
Imagine for a second that your trades business is a bucket with holes in it.
The only time you make money is when the bucket overflows, so the holes have to be small enough that the bucket can still fill and overflow.
The two biggest holes in most trades business will always be labour and materials. You’re never going to lose much money on your vans, tools or stock.
And, overheads are pretty low for the most part. You don’t have to pay expensive rent on a fancy office and most of your staff work on no-work, no-pay contracts.
The only real drain is collecting late payments and dealing with customers who never pay but then that’s the case with pretty much all small businesses and there’s always room to improve payment collection.
That’s why it’s so important to get labour and materials right.
A good rule of thumb is to have your Tradies working 40 hours per week. Plus lunch breaks, that’s around 42.5 hours spent at work.
Of those hours worked, you’d ideally want all the time to be charged out, but of course it’s not possible once you factor in meetings, training, and travel time.
Instead, aim to bill out 92% of your team’s hours.
Watch this webinar to learn how you can calculate your chargeable hours.
If you are struggling to keep your team on task or on-site, below are five tips for creating a more efficient labour force.
Take a look at the table above. It shows how much income your staff could be generating based on total hours worked and what % of those hours are billable.
You might be surprised to see that a Tradie working a 40-hour week at 92% billable hours is more profitable to you than another Tradie working a 32-hour week at 97% billable hours.
Before you agree to take on part-time tradies, work out the impact them not working a full 40 hours will have on your bottom line.
Most suppliers charge about the same amount of money for materials – no one is getting a better discount than you if you’re both in the same industry with the same buying power.
What you have to worry about is how you manage materials.
Just in Time Stock Control has been around for a long time. It’s the backbone of lean manufacturing.
Companies like Apple and Toyota use this system, so chances are – it works.
In a nutshell, Just in Time Stock Control is buying goods only when you need them. Sounds simple, right? But what does it mean in practice?
To get started, follow these four commandments:
It isn’t too hard to keep your trades business bucket overflowing once you have your labour and materials well under control.
Get those two variables right and you’ll start seeing major improvements to your bottom line.
Cash flow forecasting is tough, but it’s compounded by not being able to see which jobs you’re performing well on and which ones you aren’t. That’s where Fergus comes in.
See first hand how Fergus smart job management software for trades businesses can help you effectively manage your labour and material costs with a Free Trial!
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