White Haus
Not a Newbie
I'm wondering if you guys can help me out with something I've been struggling with for a while and I'm at a dead end.
We're having a close look at our expenses and overhead, and just wanting to make sure we're charging enough to cover our overhead and make enough profit. The previous thread about install rates was somewhat helpful but I'm more concerned about in-house labor and equipment rates than anything.
In the past we've worked around the "shoot from the hip" approach which seems to be common in our industry but I want to get some accurate numbers going.
Let's say, for example, our annual overhead (including all expenses/salaries etc. - everything but COGS) is $250,000.
Break that down to 49 working weeks a year x40 hours a week = 1960 working hours a year.
Annual overhead of $250,000 + 40% target profit goal = $350,000 / 1960 hours = $178.57 / hour.
(I came across this 40% profit idea in a couple of spots - not really sure how this compares when you factor in markup on COGS and other factors, but going with it for now)
So we know our "shop rate" should be $180ish an hour. Okay so that's good.
Now where I'm lost, is how does that "shop rate" factor in billable hours per person or piece of equipment? We can't just bill $180/hr on all our projects. Or can we?
There are some hours where no equipment or people are billing out, and there are times where we have 2 employees and 4-5 pieces of equipment running & billing out.
With some adjustments and exceptions, we bill out at roughly $90/hour per person, then $60ish/hour for printers and $95/hour for CNC. Some jobs will require 1 person and 1 piece of equipment, and some will require 2 people and 4 pieces of equipment.
Is it just a law of averages that needs to be applied here?
We quickly ran some numbers and figured out the average amount that we bill out per week (labor + machine time) and it came in a hair higher than what we would need to meet our "shop rate" goal of $180/hr.
Is that good enough? How closely do you guys monitor and adjust this in your shops?
My gut tells me that our rates are pretty close to where they need to be, and that I'm overthinking this, but I it also bugs me that it seems so complicated. We're also not really factoring depreciation on the equipment etc....but then again a majority of our equipment is paid off.
Thoughts? Comments? Suggestions? Insults?
Thanks in advance, I welcome and appreciate any thoughts on this. I know it's been discussed before but I couldn't find a final answer that helped me wrap my head around this.
We're having a close look at our expenses and overhead, and just wanting to make sure we're charging enough to cover our overhead and make enough profit. The previous thread about install rates was somewhat helpful but I'm more concerned about in-house labor and equipment rates than anything.
In the past we've worked around the "shoot from the hip" approach which seems to be common in our industry but I want to get some accurate numbers going.
Let's say, for example, our annual overhead (including all expenses/salaries etc. - everything but COGS) is $250,000.
Break that down to 49 working weeks a year x40 hours a week = 1960 working hours a year.
Annual overhead of $250,000 + 40% target profit goal = $350,000 / 1960 hours = $178.57 / hour.
(I came across this 40% profit idea in a couple of spots - not really sure how this compares when you factor in markup on COGS and other factors, but going with it for now)
So we know our "shop rate" should be $180ish an hour. Okay so that's good.
Now where I'm lost, is how does that "shop rate" factor in billable hours per person or piece of equipment? We can't just bill $180/hr on all our projects. Or can we?
There are some hours where no equipment or people are billing out, and there are times where we have 2 employees and 4-5 pieces of equipment running & billing out.
With some adjustments and exceptions, we bill out at roughly $90/hour per person, then $60ish/hour for printers and $95/hour for CNC. Some jobs will require 1 person and 1 piece of equipment, and some will require 2 people and 4 pieces of equipment.
Is it just a law of averages that needs to be applied here?
We quickly ran some numbers and figured out the average amount that we bill out per week (labor + machine time) and it came in a hair higher than what we would need to meet our "shop rate" goal of $180/hr.
Is that good enough? How closely do you guys monitor and adjust this in your shops?
My gut tells me that our rates are pretty close to where they need to be, and that I'm overthinking this, but I it also bugs me that it seems so complicated. We're also not really factoring depreciation on the equipment etc....but then again a majority of our equipment is paid off.
Thoughts? Comments? Suggestions? Insults?
Thanks in advance, I welcome and appreciate any thoughts on this. I know it's been discussed before but I couldn't find a final answer that helped me wrap my head around this.