. We might also do love jobs for family and close friends, but again this has to be limited.
They pay the normal rate too ....................
. We might also do love jobs for family and close friends, but again this has to be limited.
They pay the normal rate too ....................
Again you fail to address my points ................. its not just about the time on site doing the test .......... you have to get there, prepare , test, pack up and travel again ......
Your approach doesn't help - charging more than £35 for an hour sounds a lot .............. but its NOT a rip off - its not just about the time on site, you are providing expertise, tools, etc...... and if you are SE its not what you get in your pocket............
I will continue with my minimum charge of £50 for the first hour ........................ if you think its a rip off, then you are doing nothing more than contributing to the race to the bottom
Many years ago I tried doing work for less and concluded that it simply wasn't worth it. .......................
£50 less tax and NI = £31.00
Less direct overheads of insurances etc
Less indirect overheads of talking on phone, going to site, doing invoice, sending invoice ....
Then there is the fact that if you are Self Employed, you don't get paid for every hour you work .................. nor do you get paid for sick days, bank holidays, normal holidays, pensions, etc etc
Not around here!
You're not going to be surprised to hear I disagree with you 100%
I often do the small jobs on the way home, to suit me, I don't discount my time, nor my value!
Then there are jobs where parking is an issue ........................
Are you actually working as a spark? Self Employed? or Employed?
Yes, I am fully aware of the costs of running your own business, being self-employed, all of the overhead costs, needing to do everything yourself, and that some hours are "unpaid hours" etc. However, it is also a fact of life that some are more efficient than others at running their business. As such they will be able to undercut the less efficient operators whilst still covering their overheads and making a sufficient profit to ensure the debt collectors are not banging at their doors. And we must remember that the commercial and domestic sectors can vary considerably in their price structure, due to some companies being VAT registered whilst others are not. Running a good business and being a good electrician are two different skill-sets that not all self-employed have a good grasp of.
Going back to the initial comment that raise this point, it was about a labour only cost to test a single underground cable to a garage and I appreciate that you may be unable to test such a cable profitably for say £35, but that doesn’t mean that others cannot do so. As you say some customers have difficult access, or parking restrictions. It is also true that many do not and while some customers are not local others can be. It is not beyond the realms of feasibility that someone can establish a good successful business with a predominantly local customer base. As such the operating overheads are much lower than others specialising in more safety critical commercial or industrial applications that are further away.
To try and do a one size fits all price solution is a bit of a nonstarter, but this was relating to testing a three-core single phase supply to a domestic garage! (remove a couple of covers, isolate three conductors IR & continuity test. Tell customer your findings, simples!). In reality probably quicker and easier than replacing a ceiling light fitting. Now if there is a local electrician competent enough to do the work, it can easily be cost effective at less than £50. We are not talking about designing, installing, testing and certifying a new installation. Just checking the condition of one garage sub-main.
As a side thought consider just the pure labour aspect of £35 for 1 hour’s work and assume various levels of paid work per week and weeks per year of say; 24hours, 30hours or 40hours per week with either 40, 43 or 47 weeks per year.
For 24hours and 40weeks you will have turnover on your labour of £33,600. Or for 40 hours and 47week you turnover £65,800. Or somewhere in the middle 30hrs 43 weeks; £45,150. And that does not include any additional earnings from your mark-up on material costs for other 'real installation jobs'. Now in some parts of the country those figures could be a bit low for your cost of living, whereas in other parts an average £45,000+ turnover, just on your labour, with 9weeks unpaid per year and only 30 paid hours per week is a comfortable, (non-charitable), figure. And of course those who are more established with a larger customer base can find it easier to get more work per week and more weeks per year if they so wish.
Doc H.
At the end of the day none of us are right or wrong. We operate to the business model that suits our needs and expectations.
Sorry but just more senseless waffle....... and based on 8 years of experience, the hours for "paid" work doesn't equate to your numbers .............. you are ignoring the fact that its virtually impossible to line up work as you make out, so your calculations don't make sense.
I sometimes do a "small jobs" day - well planned and if I'm really lucky I can do 5 hours paid work for 5 people ............ but that's often more hassle than its worth, when you allow for the trips to wholesalers, the invoicing etc ................
So lets agree to disagree .............. especially as you won't let on whether you are working, where you are based ............................... and in exchange please stop setting the expectation below market rates .................... sure £35 may work in some areas, but not in others................... just peruse the Pimlico rates ...................
The problem comes when moderators on sites like this set expectations for Joe Public which can be totally unreasonable and if I had £1 for every time I hear "I read it on a website" ................ I would be well off.
This would have been avoided it the original statement had read something like "to get this submain properly tested should take no more than 1 hour and cost between £30 and £75 depending on where in the UK you are..............."
I think most sensible people would expect a 50 quid bill for an hours labour at least, try calling a plumber out if you have a burst pipe, you will be lucky to get away with less than 200 quid for them to stop the leak, in fact 50 quid is cheap IMO.
An awful lot of the UK is not major city centre based, and running costs for a business can be a lot lower, what may be unreasonable for one is perfectly reasonable for another.
Doc H.
. As we do not know where the OP (or yourself are for that matter) then my location is also irrelevant.
Again you have failed to answer my point - which as a moderator you DID indicate to the original thread that a test should cost a small amount - do you accept this was misleading?
But charges across the UK vary massively - which you consistently seem to want to ignore
At least Pro Dave had the decency to suggest he does agree.
Okay, try getting the customer to bring his garage SWA to YOU to test it.Doc H.
Try getting the garage to come & MOT your car on your driveway, then see what the cost is.
IMHO, that is a better comparison.
BOTH are performing the normal business model for the trade concerned and what they are set up for.Yes there is PD.
Doc made it.
Doc compared the spark going to the customers house and you taking your car to a garage for an mot, so there is a comparison.
more complex and expensive than having your car MOT'd?
Plenty of hero's have raced to the bottom, and the winners always end up losing out, de skilling the job is not the answer by charging cowboys rates, if your a professional time served Electrician and good at your job you will always get work by word of mouth, I kind of get your point, but you will never win the argument, quite simply with the greatest respect to you, cheap invoices do not pay bills in this industry.Is that a relevant example though? my comment in the original post was not talking about repairing anything, just a simple IR & Continuity test on a single cable. It certainly wouldn't take me an hour. As I mentioned earlier a more similar related comparison cost could be to an MOT test on your car. In this instance very few sensible people would expect to pay £50 for less than 1hours testing with specialist calibrated equipment by trained operatives, with overheads and running costs that are possibly greater than the average electrician with his/her van. I know I wouldn't pay £50.
Just to clarify again: I have been qualified and trading since well before all the Part-P and 5WW crews started appearing, (in fact since before the turn of the Millennium for that matter), and during that time it has been blatantly obvious that not all jobs fit exactly into 'full day units'. Whist some jobs may be weeks others are days others half days or Just the quick call in, or any combination thereof. Nowhere did I suggest that a business could survive on just doing single 1 hour jobs every day to make up full days or weeks, (or not). But reality shows that a small 1 hour visit can often be easily accommodated into part-days either to or from other work.
If a task is really easy, involves no materials and takes very little time and can be accommodated by a locally based electrician, but that electrician is going to charge £50 or £60, (assuming its not in the 'Pimlico' London area), is it any wonder that DIY'ers are increasingly looking to internet solutions? No different to the recent discussions about the fate of Maplin's, you can only sell cheap tat at over the odds prices for so long, before customers walk. Some electrical tasks are more complex and higher premium in value and should be charged accordingly, But others are so basic bread and butter they are like the cheap Chinese imports that Maplin overpriced. In my opinion a bit of discretion and common sense around your charges pays dividends in the long run.
Doc H
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