Ok, I am sorry to bring this up, but I am curious what you guys think about my pricing:
First let me give you some background info on myself:
I haven't done computer repair on the side in a few years, but I want to transition from my FT IT Security position to my own business - I want to focus on B2B services, but I need to start with residential fixes on the side to build to that point. I have 15 years in the IT industry, I am a+ certified, I have an associates degree in network administration, I have a bachelors in computer information technology, and I have work experience that ranges through desktop tech, team leader, network admin, and security analyst, all at large institutions.
Pricing:
I am in a major metropolitan area, and the last time I did side work (2 years ago) I was charging $80 per hour for onsite work. I am interested in doing in-house work (i don't have time to run to peoples houses) and when reviewing big box stores rates, I think $80/h is a good price, but it could even be bumped up to $100-120/h. I understand big box stores have a name brand they paid dearly for, which enables them to charge the prices they do. While I don't have the brand, I do have the experience and the education to back up making a good wage.
So I started to price the "little guys" that post on craigslist and such, and it seems like most of them are charging $25/h or maybe a $25-50 flat fee for everything but OS reinstallation.
I personally don't think that you can run a "successful & growing" business on $25/h for service. I am thinking about overhead, rent, employees - its just not going to cover the costs once I get to that level. And changing prices isn't something I think would go over well with current customers. Now, when I do work, most things don't take over an hour so the cost to the customer is usually $80-120 total. I am curious if these guys that charge $25 an hour, just tell people that it takes 4 hours to accomplish a task.
So am I crazy to want to charge $80/h for in house work? Am I REALLY CRAZY for thinking I should bump it up to $100-$120 an hour?
Any advice you may have, or thoughts you'd like to share would be appreciated.
Lumien
First let me give you some background info on myself:
I haven't done computer repair on the side in a few years, but I want to transition from my FT IT Security position to my own business - I want to focus on B2B services, but I need to start with residential fixes on the side to build to that point. I have 15 years in the IT industry, I am a+ certified, I have an associates degree in network administration, I have a bachelors in computer information technology, and I have work experience that ranges through desktop tech, team leader, network admin, and security analyst, all at large institutions.
Pricing:
I am in a major metropolitan area, and the last time I did side work (2 years ago) I was charging $80 per hour for onsite work. I am interested in doing in-house work (i don't have time to run to peoples houses) and when reviewing big box stores rates, I think $80/h is a good price, but it could even be bumped up to $100-120/h. I understand big box stores have a name brand they paid dearly for, which enables them to charge the prices they do. While I don't have the brand, I do have the experience and the education to back up making a good wage.
So I started to price the "little guys" that post on craigslist and such, and it seems like most of them are charging $25/h or maybe a $25-50 flat fee for everything but OS reinstallation.
I personally don't think that you can run a "successful & growing" business on $25/h for service. I am thinking about overhead, rent, employees - its just not going to cover the costs once I get to that level. And changing prices isn't something I think would go over well with current customers. Now, when I do work, most things don't take over an hour so the cost to the customer is usually $80-120 total. I am curious if these guys that charge $25 an hour, just tell people that it takes 4 hours to accomplish a task.
So am I crazy to want to charge $80/h for in house work? Am I REALLY CRAZY for thinking I should bump it up to $100-$120 an hour?
Any advice you may have, or thoughts you'd like to share would be appreciated.
Lumien