Your billable time will probably be very low at the start of your business, as you struggle to get clients. Hopefully the business will pick up and you will arrive at the happy state in which you are working on client paid projects most of your time. You should use this future percentage of billable time to establish your pricing, and at this stage you will have to estimate it. It would be great if your billable time was four out of five days a week, but in all likelihood it will be less.
Company time will be high at first as you sort out your administration procedures and generally get organized. You will also have to devote considerable time to promoting yourself to clients. Even initial marketing visits to potential clients cannot be billed, and so it must be counted as company time. In the first year you can count on spending a lot of your time and effort on company time, but it should reduce as your business gets going. Again, it is the company time you spend later on that you should use in your pricing calculations.
Example
As Mr. A was setting up his Internet research business, he visualized what he thought would be his future time allotments. He did his estimates for the three categories of time as follows:
Personal time:
He allowed for three weeks holiday each year, or 15 working days. He would also take off statutory holiday Mondays, Christmas, New Years, etc. These would total about 10 days a year. He estimated he would have to take off 10 sick days on average during the year. His total personal time for the year would be 35 days.
Company time:
He figured he would have to spend about one day a week promoting his business to get clients. In a 52-week year this would be 52 days. He also allowed a half day per week for administrative activities, or 26 days a year. Thus the total company time would be 78 days annually.
Billable time:
The maximum amount of billable time he could have would be the time available in the year less the allowed personal time and company time. With five “working” days per week, and 52 weeks per year, the available days are 260 annually. Subtracting from this the 35 personal days and the 78 company days, the maximum billable days he could have was 147 annually.
5. Markup Factors
Once you have calculated a basic charge-out rate or price for your time, like all for-profit companies, you may want to mark it up to allow for other factors. Companies usually do markups on a percentage basis.
5.1 Specialization
If you are offering a highly specialized and useful service that will save the clients time and money, you may want to add something to the basic price you calculated because demand for your service will be high. This could vary from a few percentage points to 10 percent or more, depending on how specialized or salable you or your company is.
5.2 Competition
Competition can affect your pricing. If there is little or no competition, you could take a chance and mark up your rates. If there is competition, you may actually have to reduce your price in order to get contracts.
5.3 Client understanding of personnel costs
You will run across some clients who will be shocked at your price because they do not fully understand the price of labor. Others, particularly in the service industry, will mentally relate your hourly rate with their own charge-out rates. Their rates could be very high, such as lawyers, or engineering companies, so if your rates are a fraction of theirs, they will not quibble with you. You may want to mark up your rates slightly higher for these clients.
5.4 Profit
Since you are a for-profit company, you may want to add a small percentage to your calculated price or rate, for profit. For example, 10 percent or 15 percent is very reasonable.
6. Overall Pricing Approach
Having considered all of the previously mentioned pricing issues, you can now calculate an official price or charge-out rate for your services. You should work it out for an hour’s service, although sometimes clients may want you to quote to them on the basis of an eight-hour day. The best way to explain the overall pricing process is with the following example.
Example
Mr. A went through the process of establishing his price.
Overhead:
He totaled his annual house costs, which came to $34,268. Since he would use the spare bedroom in his seven-room home as an office, he calculated one seventh of the amount as his office “rental” cost. This came to $4,895. He then worked through the list of other overhead costs, using utility bills and the like to establish the costs. For some he just had to make an estimate of the annual cost. The cost of these other items came to $4,977. His total annual overhead would be (4,895 + 4,977) $9,872.
Salary expectation:
In his last job he was earning about $58,000 a year, plus company benefits. He added $12,000 for the company benefits, and so his salary expectation was $70,000 per year.
Time calculation:
Mr. A’s time calculations are in the example in Section 4. He had arrived at the maximum billable days per year of 147.
Basic price calculation:
With his total overhead of $9,872, and his salary expectation of $70,000, his basic annual company income would have to be $79,872. This equated to (79,872 ÷ 147) $543.35 per eight-hour day, or about $67.92 per hour.
Markup:
Mr. A did not think his specialty warranted any extra markup. He did not know of any competition in his area, so he decided not to add or subtract anything for it in the beginning. Client understanding markup would depend on the situations as he encountered them. However, he did decide on a small 10 percent profit markup, or about $6.79.
Final price:
When he added the 10 percent profit to the base price he had calculated, it came out to (6.79 + 67.92) $74.71 per hour. He decided that his price, or charge-out rate would be $75 per hour.
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