so whats your point the price was set ahead of time the customer got his problem fixed if they are unhappy then they can call someone else next time.
If they pay you $500/hour, I'm sure they will.
so whats your point the price was set ahead of time the customer got his problem fixed if they are unhappy then they can call someone else next time.
The next service call has nothing to do with the first call, flat rate pricing for service requires a good pricing book, built from years of actuals records, of service work, and knowing how to assemble the service billing, for every condition, for example: a troubleshoot for an outlet with no power would go be quoted first for the troubleshoot, then once the problem is found, a second quote for the repair would be presented, no unknown for you and no unknown for the customer. Flat rate pricing is a process, not guess work.If done correctly yes. Remeber flat rate is based on the next service call at 250.00 being done in 30 minutes.
If they pay you $500/hour, I'm sure they will.
The next service call has nothing to do with the first call, flat rate pricing for service requires a good pricing book, built from years of actuals records, of service work, and knowing how to assemble the service billing, for every condition, for example: a troubleshoot for an outlet with no power would go be quoted first for the troubleshoot, then once the problem is found, a second quote for the repair would be presented, no unknown for you and no unknown for the customer. Flat rate pricing is a process, not guess work.
I know it was an over simplification of a more complicated process.
Yes it is, and we have been thru this many times, and what happens is someone reacts with you can't tell how many hours it will take, to troubleshoot, we have actual records for just about every troubleshoot condition, but so many of the guys that question it, will not spend the time to learn the proper process to make it work, they will not spend the money on good estimating systems or pricing books, and just say it will not work, we have been using flat rate, and contract pricing for over 30 years plus, and it has worked well for us.
This is why Time & Material, with the not to exceed price of the original amount is good. You always make money on T&M right ? And you plan on making money on the original price. So do it T&M with the 1/3 down and weekly billing. May want to mark this option up since your tracking the job more than you usually would.
I just describe that as a troubleshoot, where I'll either fix the problem as I find it, or explain what is required if not. $150 gets me there and covers the first hour. I've always found the problem in less than half of that.... for example: a troubleshoot for an outlet with no power would go be quoted first for the troubleshoot, then once the problem is found, a second quote for the repair would be presented, no unknown for you and no unknown for the customer.
You're kidding, right? On a job this small you'll spend more time in dealing with paperwork and invoicing so there goes your profit.
Any job I do under say $2k is 50% down, balance on completion. Others get 50% down, NET 10 or 30 depending on the customer. Well established customers get NET terms with no down.
It is the difference between thinking like a Technician and thinking like a business man.When you underbid your competitor by a thousand dollars do you think about the 999.00 you left on the table?If I am just paying the bills I am in big trouble.If I am clocking the same hours this year as I did last year and I have less income then I would say I am loosing money.
I just describe that as a troubleshoot, where I'll either fix the problem as I find it, or explain what is required if not. $150 gets me there and covers the first hour. I've always found the problem in less than half of that.
Granted, $150 isn't $250, but I don't get into the "But, you didn't fix it!" argument if I find it's going to take more time and/or materials than expected, and it's easier to swallow for a frantic customer on the phone.
No that is faulty reasoning. You can not lose money you never had. Ok try presenting all of your lost bids or your underbid jobs(you made money just not as much as you couda,wouda if you had bid higher) to the IRS as a loss. You can't pay a CPA to make that argument for you. Bid the job to make money. If you get the job go with it. If you consider money that you did not bid as lost you are lying to yourself. If it ain't ever been in your pocket you did not lose it. You failed to aquire it,not the same thing. I didn't win the Lottery but I did not lose 50 million dollars.
try presentting a non payment to the IRS as a loss.You can not lose money you never had
Simple question if I hire you at 100.00 /hr you do an hours work and then I don't pay have you lost $100.00? Acording to your reasoning you haven't. try presentting a non payment to the IRS as a loss.
No that is faulty reasoning. You can not lose money you never had. Ok try presenting all of your lost bids or your underbid jobs(you made money just not as much as you couda,wouda if you had bid higher) to the IRS as a loss. You can't pay a CPA to make that argument for you. Bid the job to make money. If you get the job go with it. If you consider money that you did not bid as lost you are lying to yourself. If it ain't ever been in your pocket you did not lose it. You failed to aquire it,not the same thing. I didn't win the Lottery but I did not lose 50 million dollars.
Simple question if I hire you at 100.00 /hr you do an hours work and then I don't pay have you lost $100.00? Acording to your reasoning you haven't. try presentting a non payment to the IRS as a loss.
This is a customer who potentially will give me more work..
I'm not saying I never do it, but in general T&M with a cap sounds like the worst of both T&M and contracting. Perhaps there's more to it that I don't understand.If they would like to give you a try, maybe offer at T&M with not to exceed, that way if it only takes one hours you both win?
I'm not saying I never do it, but in general T&M with a cap sounds like the worst of both T&M and contracting. Perhaps there's more to it that I don't understand.
In general I'm willing to contract a job and lose (usually time rather than money) if I'm wrong, or work T&M and do whatever the customer wants, no problem with changes or adds or other trades causing me unnessacary exta manhours. I often tell the customer that if he's not sastisfied at any point, just pay me to date and we can part as friends.