scoutabout
None
These threads are always funny. "Cheap" Utahns and other factors being blamed for poor business skills.
These threads are always funny. "Cheap" Utahns and other factors being blamed for poor business skills.
I don't know what's cheap about going to an off-road shop. What do they charge, 100$ an hour? How about charging 10$ to put a single bend in a piece of pipe, not bad for 2 min work. Plus the piss poor quality work some of them put out over time is embarrassing. Not to mention work left undone that was paid for...must i go on. If a shop goes out of business, than at least admit that some of it is due to dishonesty and poor work ethic.
No offense, but this is the business sense that puts shops out of business. Poor management is the reason for the vast majority of small business failures.
People think "$10 per bend--that takes 2 minutes! I can make tons of money doing this"
They neglect to account for the fixed and variable costs associated with operating a business and owning the equipment necessary to do that kind of work. Sure, $20 for 5 minutes work is great. But the equipment wasn't free, and the cost of your facility, insurance, taxes, wages, utilities, advertising, etc all have to be accounted for too. Either your labor or your equipment has to be burdened with that cost. If you're just looking at it as $10 for 2 minutes work, then you're doing it wrong.
There is also value in the knowledge and experience a specific individual brings to the table--but there are plenty of individuals who's knowledge and experience wasn't worth anything too
There are some people that may take offense to this, and for that I apologize. But there are a lot of blue collar industries out there where the labor sees what management is charging for their services and thinks they can go out on their own and make a killing. Fabrication, electrical, contracting, plumbing, printing.....you name it. Skilled labor is skilled labor, but skilled labor that starts it's own business very often finds out that it was far better suited to being a skilled laborer than a successful business owner.
This also applies to hobbyists who start their own business because they think it would be cool and they are knowledgeable about it, and not because it's necessarily a viable business with a market to support it.
No offense, but this is the business sense that puts shops out of business. Poor management is the reason for the vast majority of small business failures.
People think "$10 per bend--that takes 2 minutes! I can make tons of money doing this"
They neglect to account for the fixed and variable costs associated with operating a business and owning the equipment necessary to do that kind of work. Sure, $20 for 5 minutes work is great. But the equipment wasn't free, and the cost of your facility, insurance, taxes, wages, utilities, advertising, etc all have to be accounted for too. Either your labor or your equipment has to be burdened with that cost. If you're just looking at it as $10 for 2 minutes work, then you're doing it wrong.
There is also value in the knowledge and experience a specific individual brings to the table--but there are plenty of individuals who's knowledge and experience wasn't worth anything too
There are some people that may take offense to this, and for that I apologize. But there are a lot of blue collar industries out there where the labor sees what management is charging for their services and thinks they can go out on their own and make a killing. Fabrication, electrical, contracting, plumbing, printing.....you name it. Skilled labor is skilled labor, but skilled labor that starts it's own business very often finds out that it was far better suited to being a skilled laborer than a successful business owner.
This also applies to hobbyists who start their own business because they think it would be cool and they are knowledgeable about it, and not because it's necessarily a viable business with a market to support it.
Wow, I agree with everything you have said! I own a small business. Others think I'm getting filthy rich from it. They only see what comes in each month. Not overhead- insurance, taxes and on and on!
I'll tell you this, I miss the old days wheelin with Vandall...and Lee Mattingly for that matter.
I remember on Upper Proving Grounds one time..
Vandall: Hit it harder!
me: I don't want to break again
V: If you break, I'll fix it
me: full throttle--boom!
V: Awesome!
and he did fix it lol. Sheared both stub shafts at the same time right at the flange.
I believe it was this day...
A man owned a small ranch in New Mexico. The New Mexico Wage & Hour Dept claimed he was not paying proper wages to his help and sent an agent out to interview him.
"I need a list of your employees and how much you pay them," demanded the agent.
"Well," replied the rancher, "There's my ranch hand who's been with me for 3 years. I pay him $600 a week plus free room and board. The cook has been here for 18 months, and I pay her $500 per week plus free room and board. Then there's the half-wit who works about 18 hours every day and does about 90% of all the work around here. He makes about $10 per week, pays his own room and board and I buy him a bottle of bourbon every Saturday night."
"That's the guy I want to talk to, the half-wit," says the agent.
"That would be me," replied the rancher.
A man owned a small ranch in New Mexico. The New Mexico Wage & Hour Dept claimed he was not paying proper wages to his help and sent an agent out to interview him.
"I need a list of your employees and how much you pay them," demanded the agent.
"Well," replied the rancher, "There's my ranch hand who's been with me for 3 years. I pay him $600 a week plus free room and board. The cook has been here for 18 months, and I pay her $500 per week plus free room and board. Then there's the half-wit who works about 18 hours every day and does about 90% of all the work around here. He makes about $10 per week, pays his own room and board and I buy him a bottle of bourbon every Saturday night."
"That's the guy I want to talk to, the half-wit," says the agent.
"That would be me," replied the rancher.