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Remodeling Business Advice Laconia NH

If you want to open a remodeling business, you’ll need more than a nail gun in your toolbox and a way with wallboard. It’s a business, and you need to treat it like one. Here are 6 essentials for a successful remodeling startup.

Inherent Advantage
603.731.5923
110 Baptist Hill Road
Canterbury, NH
Career Advance
(603) 528-2828
25 Beacon St E Ste 201
Laconia, NH
NH SBDC North Country Regional Office
603-444-1053
120 Main Street
Littleton, NH
NH SBDC Nashua Regional Offfice
603-589-2114
102 Perimeter Road
Nashua, NH
NH SBDC Manchester Regional Office
603-624-2000
33 S. Commercial St.
Manchester, NH
Lighthouse Staffing
(603) 524-0400
128 Woodland Ave
Gilford, NH
NH Works-Laconia
603-524-3960
426 Union Avenue
Laconia, NH
NH SBDC Environmental Management Program
603-624-2264
33 South Commercial St.
Manchester, NH
NH SBDC Statewide Education Program
603-227-0417
172 Pembroke Road
Concord, NH
NH SBDC Concord Program Office
603-227-0417
172 Pembroke Road
Concord, NH
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Renovation Nation: Remodeling Startup 101

New home sales may be down, but remodeling continues to be very big business. In 2006, remodeling expenditures reached an estimated $233 billion, up 8.4 percent over 2005, according to the National Association of Home Builders.

If you’re thinking of getting into remodeling, industry veterans say you should plan on spending as much time building the business as you do building room additions. Here are some of the critical elements of being a successful remodeler:

1. Good Business Sense

The biggest mistake new remodelers make is failing to operate like a business, says Eric Phillips, vice president and general manager of DreamMaker Bath and Kitchen, of the Triangle in Apex, N.C. You’ll need a basic understanding of cash flow, accounting, sales and marketing, purchasing, contracts and estimating.

And, Dean Bennett advises, set aside time every day to manage your company’s finances. The owner of Dean Bennett Design Build in Castle Rock, Colo., spends eight to 10 hours a week doing his books.

“People aren’t used to that,” he says. “They’re used to going to work. To stay home and not be making any money doing paperwork is tough.”

2. Estimating Expertise

Proper estimating can make or break a remodeler. Bid too low and you can lose money on a job; too high and you won’t get any work.

“It’s a huge aspect of the business,” says Justin Williams, a third-generation builder/remodeler and owner of Williams Drake Construction, in Dallas, Texas.

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