Joe Diaz
New Member
Joe.......
He could very easily mean that, but that still doesn't make any sense to me. That is precisely why I originally wrote, I don't understand his reasoning.
I don't see the difference between......." It costs me $650/hr to have shop open" not "his cost is $650 an hour"
If between employees, insurance, lights, heat, loan payments, mortgage payments and whatever else is figured into that $650/hr.... his cost of operations is $650 an hour period in my book every hour. At the end of the day.... that boils down to $5,200 a day to operate or he needs to be billing out over $18,000 a day. Good... no great money, nothing to sneeze about.
Hence, the reason I asked for his explanation. I'm not nit-picking or putting him down or I wouldn't have put the example I mentioned. I honestly don't see the difference you mentioned or how if he needs a certain amount an hour.
Perhaps I'm really missing something here and need someone to boink me in the head.
It all has to do with means of production. So a larger shop may have more employees or better equipment allowing them to produce much more during a given hour, however those additional employees and equipment cost more too. So a larger shop might need to make more an hour to stay profitable, but in theory they could also charge the same amount as a smaller shop that can't produce as much in that same amount of time, yet also has lower overhead. That's why I say, until we know how large his shop is, you can't really say how much he needs to bill out per job.