curt1 said:
Many people who are not serious about running a business never calculate their P/L. This is why so many go out of business after a year or so. They are proud to do their work cheap.
Curt
Exactly
I'm so glad this thread is still alive, it's mostly why I broke down and stopped lurking.
I do basically the same thing on the side.
It's not the labor in the hourly rate, it's the cost of capital.
So, you have a truck. (cheap 10k, 50 cents a mile, probably more than that)
a trailer (3k, registration, insruance, etc)
you have a tractor (20k, plus service, insurance, parts, wear and tear)
bush hog ($1000, plus wear and tear)
you have business insurance, taxes, cost of a phone, cost of business cards, advertising, etc
Then, the labor, at $20 an hour.
And somewhere in there, you need to have a profit, otherwise you might as well stay on the couch and watch TV.
You have to recover your cost of capital. YOu could be making 5% on T bills on that 40 to 50k you have wrapped up in equipment. I expect my machines to pay for themselves in 3 years or less (other people may use different numbers). You have to figure the pro-rated cost of service, business expenses, etc, all included.
Personally, out here, it's $75 an hour for about anything and up to $125 an hour for 15 foot batwings. (which is too cheap for them, but it's not me so....) At $75 an hour you aren't making a ton of money, but you are surviving. I wouldn't even get out of bed for what he's paying you. (BTW, for comparison, a 30hp tractor with bush hog rents for about $400 a day plus delivery, and rentals understand cost recovery. So, if it's all day at most you are getting $200 for your labor and profit)
YOu need to recover all your costs, or a couple years are going to go by and you are going to have made a living, but your tractor and truck will be worn out and you won't have anything to replace them. What then?
Charge correctly.