Follow-Up Guides

How to Follow Up a Quote Without Sounding Pushy

By Zevik Editorial Team 8 min read January 2026 For tradies & contractors
Quick answer
Follow up within 24–48 hours of sending a quote. Keep the message short, remind the client what the quote covers, and give them an easy next step. The goal is to be helpful, not aggressive. One or two follow-ups is usually enough before you decide whether the opportunity is still worth chasing. Poor quote follow-up does not usually look like a major business problem at first. It looks like a few quiet clients, a few missed callbacks, and a few quotes that never get chased. Over time, that can mean real work left on the table.

Why follow-up feels uncomfortable

Most contractors do not want to sound desperate. They do not want to pressure clients, annoy them, or look like they need the work too badly.

That is reasonable. But there is a difference between professional follow-up and chasing.

A professional follow-up is short, useful and timed properly. It reminds the client that the quote is there, gives them a chance to ask questions, and makes the next step easy.

When should you send the first follow-up?

The first follow-up should usually go out within 24–48 hours after the quote is sent. That gives the client time to read the quote without making them feel rushed.

Example:

Hi [Name], just checking in on the quote I sent for [job]. Happy to answer any questions or talk through the details if that helps. Let me know how you would like to proceed.

What should you say if they still do not reply?

If there is no reply after the first follow-up, send a second message around day 4 or 5.

Example:

Hi [Name], just following up again on the [job] quote. Still happy to get started when you are ready — or if you have decided to go another way, no problem at all. Either way, let me know.

When should you stop chasing?

After two or three follow-ups with no response, it is usually time to move on. That does not mean the client will never come back. It means they should not keep taking your attention away from warmer opportunities.

What if the client has opened the quote multiple times?

That is different. A client who has opened a quote several times may still be interested. In that case, a phone call can be better than another message.

The problem is that most contractors do not know who has opened the quote, who has gone quiet, or who is still active. Quote activity and client engagement signals help separate warm quotes from dead ones.

Frequently asked questions

Is quote follow-up pushy?

No, not when it is polite, brief and useful. Pushy follow-up pressures the client. Professional follow-up helps the client take the next step.

Should contractors follow up every quote?

Yes, every quote should have a follow-up path. The key is to personally focus on the quotes showing the clearest client intent.

Can follow-up guarantee more work?

No. Follow-up improves consistency and gives each quote a better chance, but it cannot guarantee that a client will accept.


How Zevik helps

Manual follow-up is hard to keep consistent. Zevik follows up quotes automatically, shows quote activity, and helps contractors know who is worth chasing.

Next steps:

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