Hey Guys,
How do you guys handle bench labor? That is, computers dropped off to your shop? We are really trying to make a move into MSP, but currently about 50% of our business is residential customers
When we first opened, we started out at $60 per hour for bench work, and offered a free diagnostic to any computer dropped off. we take everything on a first come, first serve basis. And offer a "Rush" option (for a fee) if you need it back ASAP. We also offer to do a full backup of the system for $30 before we perform the diagnostic.
Basically when a comptuer comes in, we'll look at it and try to figure out how long it will take...we then call the customer, give the estimate, and get approval, if its declined we have no charges (unless they opted for the backup upon sign in) Once approved, we move the job into a Bench queue, which again, gets worked on first come first serve.
This worked for a while, but we found ourselves mostly billing 1 hour of labor for quicker jobs, 1.5 hours for some things and 2-3 hours for full OS reload and data migration. Even though in almost all of these cases, we'd spend much more time on the computer then what we billed... but the problem is you can't really bill 4-5 hours for a residential comptuer job.. with the exception of data recovery.
We got in some odd situations where we'd quote 2 hours... and then have something bad happen half way, or almost all the way through the job. Computer is just about ready to be finished... then it shuts down due to bad motherboard or power supply, or a few times.. I've had hard drives just die.. hasn't happened often, but its happened. Sometimes you have those cases when you can't fully remove a virus.. and you spend hours and hours trying.
Since we saw this pattern, we decided to change our pricing model to 3 flat rate "buckets". We now have "Basic" $59, "Advanced" $139 and "Critical" $199 repair rates.
Basic being any quick fixes, installing a Ram upgrade, swapping a power supply, removing or installing software etc.
Advanced being Virus Removal, Os Re installs without data migration
Critical was usually reserved for OS reloads with data migration, or in house Data recovery. As well as invasive laptop repairs (DC jack, screen replacement)
over the years as computers have become cheaper.. I find myself almost never billing critical labor anymore, as when I'd diagnosed a job as critical, it kept being declined.. meaning lost work.. so I'd rather get $139 for a job then $0 and no work
So at this point its almost as if I have 2 labor rates, $59 or $139... I don't necessarily want to get rid of our Free Diagnostic service, as I think its helpful for a customer to be able to find out what the problem is without cost. But I'm struggling to figure out what to do about this problem.
Should I go back to hourly billing? if so.. how do you guys estimate the hours spent on a job? what happens when you run into an unforseen problem that takes more time? Do you call for approval on more work? what happens if they decline the additional work, and you're left with a half finished job you can't bill for?
The other option I thought of is remaking the labor "buckets" having a 4th tier in the middle of the Basic and Advanced (so going basic $59, basic + $99, Advanced $139 and Critical $199 for data recovery or really difficult jobs)
At this point I'm open to any options or opinions..I still want to support home users while growing my MSP side of things, but as computers get cheaper i feel like my labor is becoming significantly devalued.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
How do you guys handle bench labor? That is, computers dropped off to your shop? We are really trying to make a move into MSP, but currently about 50% of our business is residential customers
When we first opened, we started out at $60 per hour for bench work, and offered a free diagnostic to any computer dropped off. we take everything on a first come, first serve basis. And offer a "Rush" option (for a fee) if you need it back ASAP. We also offer to do a full backup of the system for $30 before we perform the diagnostic.
Basically when a comptuer comes in, we'll look at it and try to figure out how long it will take...we then call the customer, give the estimate, and get approval, if its declined we have no charges (unless they opted for the backup upon sign in) Once approved, we move the job into a Bench queue, which again, gets worked on first come first serve.
This worked for a while, but we found ourselves mostly billing 1 hour of labor for quicker jobs, 1.5 hours for some things and 2-3 hours for full OS reload and data migration. Even though in almost all of these cases, we'd spend much more time on the computer then what we billed... but the problem is you can't really bill 4-5 hours for a residential comptuer job.. with the exception of data recovery.
We got in some odd situations where we'd quote 2 hours... and then have something bad happen half way, or almost all the way through the job. Computer is just about ready to be finished... then it shuts down due to bad motherboard or power supply, or a few times.. I've had hard drives just die.. hasn't happened often, but its happened. Sometimes you have those cases when you can't fully remove a virus.. and you spend hours and hours trying.
Since we saw this pattern, we decided to change our pricing model to 3 flat rate "buckets". We now have "Basic" $59, "Advanced" $139 and "Critical" $199 repair rates.
Basic being any quick fixes, installing a Ram upgrade, swapping a power supply, removing or installing software etc.
Advanced being Virus Removal, Os Re installs without data migration
Critical was usually reserved for OS reloads with data migration, or in house Data recovery. As well as invasive laptop repairs (DC jack, screen replacement)
over the years as computers have become cheaper.. I find myself almost never billing critical labor anymore, as when I'd diagnosed a job as critical, it kept being declined.. meaning lost work.. so I'd rather get $139 for a job then $0 and no work
So at this point its almost as if I have 2 labor rates, $59 or $139... I don't necessarily want to get rid of our Free Diagnostic service, as I think its helpful for a customer to be able to find out what the problem is without cost. But I'm struggling to figure out what to do about this problem.
Should I go back to hourly billing? if so.. how do you guys estimate the hours spent on a job? what happens when you run into an unforseen problem that takes more time? Do you call for approval on more work? what happens if they decline the additional work, and you're left with a half finished job you can't bill for?
The other option I thought of is remaking the labor "buckets" having a 4th tier in the middle of the Basic and Advanced (so going basic $59, basic + $99, Advanced $139 and Critical $199 for data recovery or really difficult jobs)
At this point I'm open to any options or opinions..I still want to support home users while growing my MSP side of things, but as computers get cheaper i feel like my labor is becoming significantly devalued.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!