Strictly Business with Cost Control Savannah GA

Do you want to prevent unauthorized purchases of materials? Would you like your variance between estimate and actual costs to be less than 1 percent? Are you willing to invest time up front, before you start construction, to commit costs to your trade partners and suppliers?

Small Business Svc
(404) 873-0470
112 Krog St NE Ste 17
Atlanta, GA
Techstar Consulting
(404) 869-6333
508 Main St Ne
Atlanta, GA
Remodel Managers.com
770-428-7507
PO Box 715
Marietta, GA
F A Sims Oil Co
(770) 963-5702
175 W Oak St
Lawrenceville, GA
Count5 Sales Force Alignment Solutions
404-961-7350
1800 Peachtree Street Suite 444
Atlanta, GA
Halogenex
770-736-6504
6430 Sugarloaf Parkway
Duluth, GA
Performance Enhancement Strtgs
(770) 419-1507
379 Atlanta St SE
Marietta, GA
Start-up Efficiency, Inc
(678) 653-1341
1296 Crown Terrace
Marietta, GA
Windermere
(678) 455-7708
4444 Front Nine Dr
Cumming, GA
B2B CFO
404-787-5835
1360 Epping Forest Drive NE
Atlanta, GA
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Strictly Business with Cost Control

Source: CUSTOM HOME Magazine
Publication date: September 1, 2003

By Steve Maltzman, CPA

Do you want to prevent unauthorized purchases of materials? Would you like your variance between estimate and actual costs to be less than 1 percent? Are you willing to invest time up front, before you start construction, to commit costs to your trade partners and suppliers? Do you want to get away from approving every invoice for job costs that comes into your office? Do you want to streamline your job cost reporting? If you answered yes to any of these questions, a purchase order system may be right for your company.

The best method for controlling material and trade contractor costs is committing costs up front and using a purchase order system for cost control. The key to a successful purchase order system is to commit as many costs as possible prior to starting the job. Committed costs can take the form of a written purchase order or a subcontract agreement. Many of the commitments can be established during the estimating process by obtaining trade contractor and supplier bids. A committed cost system is valuable for builders of any size, but to implement one takes discipline and does not happen overnight. However, if you are willing to invest the time and resources to implementing a committed costs system, there should be a significant effect on your bottom line.

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