How Remodelers Are Handling Projects This Holiday Season
Communicating clearly with clients and adding a buffer to the timeline can ease project stress during the holidays
What’s your holiday plan this year? Will you take time off from your remodeling or outdoor business in addition to Thanksgiving and Christmas Day? Or do you feel too busy this year to take an extended break?
We recently spoke with three pros about their holiday workload this year compared with last year and how they plan to handle projects this holiday season.
We recently spoke with three pros about their holiday workload this year compared with last year and how they plan to handle projects this holiday season.
Coping Strategies for Holiday Projects
Communicating expectations with clients. Projects that take place over the holidays require extra care in terms of client communication. Some homeowners may prefer not to have tradespeople in their homes while they’re enjoying vacation time there. Others might want workers on-site as soon as possible to keep the project moving.
“It’s all about an upfront agreement, long before the holidays come, about whether it’s OK to work through the holidays,” says Brandon Bailey of Bailey Remodeling and Construction in Louisville, Kentucky. Bailey makes sure he knows homeowners’ preferences and then simply schedules workers to jobs where homeowners are OK with having workers on-site.
One way to make sure everyone is on the same page about the project is to use project management software like Houzz Pro. With Houzz Pro software, you can share a personalized dashboard with your clients and give them access to helpful information such as a project timeline and progress updates. Houzz Pro keeps documents like estimates and change orders in a central place and tracks communication so everyone can see what’s been agreed upon and what needs to happen next.
Planning in buffer time for project overruns. A holiday-related deadline can be stressful. The homeowners’ holiday plans may depend on the deadline being met, which puts extra pressure on the pro to meet it.
“You just have to be honest when first connecting on whether it is doable or not,” Pinc says. “I had several potential clients this year that requested a holiday deadline when first speaking. I knew it was not doable and was completely transparent about it. Better to be upfront than let anyone down in the end!”
If you do agree to meet a holiday deadline, make sure you build in a buffer for those inevitable project delays. “If someone tells me that they want it done by Christmas, I schedule it as needing to get done by Dec. 1,” Bailey says.
See more resources for pros in Houzz Pro Learn
Communicating expectations with clients. Projects that take place over the holidays require extra care in terms of client communication. Some homeowners may prefer not to have tradespeople in their homes while they’re enjoying vacation time there. Others might want workers on-site as soon as possible to keep the project moving.
“It’s all about an upfront agreement, long before the holidays come, about whether it’s OK to work through the holidays,” says Brandon Bailey of Bailey Remodeling and Construction in Louisville, Kentucky. Bailey makes sure he knows homeowners’ preferences and then simply schedules workers to jobs where homeowners are OK with having workers on-site.
One way to make sure everyone is on the same page about the project is to use project management software like Houzz Pro. With Houzz Pro software, you can share a personalized dashboard with your clients and give them access to helpful information such as a project timeline and progress updates. Houzz Pro keeps documents like estimates and change orders in a central place and tracks communication so everyone can see what’s been agreed upon and what needs to happen next.
Planning in buffer time for project overruns. A holiday-related deadline can be stressful. The homeowners’ holiday plans may depend on the deadline being met, which puts extra pressure on the pro to meet it.
“You just have to be honest when first connecting on whether it is doable or not,” Pinc says. “I had several potential clients this year that requested a holiday deadline when first speaking. I knew it was not doable and was completely transparent about it. Better to be upfront than let anyone down in the end!”
If you do agree to meet a holiday deadline, make sure you build in a buffer for those inevitable project delays. “If someone tells me that they want it done by Christmas, I schedule it as needing to get done by Dec. 1,” Bailey says.
See more resources for pros in Houzz Pro Learn
Prioritizing time off. Despite their plentiful workloads, pros said they’re still planning to take at least a short holiday break this year. Bailey takes several days off to visit with out-of-town family, though construction projects continue while he’s off work.
Pinc takes a trip from Christmas Eve to Jan. 3 each year. On the weekdays she gets up early to work for three to four hours before enjoying no work for the rest of the day. “I haven’t had a vacation without work in over four years, but getting away and partially decompressing is key to balance,” she says.
Clark and her husband, son and father-in-law, who all work in the business, will take off Thanksgiving and the Friday after and Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. “We try really hard to take that time to stop and breathe and connect with family,” she says. “Taking a break during the holidays is super important to us. And we have to make ourselves, and remind ourselves, to do it.”
Download our Relationship Management Checklist
Pinc takes a trip from Christmas Eve to Jan. 3 each year. On the weekdays she gets up early to work for three to four hours before enjoying no work for the rest of the day. “I haven’t had a vacation without work in over four years, but getting away and partially decompressing is key to balance,” she says.
Clark and her husband, son and father-in-law, who all work in the business, will take off Thanksgiving and the Friday after and Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. “We try really hard to take that time to stop and breathe and connect with family,” she says. “Taking a break during the holidays is super important to us. And we have to make ourselves, and remind ourselves, to do it.”
Download our Relationship Management Checklist
Your turn: What does your holiday project load look like this year and will you take an extended vacation? Please share in the Comments.
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More for Pros on Houzz
Read more stories for pros
Learn about Houzz Pro software
Talk with your peers in the Pro-to-Pro discussions
Join the Houzz Trade Program
For many remodeling and outdoor professionals, 2020 has turned out to be a good year for business. With people spending more time at home, many homeowners have reached out to pros for help with refreshing their spaces. That’s led to busy workloads even as we move into a phase of the year where inquiries and projects often taper off.
“Typically people aren’t wanting to have their homes torn up for the holidays,” says Heidi Clark, who runs the office and customer-facing functions for Clark Builders in Lompoc, California, where her husband, Brian, is the general contractor. But this year, clients are plunging ahead.
One couple began demolition at the end of October. “I told them, ‘You know, by Thanksgiving you might not have a kitchen. By Christmas you might not have your living room back together,’ ” Clark says. But the clients don’t seem to mind. They’re grandparents, and Clark speculates they may be planning to spend the holidays with family elsewhere. Another client, who lives alone, is signed up for an addition that will make his home a holiday mess. “He’ll break ground in mid-December,” Clark says. “It baffles me but I’m grateful for it.”
In San Diego, business is booming at Hope Pinc Design. “Generally, things can be a tad slower during the holidays,” Pinc says. “However, this year is absolutely madness due to everyone being at home with COVID.”
Most years, Pinc manages eight to 10 projects during November, which she considers her slowest month. This November she’s juggling 20.