Fill in the Blank

An electrical contractor is executing a signed contract for a $4,800 commercial service panel upgrade, having previously provided a transparent, itemized quote showing $1,200 for permit fees, $1,800 for specialized materials, and $1,800 for labor. During the rough-in phase, the customer says: 'Since you already paid the municipal permit fee and have your crew on-site, can you also run a new dedicated 20-amp line to my garage without charging me extra?'

To protect the business and maintain scope boundaries, the contractor must analyze the communication dynamics of this request. Although being open about the permit costs built trust, the contractor must not allow this detailed transparency to invite open-ended ____________ of the terms that have already been agreed upon. Instead, the contractor should acknowledge the request warmly, explain that the new circuit requires its own dedicated materials and labor, and formally route the addition through a change-order.

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Updated 2026-05-17

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