Start up costs

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Florida requires you have a minimum of $10K in the bank to start a contracting business. Having started one three years ago I would say a minimum of $30K is more reasonable. There are a lot of startup expenses.

Here's an expense to avoid: advertising. Most of it is a waste. Don't wrap your vehicle, nobody notices. Don't do newspaper ads or any other print. Print up business cards and join a BNI group (google it). You want your business to run on word of mouth advertising only.

I started with 10,000 and went through it fast. It would have been enough in better times, but I started in 2008 and shut down in 2013. I had some good profitable work but not nearly enough. Lots of small stuff that barely kept the wheels spinning. 30,000 may have kept me alive.

Dittoes on advertising. I did keep a yellow pages ad; that used to be a sign around here that you weren't fly by night. I should have gotten a simple website. I could have gotten one for about 500 but would have had to set it up myself. I didn't have the computer skills. Nearly everyone looks to the web now. I had a free listing in The Blue Book for awhile. I got lots of offers to bid but usually got them right at deadline. The rep said free listings got the offers no one else responded to and that a paid listing would get me 1st priority. I turned them down. 300 a month. It sounded fishy to me that no one else wanted fast food or retail projects when work was so hard to find. People I knew of all trades were taking work they hated, just to stay alive. I did buy a few ads in various directories but what I mostly got from those were more advertisers calling to sell me more ads.

I did sign my truck with simple magnetic signs on both sides and the back. I got enough calls from that to be worthwhile. I think the 3 signs cost me about 100. Do be careful though and remove the signs occasionally. I still have a few paint bubbles where I left one in place too long. I also bought 2 cardstand signs to put on my jobsites. They were about 25 each. I also had a small magnetic sign on my sawpole.

Good luck to you. It's tough out there.
 
If possible keep away from big purchases or lease/ finance instead of taking a big chunk of money out of cashflow. Early on I spent 30k on a nice work truck for my service tech. Would've been better to pay hundreds monthly rather than take 30k outta circulation.
It wouldn't have been such a problem if receivables were always up to date but more often than not; bigger jobs, smaller margins and later payments
 
a business plan, with all the numbers filled in.
https://ellenrohr.com/catalog/the-bare-bones-biz-plan/
don't even consider going out to seek fortune till you do this.

six months living expenses, in the bank. not in theory.

your largest customer is no more that 15% of your net income.
gross doesn't count. and if your gross is waaaaayyyy out of ratio
to your net income, your risk factor escalates.

how much money are you putting into a job for the yield?
that is your risk.

normal contracting, if your profit is 20%, you are doing awfully
well. that means to make $100k a year, you are going to roll
the dice with half a million, that anything can happen with.

my "bad" customers are my most valuable asset. i have to go
talk to more people and get more customers, so they aren't
two thirds of my business.

when my least desirable customer is 15% or less of my income,
i'm good. when they are 65% of my income, i'm screwed.

i'm blessed that i have generally excellent customers. that is
the result of a business plan, and some amazing luck.

no plan, is you take whatever washes up on shore.

i am probably more fortunate than i honestly deserve.
i took a look back thru receipts last week, i had my
first deadbeat loss.

it was $500, on almost $4M in receipts. that is stupid good.
ask on here about losses... the point is, how much can
you afford to lose, and not end up over a steam vent?

any losses come right out of that six months prudent reserve.

good luck, and have fun. remember, the devil isn't in the
details, the profit is.

I'll second that emotion.
 
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