Great, important info. Thanks. I also need to get my pricing down... what's everyone use for pricing?
Signcraft Pricing guide, and a copy of Estimate is about all I use. Often I'm tempted to just shoot a price, but It does make the customer feel a bit better when I start the program, and enter all the info, and it spits out a price.
As far as working out of the house, you will need some seperation (for tax reasons). I used a back room of my house a couple of years ago, and the distractions were unbelivable. The kids would come home, and crank up the tv full blast (if I was on the phone or not), go into the kitchen, fix a snack, and then leave and go upstairs... And the wife (if she was home) didn't think twice about asking me dumb questions, and would get pissed off if I didn't answer her becasue I was concentrating on artwork.
I was lucky enough to have a 2 car / 2 story garage where I used the upstairs to store junk. I worked for about 8 months and put up insulation, drywall, had a contractor come in and cut doors in to the wall (for storage behind it...gambrel style roof, so I have about 3' of space behind the wall), take out the inside steps, and build a deck and stairs on the outside, add some windows, and paint. Now I use the upstairs for my office / vinyl work area and the downstairs for material prep (plus the router is down there).
The advantage to having an outbuilding is it is easier to claim a tax write off for the space than a back room of your house. IRS claims they want a separate area to be used as a work only space, and a back room (that can be used as a tv room, storage room, or what ever) mayby won't work. With the outbuilding, it is easier to say that only work goes on there.
When that is all set up, you can claim a certain percentage of house hold expenses (electricity, water, sewer, etc) as business expenses. It all falls as how much business / living space you use. ( I personally have a 1600 sq ft living area and 1100 sq ft business area, so I can write off most of my expenses).
Another thing did do, was add a meter to my outbuilding. My shop/offices are fed by the main panel of the house, so I had the meter added in front of the breaker box that tells me of my exact power usage. Its for my own use, and the power company doesn't read it and charge me commercial rates for my business.