s best to stay positive. When you observe any kind of competition, from a political campaign to a sports game, you’ll notice members of one group attempting to distinguish themselves by tearing down another group. Identifying the flaws of your competition is a time-tested sales tool, but it isn’t always an effective one. When you focus on your competition, you’re not showing prospective clients how you can do it better. You just end up looking like a critic, instead of a professional. Staying positive and focusing on your own business’s qualities is more likely to pay off.

Get Your Contractor License
Ultimately, clients want to know that the company they hire is legit and able to stand by their work. Doing work as a contractor in California without a license is illegal, but you’ll still see people doing it on occasion. That’s why consumer advice guides recommend that people verify that the business has an active license as the first step. Getting your contractor license opens lots of doors. And once you have it, it’s easy to show to clients as a way of building trust in your company.

Starting your contracting business is just the first step in a long path. Doing well against the competition is part of the process. To learn more about what you need to get your contractor license, visit CSLS today!