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How to Win More Work as an Electrical Estimator: Tips for Getting the Cost of a Project Right

  • Writer: Melvin Newman
    Melvin Newman
  • 22 hours ago
  • 4 min read

Building on previous resources on how to bid electrical jobs and advanced estimating methodologies, this article focuses on the practical tips that help an electrical estimator get the cost of a project right and win more electrical construction jobs.


Here are some tips from an experienced Red Seal electrician and estimator. Ian Paterson has spent years on the tools and in the estimating chair, which means his advice comes from real lived experience. He knows what it takes to read a set of drawings, walk a site, and put together a number that wins the work. Ian is now the Customer Support Manager at PataBid, where he trains new users on how to use Quantify and helps estimating teams get up and running.


Estimating is more than running a takeoff and dropping in prices. It is about reading the project, understanding the people you are bidding to, and knowing where you can sharpen your number without giving away margin. Some of that comes from good electrical estimating software, and a lot of it comes from experience. The tips below cover the parts that do not show up in a manual. They are the practical, hard-earned habits that separate estimators who consistently land electrical construction jobs from those who keep coming in second.


Start With Site Visits and Relationships

1. Make time for site visits. This is your chance to spot any areas of concern that could affect your quote. Look at the access, the existing conditions, and anything the drawings do not show you. A tight ceiling space or a panel you have to work around can change your labour fast. It is also one of the best ways to meet the different GCs and start building a relationship.

2. Set up a scheduling meeting when the scope allows. On larger projects, reach out to the GCs and ask to meet about scheduling. Walk through the timeline and where your crew fits. This gets you in front of their team and shows you have thought about how the job will actually run. It also positions you as a partner worth working with.


Use RFIs to Your Advantage

3. Be deliberate with your RFIs. When you pose an RFI to the consultants, always lead the conversation. Frame it around a method you actually plan to use. That pushes the consultant to answer your query, and once the response is out, every other electrical bidder has to follow it. Now they are all costing your method.

4. Sometimes the best RFI is the one you don't ask. You may choose to hold a question if you know you can lower your quote with a method you plan to use. Just make a note explaining it in your bid letter. That note becomes the PM's first change order.


Get the Cost of a Project Right

5. Factor your labour for the real site conditions, not the ideal ones. Published labour units assume open, easy access. An occupied building, high ceilings, tight ceiling spaces, or working around other trades will all slow your crew down. Adjust your units to match what the job actually demands. This is where the cost of a project gets won or lost.

6. Get budget pricing on long lead gear early. Distribution gear, switchboards, and transformers can carry long lead times and pricing that moves. Lock in budget numbers from your supplier while you bid, and note a price hold window in your bid letter. It protects your margin if the award drags out.

7. Account for the costs that are easy to miss. The big material and labour numbers are obvious. The ones that hurt an electrical estimator are the items hiding in the specs. Permits, temporary power, as-built drawings, O&M manuals, testing, and commissioning all carry real cost. Many trace back to the spec and the Canadian Electrical Code or the National Electrical Code. Build them into your number from the start. On electrical construction jobs, missing these is how a winning bid turns into a losing job.

8. Build a contingency into your number. No set of drawings is ever complete. There are always unknowns, from site conditions you cannot see to scope that shifts after award. A contingency protects you when they show up. Set it based on the risk of the job, not a flat percentage on every bid. A clean, well-documented project might carry a small one. A messy renovation in an occupied building needs more. It is part of getting the cost of a project right, and it keeps a surprise from turning into a loss.


AI Tools Built for Electrical Estimators

9. Let AI tools do the heavy lifting. The math on winning more work is simple. The more bids you can turn around, the more electrical construction jobs you can win. AI estimating tools cut the time each takeoff takes, so you can bid more without adding to your team. They also lower the risk of a missed count or a pricing error that eats your margin. AI won't replace a good electrical estimator, but it gives one a real edge. Tools like PataBid's Quantify, and its Newton AI estimating assistant, are built for exactly this kind of work.


For a deeper look at setting up your digital estimating, from workstation layout to choosing the right software, this is a walk through of the best practices in electrical estimating that was created in collaboration with the Ontario Electrical League.




Start Winning More Electrical Construction Jobs

Winning more work is not about one trick. It is a stack of habits that add up to getting the cost of a project right. Walk the site before you quote. Meet the GCs and build the relationships that get you on more bid lists. Ask your RFIs with intent, and know when holding one back sets up your first change order. Factor your labour for the job in front of you, not a perfect one. And let AI tools carry the load so you can bid more without growing your team. PataBid's Quantify estimating software was built for electrical estimators who want to do exactly that. See how it fits the way you already work. Book a Demo today.



About the Author

Melvin Newman, C.E.T., is the co-founder and CEO of PataBid, bringing nearly two decades of hands on MEP estimating experience to the development of AI powered construction technology. His background as a Certified Engineering Technologist, seasoned estimator and full stack developer gives him a rare perspective on where the construction industry and emerging technology meet.

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