The basics
The Three Terms — Clearly Defined
Let's define them once and for all.
- Estimate — a price range based on limited information. Not binding. Given early.
- Quote — a fixed price commitment for a defined scope of work. Often binding.
- Survey — a detailed on-site assessment to confirm scope and finalise pricing.
If you treat these as the same thing, you risk underpricing, creating confusion, and losing credibility with customers who expect you to know the difference.
Part 1
What Is an Estimate?
An estimate is an informed approximation of cost — given early, based on limited information, and presented as a range.
- Given early in the process
- Based on limited information
- Presented as a range (e.g. $1,800–$3,000)
- Not legally binding
When to use estimates:
- First customer enquiry
- Website pricing tools and instant quote widgets
- Lead qualification — filter out low-budget enquiries
- Early-stage discussions before a survey
Estimates are powerful because they set expectations, reduce uncertainty, and filter out customers who aren't serious — all before you invest any time in a full quote.
In modern trade businesses, estimates should be instant wherever possible.
Part 2
What Is a Quote?
A quote is a fixed, formal price for a clearly defined scope of work. Unlike an estimate, it carries weight — and often legal significance.
- Based on detailed, confirmed information
- Fixed price (or clearly scoped)
- Documented and often legally binding
- Presented after full scope is understood
When to use quotes:
- After gathering full job details
- After a survey, if one was required
- When the scope is clearly defined and agreed
If you give a fixed quote without enough information, you absorb every unexpected cost. Your profit disappears. A quote should only be given when you are confident in the scope.
A quote should only be given when you are confident in the scope.
Part 3
What Is a Survey?
A survey is the step where you validate everything before committing to a final price. It is the bridge between estimate and quote for complex or high-value work.
- On-site or detailed remote assessment
- Identifies unknowns and risks
- Confirms measurements and technical requirements
- Ensures the final quote is accurate and protected
When to use surveys:
- Complex or multi-stage jobs
- High-value work where scope could change
- Projects with unknown variables (older buildings, existing systems)
A survey protects both you and the customer. It shows professionalism, thoroughness, and that you take accuracy seriously.
The process
The Ideal Modern Trade Workflow
The most effective trade businesses follow a structured four-stage process that balances speed, accuracy, and trust.
Instant estimate
Customer enters job details and receives a price range immediately. Filters and qualifies the lead before you invest any time.
Qualification
Confirm key details, job fit, and customer intent. Ensure the job is worth progressing.
Survey (if needed)
For complex or high-value work, validate scope on-site, identify risks, and confirm pricing inputs.
Final quote
Provide a fixed price with confirmed timeline and scope. Both parties know exactly what is agreed.
This process balances speed + accuracy + trust — and converts more enquiries into booked jobs.
Common mistakes
Four Mistakes That Cost Trades Money
Treating estimates like quotes
Saying “it'll be about $2,000” and then being forced to honour it. This leads to underpricing and lost profit — especially when the job turns out to be more complex than expected.
Giving quotes too early
Quoting without seeing the job or understanding the full scope creates risk. If anything changes, you absorb the cost. Always qualify and survey before committing to a fixed price.
Skipping the estimate stage
Going straight to “we'll come take a look” slows the process down and reduces conversion. An instant estimate filters out poor-fit enquiries before you invest time in a site visit.
Not explaining the difference to customers
Customers assume an estimate is a final price. If you don't clarify early, you create confusion and disputes later. Set expectations clearly at every stage.
The psychology
Why This Structure Builds Trust
This three-stage structure works because it aligns with how customers actually think and make decisions.
Estimates reduce uncertainty
Customers want to know “Is this within my budget?” before they commit to anything. An instant estimate answers that question immediately, removes anxiety, and moves them forward.
Surveys build confidence
A survey signals professionalism and thoroughness. It tells the customer: “We do this properly.” That's a trust signal that generic “call us for a quote” businesses can't match.
Quotes create commitment
A clear, fixed quote provides certainty — for both sides. Customers who have been through the estimate and survey stages are far more likely to accept the final quote without objection.
Each stage moves the customer closer to saying yes.
The impact
What Happens When You Get This Right
When you structure your process properly, every part of the business improves.
Confusion, delays, and disputes. Customers push back on prices they didn't expect.
Lower close rates, more time wasted
Clarity, speed, and trust. Customers arrive at the quote stage already prepared.
Higher conversion, fewer surprises
Modern tools make it possible to deliver the estimate stage instantly — so customers are qualified and expectations are set before you've spoken to anyone.
- More enquiries turn into qualified leads
- Fewer time-wasters reach the survey or quote stage
- Customers trust your pricing because they understand the process
- You close more jobs with less back-and-forth
Summary
Key Takeaways
- Estimates = price ranges given early, based on limited information. Not binding.
- Quotes = fixed prices for a defined scope. Often legally binding.
- Surveys = on-site validation step for complex or high-value work.
- Each stage plays a critical role — skipping any one creates risk.
- Structured workflows improve both profit margins and conversion rates.