One way to do it is to try and get some business from used car lots. Another friend of mine who works at a Toyota dealer does a lot of that. He fills in with repair work as well, but mostly does work for used lots. Often times, they put up the funds for the cars (auctions) and the parts, and he invests in the labor. When the vehicle is sold, they split the profits. I recall one night about a year ago he did 3 head gaskets (lift and swap only) on Cavaliers. He was up until about 3:am, but got'r done.
I rebuilt a transmission and did a rear main seal on a Ford F-150 and three weeks later I was handed a check for $650.00. That just barely covered the parts and I was told that we took a beating on that one. I thought well you take the good with the bad and did another about a month later, a rear end and radiator on a late 90's Mustang that he picked up cheap. After a weeks worth of work and about $500.00 in parts I received a check for $400.00. I confronted the individual about it and again was told we took a beating. I ran into the new owner of the F-150 at the local parts store about two weeks later and asked how the transmission was working out for him. Come to find out the owner was never told about the transmission, (which I thought to be odd especially being a selling point about having a new transmission) and he told me he gave $1800.00 more for the vehicle than I was told. I confronted my so-called friend and he told me he got a couple vehicles mixed up, anyway no longer a friendship so be careful about splitting profits money makes poeple do and say things they may not otherwise do. .
Anybody run into having to take out self-employed health insurance for your family? This thread has got me thinking alot about trying to get enough clientelle that i can just work from home full time.
The biggest kicker im running into is insurance- my wife works but does not receive benifits, our entire family is on the dealership's health plan. ITs not cheap, and its very poor coverage so i cannot imagine independant coverage could be that much more?
Anybody run into having to take out self-employed health insurance for your family? This thread has got me thinking alot about trying to get enough clientelle that i can just work from home full time.
The biggest kicker im running into is insurance- my wife works but does not receive benifits, our entire family is on the dealership's health plan. ITs not cheap, and its very poor coverage so i cannot imagine independant coverage could be that much more?
Be careful, I found out a couple of weeks ago it can get ugly quick working in a residental zone.
Long story as short as possible: I tried to help out a needy neighbor with some simple but needed car repairs, she picked the car up and insisted on giving me some cash for the labor (not much as I was not going to charge but she insisted, said she would fell better if I took it).
My other neighbors, elderly couple managed to get a picture of her giving me money and turned it all over to the city and county. The called me in and let me know that I am being watched and informed me of all the violations and fines etc.. that will happen if I am "caught" again.
In reality if I had different neighbors this probably would never have happened. It did open my eyes to the fact that it can happen.
I definitley want to retire early - about 55-59 would be do-able - and I know I'll want to do something to keep busy and pay for my hobbies. I could either do some work in my shop or work PT in a parts shop or the like. If I did any work from my shop, I definitely would only do "high-end", no time-frame resto work. I'd put it out there up front - I do it right & it'll cost ya!!
You would have to deal with people who are willing to pay for the premium service. I mean, if you are going to work from home competing with some yahoo down the street doing pad slaps for $25 an axle, you'll go nuts just dealing with the calls and haggling. That would be a total waste of time in my humble opinion. QUOTE]
I Deal with that on the shop level ALL the time. New dive shop opened up doing $49 pad slaps with the cheapest pads on the planet. I refuse to do that with my name on the repair order. You try to explain the difference about pad quality, rotor machining, lubrication, etc, its like talking to a wall. They tuned you out when you said $125/axle for decent brake job.
Get the same thing with ******* chain stores selling what they call "tune-ups". Customer will get 6 spark plugs put in and they think they got a tune up. What about the cap and rotor? Wires? fuel filter? pcv?
I give estimate on a full tune up they already said no because for $20 less they can go to midas and get their "tune up"
Sorry for the thread jack, i know topic is not related. Had to vent when i read that statement because chain stores and rip off cut-corner jobs make me crazy
Sorry for the thread jack, i know topic is not related. Had to vent when i read that statement because chain stores and rip off cut-corner jobs make me crazy
Yeah but some of our own worst enemies are in house. I've seen some techs who flag 120 hours a week consistently simply because they sell but don't perform the services they sell. Most customers don't know if you really replaced all the brake fluid or just sucked out the m/c. To me, thats worst than the cheap *** midas(s) or the $49 pad slaps.
You would have to deal with people who are willing to pay for the premium service. I mean, if you are going to work from home competing with some yahoo down the street doing pad slaps for $25 an axle, you'll go nuts just dealing with the calls and haggling. That would be a total waste of time in my humble opinion. QUOTE]
I Deal with that on the shop level ALL the time. New dive shop opened up doing $49 pad slaps with the cheapest pads on the planet. I refuse to do that with my name on the repair order. You try to explain the difference about pad quality, rotor machining, lubrication, etc, its like talking to a wall. They tuned you out when you said $125/axle for decent brake job.
Get the same thing with ******* chain stores selling what they call "tune-ups". Customer will get 6 spark plugs put in and they think they got a tune up. What about the cap and rotor? Wires? fuel filter? pcv?
I give estimate on a full tune up they already said no because for $20 less they can go to midas and get their "tune up"
Sorry for the thread jack, i know topic is not related. Had to vent when i read that statement because chain stores and rip off cut-corner jobs make me crazy
I had similar problems years ago when I first started working on the side. The biggest problem I had was that people didn't think I should charge as much as the larger shops because I was just a small 'home' business. I reinforced to them that I don't charge what the other shops do because I do not have the overhead that they do, however, I made no excuses that I was not in it to do work for free. I also made it perfectly clear that ONLY the highest quality parts and supplies are used in my shop (as well as the highest level of workmanship). After word of mouth got out I really have not had any issues to speak of. I did a tune up on a guys boat a few years ago and he groaned a little about the price. I had rebuilt the carb and found it was not jetted correctly for our altitude plus noticed the timing was all over the place and rebuilt the distributor with new bushings and also fine tuned the timing and advance weights. After first trip out on the water with his family he called and told me it had never run that good. It seems people forget about the price long before the quality. He is one of my clients now that I work on everything he and his family owns. I don't try to compete with the other shops around on price like I used to because I feel the client gets a better job done at my shop than anywhere else they can go and I will not play the price war game. I try to prove that to the customer with each and every job. However, I am in a unique situation where I can lose or turn away the work I don't want to do because it is not my only source of income due to my full-time job. Currently I am trying to get more into the motorcycle/ATV and off-road (Jeeps and buggies) and that is its own little niche to tap into. Not as easy as I thought it would be. I am having to still do the daily driver repairs to fill in the gaps until I can build up the clientele in the off-road market but I am certain once a few of my jobs get out there and get seen it will be a whole different game. It is funny how much money people will spend on their toys but moan and groan about a brake job or tune-up on their vehicle that gets the wife and kids around safely everyday. I would much rather work on the toys than the daily drivers. Mike.
I too have been considering this for quite some time; not so much as a full time gig but the weekend stuff. The one thing that scares me was touched on in an earlier post, and would like to hear your opinions on this: what happens when you forget to tighten the (blank), the (blank) falls off and the customer crashes into a bus load of kids? Working at a dealership, the owner has the insurance for that (I assume!!) but what about the home based weekender? It certaintly isn't worth losing my house for.
I too have been considering this for quite some time; not so much as a full time gig but the weekend stuff. The one thing that scares me was touched on in an earlier post, and would like to hear your opinions on this: what happens when you forget to tighten the (blank), the (blank) falls off and the customer crashes into a bus load of kids? Working at a dealership, the owner has the insurance for that (I assume!!) but what about the home based weekender? It certaintly isn't worth losing my house for.
So i wonder if i just make my home business legit and say screw the city? dunno what happens if they find out? All my neighbors are cool and i work on their stuff (for money) so i dont worry about them.
Anybody ran into this? There has GOT to be a way to do this! Its my freaking house, garage, yard and driveway why do they have the right to tell me i cant fix cars?
Quite simply, you just dont let that happen. You will be screwed. If you dont feel comfortable enough to trust your workmanship, its best to shy away from doing work with your name on it directly.
I realize mistakes happen. Thats why even while im at work, every thing is double checked. EVERY vehicle i work on gets a "flashlight inspection" after my test drive and before i lock it and bring the keys in for the customer.
Shine under can, look for leaks, quick flashlight into wheels to check caliper bolts, i have even walked around and kicked tires to check for loose lugs. Has not failed me yet, have no had one comeback due to loose anything.
While i am doing this final walkaround, you wouldnt beleive how many sockets, wrenches, screwdrivers, etc i have found on wiper cowls and under dashboards that i almost lost.\
Shop environment can be very hectic, always best to double check work to ensure no mistakes.
I have kicked myself for taking on a side job where i broke something and had to pay for it (at work boss has to buy). Only happend once and cost me about $15 so good so far. These items can include plastic connectors, door panel trip peices, etc. jb weld is a lifesaver but sometimes you just gotta shell out cashola :-(
I like the idea of an LLC, but how is that done? Do you need a business license/tax ID number/whatever or is this something you can put under your name and address only?
Called the city today curious about the restrictions of a home-based business. Auto/Boat/motorcycle repair is a no-no in a residential single family homestead setting according to city code. Minnesota state law says you cant "spot-zone" and the lady at city hall seemed to think there was no way around it.
So i wonder if i just make my home business legit and say screw the city? dunno what happens if they find out? All my neighbors are cool and i work on their stuff (for money) so i dont worry about them.
Anybody ran into this? There has GOT to be a way to do this! Its my freaking house, garage, yard and driveway why do they have the right to tell me i cant fix cars?
There are limitations even if you operate under an LLC. It doesn't give you a license to be inept, if you catch my drift.
I guess it all depends on how lucky you feel.![]()
The one thing that scares me was touched on in an earlier post, and would like to hear your opinions on this: what happens when you forget to tighten the (blank), the (blank) falls off
Same folks that run into their doctor at Taco Bell and bug 'em for a free diag about the latest problem area. When you do stuff for $, you have to set some rules...
I don't mind at all that this thread got WAY off topic - as it appears many of you mechanical-types have much to disucss! And I'm learnign a lot about your trade too!
But just to know - what I'm talking about doing in my shop is "High-End Restorations" of classic cars. Many of you have seen my Challenger build on here. I've done many others. All show winners. I won't be doing brakes for drivers, but more like turning rust buckets into "as delivered". Just thought I'd clarify, so that when I said I'd only do top-end work and charge through the nose for it, I don't mind the type of customer that brings. Hell, I AM one of those types!
Like I said earlier, I put an ad online stating just that. Got lots of replies, lots of "estimates please" and the like and whitled it donw to 2 guys who want "full-meal-deals", "money-is-no-object" on cars they own. One is a 70 Road Runner and the other a 69 Elan.CArs I'd love to work on - espicially for $75 an hour!![]()
Anybody run into having to take out self-employed health insurance for your family? This thread has got me thinking alot about trying to get enough clientelle that i can just work from home full time.
The biggest kicker im running into is insurance- my wife works but does not receive benifits, our entire family is on the dealership's health plan. ITs not cheap, and its very poor coverage so i cannot imagine independant coverage could be that much more?
Sorry bout hijacking your thread there E-tek. I understand the type of work you do and have admired it from a far for quite some time now. I still think much of the information we've been discussing would still apply to your market as well. People with money to spend are still human beings unfortunately. When things are going well, you could get away with no liability insurance, no LLC or anything. I wish it was as simple as handing over cash for services provided. Granted you get to be more choosy on who's projects you decide to work on. Yet still, you can't predict the human element. Their 16 y/o kid takes dad's ride out for a spin, goes across the median and kills someone. The family might not blame you knowing full well it was their pot head kid's fault, but the other parties' attorney is foaming at the mouth and he is after everyone cause he wants a larger chunk of that 33.3% and he finds out somehow that you built the car and your net worth is what? Can you afford that kind of negative publicity? Even if the accusations are unfounded, you'd still have the expense of hiring an attorney to defend you against a civil law suit. I guess in that instance, it might make more sense to buy/ build/ and sell AS IS. I guess you can't let fear of that simply drive you insane and keep you locked up in the bomb shelter forever. I wonder if having some sort of contract drawn up that limits your legal responsibility would help. An attorney would be better able to answer that. By all means I say GO FOR IT.
There are limitations even if you operate under an LLC. It doesn't give you a license to be inept, if you catch my drift.
As far as forming an LLC, its pretty straight forward. You can google that online and find much of the information. Some companies like US legal forms offers a whole kit you can buy, print, fill out and mail. Or other kits where they charge a bit more for filing it for you. Check with your secretary of state's office. Its really not all that expensive, but that varies from state to state.
Many of these forms can be found for free, so if you do some digging, you can just download them, file & pay.
My L.L.C. was set up by a trusted law firm, cost me about $1000.
