i think, and this is my opinion of what satcom was referring to, is that the companies you work for and the 1-3 man shops out there are apples and oranges.
for the 1-3 man shops, T&M work is not much different than working for someone else hourly...except you don't necessarily get paid for all the hours you work.
Very rarely are their contracts in place for this type of work. And typically, the contractor will give a ballpark, or NTE, price and end up taking all the risk, while giving the customer all the reward. Since there typically is no contract, the T&M contractor is relying on the goodness of the customer to actually pay the total amount billed. An unscrupulous contractor knows that they can now haggle, successfully, with the contractor. You've already provided all your material and labor, without a contract. Most states make it illegal for you to remove what you have installed. You've now put yourself in the following position:
1) you probably charged a rate that is lower than what you really need or want
2) you don't have a signed contract
3) you've already done all the work
4) legally, you can't take anything back
5) you have 2 options, haggle with the customer, or go to court. If you go to court, see Item #2
So, if you proceed to do all of the above to yourself, I agree with Satcom, you are not a contractor.
You are a guy with a license and not a clue what to do with it...
for the 1-3 man shops, T&M work is not much different than working for someone else hourly...except you don't necessarily get paid for all the hours you work.
1) you probably charged a rate that is lower than what you really need or want
2) you don't have a signed contract
3) you've already done all the work
4) legally, you can't take anything back
5) you have 2 options, haggle with the customer, or go to court. If you go to court, see Item #2
So, if you proceed to do all of the above to yourself, I agree with Satcom, you are not a contractor.
You are a guy with a license and not a clue what to do with it...