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Bruce Woodruff
#1 Contractors Contributor
  • Contractor/Investor/Consultant
  • San Diego / Phoenix
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What is an 'Investor-friendly' Contractor?

Bruce Woodruff
#1 Contractors Contributor
  • Contractor/Investor/Consultant
  • San Diego / Phoenix
Posted

I keep seeing this phrase in the Forums.....I take it that the concept is about finding a GC who has been an investor themselves...? That may or may not mean that the Contractor will have some knowledge that will help the project move along more smoothly? That they may be aware of which finish products work in a budget minded house project?

Or....is it just about being cheaper...?

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Georgii Grigoriants
  • Real Estate Consultant
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Georgii Grigoriants
  • Real Estate Consultant
Replied

I think a lot of investors underestimate how much you can learn about a contractor just from the estimate itself.

One of the best GCs I’ve seen recently wasn’t the cheapest bid on the project. He was actually a little higher than several others. But his estimate immediately stood out because everything was organized and clearly thought through from start to finish.

While some bids were vague or just rough numbers on a page, his breakdown showed:
• scope
• sequencing
• realistic timelines
• workflow
• materials
• execution plan

The owner basically stopped taking the other bids seriously after reading it.

What impressed me most wasn’t even the pricing. It was how structured and predictable the entire operation felt before construction even started.

The guy runs extremely fast projects, has his own crews/equipment, and thinks several steps ahead. In my opinion, that’s what really protects investor margins long term — not simply finding the cheapest contractor.

A lot of projects don’t fall apart because labor was 5–10% more expensive. They fall apart because of delays, failed coordination, weak scheduling, and holding costs quietly compounding month after month.

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