Last year has seen an amazing increase in home construction. Lots of people, forcibly confined to their homes to avoid the pandemic, decided that their houses need some improvement.
According to a recent survey of homeowners in the United States, 58 percent of homeowners in the country were planning on implementing home improvement project within the next 12 months. Respondents revealed that most of their proposed home improvement projects were to increase the comfort of their homes during lockdowns whereas 62 percent were more concerned about increasing the health features of their abodes.
Regardless of why you would want to improve your home, unless you have extensive construction experience, you will most probably require the help of a home contractor. But how can you ensure that you work well with the contractor?
Here are four tips on how you can make sure you manage the project and your contractor effectively.
Keep a Journal
You need to keep track of everything that happens during construction. Did your contractor suggest you purchase some heavy equipment on the market to hasten the project? Did you change your mind about the tiles you were using in the kitchen? Was construction unusually fast or slow today? Was someone injured in the workplace?
Detailing all these in a journal helps you keep track of what's going on. In can also be helpful if you have to check what's already been accomplished and what needs to be done. A journal with dates and timestamps can also be critically important if things go south and you have to file a lawsuit against the contractor. It's better to be safe and have documentation than have nothing to back up your claims, after all.
Finally, a journal can be very instructive in case you plan on improving your home again in the future. You can easily refer to what you did right and avoid mistakes simply by reading your journal.
Document All Changes
Home improvement projects rarely remain within the parameters they started in. Sometimes you think that the paint you used to living room isn't right. Or maybe your contractor insists that the foundations of your carport designs aren't suited for the type of soil on your property. A home improvement project can suddenly change in many ways.
It is vital to the future of your project that you document every change that occurs. This will not only help you keep tabs over the direction of the project, it can also tell you if there are financial issues. Too many changes can cost you more money and maybe a sign of deliberate efforts to extract money from you. Documenting all the changes can help you see which are necessary and which are superfluous.
Communicate Continually
You may not be able to live in your home while the contractors are making your improvements, but that doesn't mean you should not maintain constant communication with them.
Visit the construction site and always ask for daily reports. These reports will be important if you are keeping track of all changes and documenting progress in your journals. Continual communication will also be vital if you want to assess quality of the work that's being done on your home.
If you remain standoffish from you're your contractors, you can find it very difficult to coordinate with them regarding changes. You may find out about delays too late to do anything about them. And most importantly, you could miss out on the opportunity to learn more about construction. You could be surprised how much information you can glean from daily conversations with your contractor.
Establish Payment Schedules Beforehand
One of the most crucial aspects of managing a home construction project is establishing payment schedules. Unless you want to have multiple awkward conversation with your contractor, you should discuss when you are due to pay them beforehand. Don't be tempted to pay them like any other employee. Instead, you should link the payments with preset milestones.
For example, if you are having your kitchen redone, have them receive the first payment after the floors are retiled, the next when the cabinets are done and the final payment when the fixtures are installed. Establishing such time frames helps keep things on track, preventing people from delaying the construction.
Home improvement projects are very difficult to complete, but they don't always have to be. Keeping a level head, treating your contractors fairly and establishing open communications with them are all essential for ensuring you get the improvements you want without losing time or money.
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