Advertisment
A man has sparked discussion online after sharing how a carpenter he hired completed a job much faster than expected while still collecting the full agreed payment.
According to the man, he had negotiated a fee of ₦60,000 for what he believed would require two workers and take two days to complete.
Advertisment
However, when he arrived at the work site the following day, he discovered that the carpenter had already finished the entire project by himself.
Advertisment
Unexpected completion
The man said he was surprised by the speed at which the work was completed and initially questioned whether the agreed price was still justified.
Advertisment
He explained that he carefully inspected the finished work in search of possible faults or areas that might suggest the job had been rushed.
Despite his efforts, he said he could not find any problems with the workmanship.
Advertisment
The experience prompted him to reconsider the original agreement, believing the task had taken significantly less time and labour than he anticipated.
Advertisment
Speaking about the encounter, he recalled telling the carpenter that the payment arrangement needed to be reviewed.
Advertisment
“I told him we needed to revisit our agreement. That I no go gree.”
Advertisment
The carpenter laughed off the suggestion and insisted that the original deal would stand.
Advertisment
‘Agreement is agreement’
Advertisment
Responding to the request, the carpenter defended the agreed fee and explained that his speed was the result of experience and skill acquired over time.
Advertisment
Advertisment
“Agreement is agreement.”
Advertisment
The man admitted that the carpenter had a valid point and acknowledged that expertise often allows professionals to complete tasks more efficiently than expected.
Advertisment
His post has since generated reactions online, with many people arguing that clients pay not only for labour and time but also for experience, knowledge and efficiency.
Advertisment
Others noted that accurately estimating the value of skilled work remains a common challenge in service-related jobs.
Advertisment
The story has added to ongoing conversations about pricing, expertise and fairness in professional agreements.
Advertisment
Check the post below;
Advertisment

Advertisment
Fastrumours Information update spot
