Coppersmith
Senior Member
- Location
- Tampa, FL, USA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
How to price service jobs for profit IMHO.
Gangbox jobs are the kind where you expect one or more workers to be on the same jobsite all day for multiple days. You can bill eight hours per day per worker every day.
Your hourly rate for gangbox jobs should be [fully loaded labor cost per hour] + [overhead cost per hour] + [desired profit per hour].
In addition, in your quote you charge for material, rentals, subs, and travel.
A service technician running around in a service truck can have a lot of unproductive hours. In fact, on average a service truck only has four billable hours per day. Your service technician expects to get paid for eight hours a day. (If you are filling that role, you should expect the same.) Therefore, the hourly rate on service jobs is different.
Your hourly rate for service jobs for the first four hours per job should be [fully loaded labor cost per hour x 2] + [overhead cost per hour x 2] + [desired profit per hour]. After four hours, the rate should be [desired profit per hour]. Again, materials, rentals, subs, and travel are separate charges.
Things to note about how this hourly rate works:
* You use the above to calculate your price. Don't tell the client how you calculate the price.
* After four billable hours per day you have fully paid your labor and overhead costs for the day.
* For hours five and above you are only charging for profit since labor and overhead are already covered.
* If you do two jobs in one day, you are making extra money on labor and overhead charges. This covers those days where you bill less than four hours.
The result is short jobs are charged more per hour than long jobs. This is not a problem because the total bill will be lower. If you do a full day job, the price comes out the same as a gangbox job making longer jobs less expensive to the client while still covering all your labor, overhead, and profit.
Gangbox jobs are the kind where you expect one or more workers to be on the same jobsite all day for multiple days. You can bill eight hours per day per worker every day.
Your hourly rate for gangbox jobs should be [fully loaded labor cost per hour] + [overhead cost per hour] + [desired profit per hour].
In addition, in your quote you charge for material, rentals, subs, and travel.
A service technician running around in a service truck can have a lot of unproductive hours. In fact, on average a service truck only has four billable hours per day. Your service technician expects to get paid for eight hours a day. (If you are filling that role, you should expect the same.) Therefore, the hourly rate on service jobs is different.
Your hourly rate for service jobs for the first four hours per job should be [fully loaded labor cost per hour x 2] + [overhead cost per hour x 2] + [desired profit per hour]. After four hours, the rate should be [desired profit per hour]. Again, materials, rentals, subs, and travel are separate charges.
Things to note about how this hourly rate works:
* You use the above to calculate your price. Don't tell the client how you calculate the price.
* After four billable hours per day you have fully paid your labor and overhead costs for the day.
* For hours five and above you are only charging for profit since labor and overhead are already covered.
* If you do two jobs in one day, you are making extra money on labor and overhead charges. This covers those days where you bill less than four hours.
The result is short jobs are charged more per hour than long jobs. This is not a problem because the total bill will be lower. If you do a full day job, the price comes out the same as a gangbox job making longer jobs less expensive to the client while still covering all your labor, overhead, and profit.