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3 June 2026·7 min read·Richard Bajnath

Window Installation Software: 7 Questions to Ask Before You Buy

Most quoting tools weren't built for window installers. Seven essential questions that reveal whether a platform will actually fit your workflow — or just add another dashboard to ignore.

Most quoting tools were built for generic contractors. Window installation is not a generic trade — you're configuring frame types, glass packages, Uf values, VAT splits, and hardware specs per unit, per opening, per job. A tool that doesn't understand fenestration will cost you more time than Excel. Here are seven questions to ask before you commit.

Question 1 — Is there a visual window configurator?

This is the non-negotiable. A visual configurator lets you specify frame type, material, glass package, dimensions, and hardware per window element — and outputs a line-by-line quote with the technical specs. Generic quoting tools offer a blank line-item table; you fill it in manually every time.

What to ask: "Show me how I configure a tilt-and-turn aluminium window with triple glazing, Uf 0.8, SKG** hardware, and RAL 7016 powder coat." If the demo takes longer than 2 minutes, that's your answer.

Question 2 — Does it handle tax rules automatically?

VAT handling in window installation is more complex than most trades. In the Netherlands and Belgium:

  • Residential renovation (property older than 2 years): 9% VAT on labour, 21% on materials — split on the same invoice.
  • New build / commercial: 21% across the board.
  • VAT reversal (BTW-verlegging): for VAT-registered B2B clients, the liability shifts to the client — 0% on the quote, full reverse-charge notation.

A tool that can't split these automatically will either leave you applying 21% across the board (less competitive on residential) or doing the maths by hand (error-prone). Ask the vendor to show you all three scenarios.

Question 3 — Can the client sign digitally inside the quote?

Not "can you export to DocuSign" — does the signature happen inside the quote portal? The fewer steps between "client opens quote link" and "client signs," the higher your conversion rate. Every additional tool adds friction and a drop-off point.

A proper e-signature flow: client receives a unique link, views the full PDF with all line items and terms, signs with finger or mouse, and you receive a date-stamped audit log. That's a Simple Electronic Signature under EU eIDAS — legally binding for window installation contracts.

Question 4 — Is there a deposit payment link inside the quote?

Asking clients to sign, then separately send a bank transfer, adds 2-5 days to your cash flow and 20-30 minutes of chasing per quote. The cleanest workflow: client approves the quote, pays the deposit via iDEAL or card in the same session, and you have the deposit before they close their browser.

For European window businesses, iDEAL (Netherlands), Bancontact (Belgium), and SEPA Direct Debit are the payment methods clients expect. A US-built tool offering only Stripe US doesn't solve this.

Question 5 — Does the client get a live portal to track quote status?

A client portal lets customers see quote status, revision history, and signed documents without emailing you. For commercial clients (project developers, housing associations, general contractors), this is often an expectation rather than a nice-to-have.

Secondary benefit: you spend less time on "can you resend the quote?" emails. The client has the permanent link.

Question 6 — How long until you can send your first quote?

This question reveals the implementation reality. ERP platforms typically answer "3-6 months with an implementation partner" — which means months before you see any return, plus implementation fees. Purpose-built quoting tools should answer "30-60 minutes."

The setup benchmark: add your company logo and details, load your top 5 product configurations, and send a test quote. If that takes more than two hours on a well-designed platform, something is wrong.

Question 7 — What's the real cost?

Per-user pricing looks cheap until your team grows. A €15/user/month tool becomes €75/month for a 5-person business — plus a per-user charge for every seasonal worker or subcontractor you add. Flat monthly pricing (per company, not per user) is a better model for installation businesses.

Also ask about:

  • Setup fees — some platforms charge €500-2,000 for onboarding.
  • Payment processing fees — who absorbs iDEAL transaction costs?
  • Minimum contract length — annual lock-in on a tool you haven't tested is a risk.
  • What's included at the base price — portal, e-signature, and payment should not be add-ons.

Conclusion

The right window installation software answers all seven questions cleanly: fenestration-specific configurator, automatic VAT splits, in-quote signature and payment, client portal, fast setup, transparent flat pricing. Most generic tools fail questions 1, 2, and 4 immediately.

See how Kozynofferte answers each question{" "} or start your free 14-day trial — no credit card, no setup fee, first quote in under an hour.


Questions about a specific platform you're evaluating?{" "} Email me directly — I'll give you an honest comparison.

— Richard Bajnath, Kozynofferte

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