Professional quotes for domestic and small commercial work
Your customer should see the job broken down, not a round number that invites haggling. With FieldQuote you build the quote the way you price: circuits, day rates, materials, and scope notes. In the UK market, clarity builds trust — and when the quote is easy to read on a phone, you’re not losing work to someone who undercuts with a vague “about £X.”
Take a deposit when they accept, not when you chase
A signed acceptance with no money on account is still a risk: dates slip, the customer changes their mind, or a cheaper spark gets the nod. A card deposit (or staged payments, depending how you work) secures the diary and covers part of your time if things change. FieldQuote handles that in one link — your customer signs and pays without another phone call or bank transfer.
No app for the person paying — one link, any device
Homeowners don’t want another log-in. They get a link to the quote, they accept, they pay. You’re not herding them through a portal; you’re giving them a straightforward way to say yes. That’s especially useful on rewires, consumer unit upgrades, and EICRs where the decision might involve more than one person in the house.
For self-employed sparks and small electrical firms
The product is designed around UK electrical work and honest pricing, not a generic US-style estimator. You pay a simple monthly rate for the quoting, deposit, and follow-up side of the job — and you can try it on real work without a long contract. The aim is straightforward: get the deposit before you start, send one link, and stop losing jobs in the gap between “sounds good” and money in the account.
From first fix to EICR — one journey for the customer
Whether the job is a like-for-like consumer unit, a full rewire, or documentation after testing, the pattern is the same: agree the scope, agree the price, take something on account, then do the work. FieldQuote doesn’t replace your professional judgement on BS 7671 — it gives you a clean way to present the quote, take a card payment, and move the job from “interested” to “booked.” That’s what electrician quoting is for: not a spreadsheet in a PDF, but a line of business that actually closes.