Disagree. You’re right that some won’t care but if you don’t do it, then all you can do is win work by undercutting and luck.The above method(listing the things that make yours better) is totally wrong. Someone who is eventually going to make it themselves isn't a typical customer. People really don't care. If people could have an exact replica of a black range rover on the drive as a status enhancer at a 10th the price seriously that would be a thing. No engine no suspension zero. People are this shallow.
I'm just considering working for a company atm. There literature/marketing is a complete fabrication. Hundreds of reviews. 9.8 trust pilot everything. They haven't completed a single job. Guess what....they've got lots of work....lots and lots. Now there trying to find a way to fulfil!
If everyone assumes ‘they’re all the same’ it only benefits the lowest common denominator (note how the concept of ‘all politicians are dodgy you just have to accept it’ means the bent ones can carry on being bent and harms the decent ones)
No, people don’t know. But they will if you educate them a little. Also, it will whittle out the customers who really don’t care at all, which may be a good thing.
Given that marketing has a lot of success in doing very disingenuous tactics like ‘our blackcurrant squash contains no plutonium!’ (Which suggests to the consumer that other squashes do have this contamination even though none of them do)
Then doing truthful marketing showing the benefits of your work and giving them enough to recognise why the competing quotes may be a false economy is a no-brainer.
People love feeling that they know a little. They can then tell people why their new thing is made of a particular material, where it came from etc.
Yes not all people etc. etc. but as I say, if you assume no one cares then the only game in town is price.