Bombjockey9
Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2023
- Messages
- 8
How’s it goin’ everyone?! New welding biz owner (solo), and F/T Aerospace welder in Chandler, AZ. Millions of questions, as this journey is quite rough so far.
Excellent, I’m on it. ThanksReally important - work up a business plan and an intro letter to show potential lenders you have a viable business plan that will make money, including your potential customer base and your estimated potential income/expenses for the next 3 years. With that, you can approach lenders and have a better than average chance of pulling a line of credit.
I do aerospace welding right now but I’ve done commercial, artistic, heavy equipment etc. I’m versed in a lot of processes however I’m limited to my garage+driveway. renting a space is the only option here in town and not likely anytime soon solo.Thank you! These are many of the things running thru my head. “Gota spend money to make money” seems NOT to be the immediate route these days. Lots of avenues to study up on. Right now I am recently divorced with a son.
Be the most expensive guy in town but just be ready to perform accordingly. If you start out cheap you will attract cheap customers. As far as borrowing I would say don't do it except maybe financing a piece of equipment. Most equipment suppliers have some type of financing plan.
Find a cpa that is familiar with small businesses and talk to him. Pay for an hour of his time. He will be your most important employee.
I sounds like you are still also working full time. If so I would put every penny of profit from your business back into the business at first. If nothing else put it in the bank so you wont have to borrow.
Extremely good point. A good friend of mine left a big buck job at a large bank to go out on his own and offer same services as were being provided under contract to him at the bank. His business plan was instead of charging $400 an hour for some snot nosed brat with a brand new MBA but knew diddly squat about real world banking or business as the big companies were doing he would use "packaged out" people who already knew the exact job/department/market and he could make really good money charging them out around $250. His big mistake was being honest. He didn't realize anywhere near the level of graft the big consulting firms poured into the back door taking senior execs (who made the contract decisions) by chartered bizjet to foreigh 5 stars for "business meetings". My guess is about 1/4 of the gross revenue was being kicked back. When he reported those findings (with documented proof) to chief counsel of one bank (his largest customer) he was thanked profusely for pointing out these obviously non-policy conflicts (that were actually criminal) and never saw another nickel from them.When I started my consulting business back in the 90's, I was desperate for customers. I submitted a bid for some work, and when I made my followup call to the customer, the owner told me, "I liked the detail and organization of your quote, but at the hourly rate you are quoting, you cannot stay in business. I want to work with someone for the long term and you won't be around charging these low prices".
On every bid I did after that, I charged the same rate that all the big consulting firms changed. I didn't get every bid, but I got a bunch of them, and each one made me far more money than I would have otherwise. There is a temptation to charge low rates to get started. Avoid that. It is very hard to raise your rates once customers are used to paying a below market rate.
Best of luck to you.
Lee
Interesting. I’m working with what I have as you did, but the mobile route is extremely pricey. Gear, tools, licenses…it’s daunting.Pick what you are going to do and specialize in it. If you are working on residential or commercial properties be sure you have a contractors license. You can get one at Az Registrar of Contractors. Get yourself a good liability policy. Be sure to get your Transaction Privilege Tax number (TPT). Then get to work.
I am surprised you need a lot of equipment, I just started out using the welder and gear that I already had from doing it as a hobby, then upgraded as jobs required. I have never taken out a loan, or needed a line of credit.