marmathsen
Senior Member
- Location
- Seattle, Washington ...ish
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
Billable Rates
I'm looking to do another labor rate increase and I was hoping to get a sense of how others structure their pricing.
As a point of reference we are a small 4 man shop and we only do residential. Aside from new construction and select few large remodels, we bill hourly for almost everything.
In the past we had billed out at a higher rate for more experienced journeymen and a lower rate for more green journeymen. Then a few years ago we changed to 1 hourly rate for all 3 journeymen and a lower rate for the one trainee we have. We bill the same hourly rate to our largest general contractor as we do for our smallest brand new client.
The discussion now is to have price levels, 1 default rate for new clients and smaller clients, and 1 discounted rate for our largest clients (probably based on the last ~2 years of invoices). I use QuickBooks and it looks like the easiest to implement would be a discount (I'm thinking 10%) on the whole invoice which would include labor and materials.
How do you structure your pricing that you bill out in comparison to what I've described above?
Payable Employee Hours
In the same conversation, we're toying with the possibility of changing how we pay our guys. Maybe...
If we send them out to one or several jobs in a day, and they bust their butts and are done in 6 hrs rather than 8, then they're benefiting the customer but short changing themselves since they are paid by the hour.
I've wondered for a long time about the idea of converting to salary for our guys. Or recently I was wondering about paying in full day or half day increments. That way if they get done in 6 hrs they still get a full 8 hrs of pay.
We are in a competitive labor market (Seattle) so I'm always sensitive to making sure my guys feel like they are in a good spot and are LESS likely to look around for other opportunities.
How do you structure your employee compensation in comparison to what I've described above?
Thanks in advance for your input
I'm looking to do another labor rate increase and I was hoping to get a sense of how others structure their pricing.
As a point of reference we are a small 4 man shop and we only do residential. Aside from new construction and select few large remodels, we bill hourly for almost everything.
In the past we had billed out at a higher rate for more experienced journeymen and a lower rate for more green journeymen. Then a few years ago we changed to 1 hourly rate for all 3 journeymen and a lower rate for the one trainee we have. We bill the same hourly rate to our largest general contractor as we do for our smallest brand new client.
The discussion now is to have price levels, 1 default rate for new clients and smaller clients, and 1 discounted rate for our largest clients (probably based on the last ~2 years of invoices). I use QuickBooks and it looks like the easiest to implement would be a discount (I'm thinking 10%) on the whole invoice which would include labor and materials.
How do you structure your pricing that you bill out in comparison to what I've described above?
Payable Employee Hours
In the same conversation, we're toying with the possibility of changing how we pay our guys. Maybe...
If we send them out to one or several jobs in a day, and they bust their butts and are done in 6 hrs rather than 8, then they're benefiting the customer but short changing themselves since they are paid by the hour.
I've wondered for a long time about the idea of converting to salary for our guys. Or recently I was wondering about paying in full day or half day increments. That way if they get done in 6 hrs they still get a full 8 hrs of pay.
We are in a competitive labor market (Seattle) so I'm always sensitive to making sure my guys feel like they are in a good spot and are LESS likely to look around for other opportunities.
How do you structure your employee compensation in comparison to what I've described above?
Thanks in advance for your input