Thats the whole basis of a business transaction, you wouldn't go and buy a new sofa and expect to pay less because the truck delivering it arrived early because didn't get held up in traffic. You agree a price for something, the risk and opportunity lies wih the provider: if they do it quicker they make more money, if they take longer they lose out. If they quote silly-high, they don't get the work.
The customer is paying for a decorated room, not the act of decorating the room.
Couldn’t agree with this more.
If the price is to provide a product or the result of my labour and experience, then the end price is the end price. I will often give an amount of days estimate to reflect my pricing, and this is led by experience and often worst case scenarios - this or that could be a nightmare, and if it is, I am going to be working for free if I don’t quote for it etc.
if it’s something I can’t easily estimate, or stuff that’s slightly out of my wheelhouse I won’t do it unless the client will agree to an hourly rate, for that part of the job.
if something takes significantly shorter than expected, or upon receiving a quote from a supplier that is significantly less than I estimated initially, I will often hand on these savings to the client.
If you can’t afford what people are charging, you must do it yourself. Even with a decorator there is also work happening that the client might not see, I.e. waste disposal, cleaning brushes, loading up the van with the appropriate kit, laundry of work clothing, client visits and quoting, travel to and from site.
They might work through lunch or work longer hours to get the job done in less days but similar hours etc..
fair play. I wouldn’t be at all annoyed if someone quoted me a price, and then delivered on that price, regardless of however many days it took or my perception of their labour and experiences value.