It’s rarely the big mistakes that hurt you.
It’s the little things – the quiet, everyday habits that chip away at your margin, slow the team down, and turn jobs from profitable to painful.
Here are five common habits we see in fabrication shops that cost serious money over time (and how to fix them).
We get it – you’re busy, and quotes need to go out fast.
But if you’re not double-checking material prices, supplier lead times, and labor estimates, you’re gambling with your margin.
Small underquotes stack up fast.
A few jobs here and there at 5 to 10% under cost? That’s your profit gone for the month.
Fix it:
Have a system that keeps you consistent. Slow down just enough to quote right – then you can quote fast and profitably.
When the team has to walk back into the office to ask,
“What’s this for?”
“Where’s the drawing?”
“Which material are we using?”
– you’ve already lost money.
Every interruption is time and focus gone.
Not to mention the risk of rework if they guess wrong.
Fix it:
Make sure every job hits the floor with clear instructions, drawings, and material notes. If it’s not ready, don’t release it.
If you’re relying on memory or scrap paper to know what’s in progress, what’s at what stage, or what’s next, things will slip.
You can’t fix delays you can’t see.
Fix it:
Set your team up with clear, real-time visibility. Everyone should be able to see what’s moving, what’s stuck, and what’s coming – without needing to ask.
If you’re not measuring how long things actually take, you’re quoting blind.
Jobs you thought took 4 hours might be taking 6 or 7 – but you won’t know until it’s too late.
Fix it:
Use a system that makes time tracking part of the workflow. The goal isn’t to micromanage – it’s to understand what’s really going on so you can price jobs properly and plan your week with confidence.
When instructions, changes, or approvals are given on the fly (and not written down), you open the door for costly mistakes.
“But you said…” becomes a time suck.
And it’s hard to back yourself up when things go sideways.
Fix it:
Put it in writing. Confirm changes via text, email, or job notes. It protects your team – and your business.
No one sets out to lose money.
But in busy shops, it’s the small inefficiencies that do the damage.
Fixing just one or two of these habits can make a huge difference – not just to your bottom line, but to the way your whole shop runs.
Take the quick audit below - and consider having your team do it too. Comparing answers can spark some great conversations.
Think your workshop is running tight?
Score yourself on each habit from 1 (Not true at all) to 5 (Absolutely true).
Be honest - no one else is watching.
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