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What is your time worth?

Started by hackberry jake, February 01, 2013, 02:07:23 PM

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hackberry jake

Everybody does hundreds of calculations a day, most don't have to be very accurate or numerical for that matter. But how much is my time worth comes up in quite a few of my calculations. Example: I need X amount of framing lumber. All the framing lumber i need comes to $XX.xx at the box store. I can fell trees, buck trees, skid logs, saw logs, stack lumber, and dispose of slabs for minimal monetary investment, but it takes a large time investment. So you need to know roughly what your time is worth. I set mine at around $10 an hr. I know this seems low, but it's cash money (pretend) that I don't pay income or sales tax on. In today's world, if you make $10 an hr, 30% gets taken of the top for income tax leaving you with $7. Then you buy something and theres a 10% sales tax leaving you with $6.30. After you pay for fuel to get to the store and back, you worked for an hr for about a gallon of milk. (just realized I'm blabbering) I set mine at $10 an hr. what do you set yours at?
https://www.facebook.com/TripleTreeWoodworks

EZ Boardwalk Jr. With 20hp Honda, 25' of track, and homemade setworks. 32x18 sawshed. 24x40 insulated shop. 30hp kubota with fel. 1978 Massey ferguson 230.

drobertson

Some folks really like to torture themselves, hack, you might be one of those, ;D but to be plane and simple I shoot for 20/hr, and this has been a good avg for awhile now, sometimes it goes to ten, and many times it goes to over 30, it reminds me of many of the posts asking how to charge for a job, by the hour or bdft'g  the most I have ever made on a job cutting bdft, is $84/hr. this was a sweet job, that lasted several weeks.  When considering going from being in the timber to finish on the saw, this is another ball game altogether,  I have quit keeping tabs on many jobs and price by circumstances involved, backwards thinking, but fair for all,
only have a few chain saws I'm not suppose to use, but will at times, one dog Dolly, pretty good dog, just not sure what for yet,  working on getting the gardening back in order, and kinda thinking on maybe a small bbq bizz,  thinking about it,

Jay C. White Cloud

Hi Jake,

I guess because of who and how I was mentored, I have never been able to think in hours that way.  At my age now and with my skill sets, when I do something that is nebulous, like consulting I charge between $65.00 and $75 per hour plus experiences.  My salary rate is $2500/week or $500/day, again no hours. Some days are long some are short. 

Most of my consideration is valuation and markets.  What is that per cubic meter or board foot, (even insulation is sold whole sale by the cubic meter or board foot.) They Plaster artisians do there "mud," as they call it by  square meter of square foot.  Dry laid stone masons charge material/equipment fees plus surface square footage or liner foot of laid stone.  It has always been by a metric of some unit produced.  When you are young you make less, as you gain experience you make more. 

It wasn't till after the industrial revolution, labor unions, and massive unskilled labor forces did we start to see more "hourly," considerations.  Professions that have a intangible elements like lawyers, (many of them charge by 15 minute increments,) tend to do things hourly, but not always. They have set fees for certain items like contracts, will, adoptions, etc.  Medical Doctors and Dentist even have unit metrics they use, not hours.

So, for me, it is seldom about hours, it's about units produce and there value. Time is a consideration, of course, but it seems to be looked at in a different context.

Regards,  jay



 
"To posses an open mind, is to hold a key to many doors, and the ability to created doors where there were none before."

"When it is all said and done, they will have said they did it themselves."-teams response under a good leader.

Cedarman

To be successful, one must do the most important thing possible at every available moment.  Available moment is what you define as time with which to devote to a money making activity. You might decide on 4,6,8, 12 or whatever hours per day to devote to work. When you devote time to work, you should be doing what is the most important thing possible at that moment.
Ask yourself, what would you be doing if you were not logging and sawing lumber?  Is there something more lucrative that you could be doing?
Figure the cost of going to town, figure 50 cents per mile as wear and tear, depreciation, fuel, oil etc for the vehicle.  This is what IRS allows or close to it. Cost of lumber including taxes.
How long did it take to make the trip?
If you weren't logging and sawing, would you be watching TV or chatting with friends? So whatever you make is a plus.
If you are in a high tax bracket, it might take $30.00 to leave $15.00 to pay for the lumber and travel costs when the lumber costs $10.00.   If it took 1 hour to harvest and saw the lumber, it is equivalent to working at a job that pays $30.00 per hour.  If you are in a low tax bracket, the pay back is not so much.
Play with the numbers , experiment, see what makes sense.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

beenthere

Quote65.00 and $75 per hour plus experiences

Was that a typo, or meant to be? ;)   ;D
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

rooster 58

     Think like a businessman and succeed, and make a decent living

     Think like a workingman, and struggle and starve 


     Which do you prefer?

     Ask yourself that when you decide what to charge ;)

Jay C. White Cloud

Hi Beenthere,

No I wasn't trying to be funny, but I'm told that I usually am.  :D  Most folks in the historical restoration field charge between $60 and $100 per hour plus expenses for consulting.  That is why a client will usually just hires me for the day, plus expenses.  They know that for $500.00 I will be there all day to look and answer their questions, then we usually have a meal and talk more.  If they contract me for the work, I wave the daily fee and only charge for expenses.  Some still want me by the hour, and don't care, but I give them the choice. I'm told I don't charge enough for what I do.

When I do guiding or wilderness education work, it is very similar.

Regards,  jay
"To posses an open mind, is to hold a key to many doors, and the ability to created doors where there were none before."

"When it is all said and done, they will have said they did it themselves."-teams response under a good leader.

florida

For most of my life I've listened to people talk about what they did or are going to do in their "spare time." So how can you or I put a value on our "spare time?"

Your boss calls and wants you to come in Saturday night and work 8 hours when you would normally be spending "free time" lying on the sofa watching reruns and eating Fritos.

Will you work those hours for free?

Will you work those hours for your regular hourly wage?

How about time and a half?

Double time?

Unless you  chose option one or two we can quickly see that the value you place on your "spare time" is not free or cheap. Remember that when you're calculating how much doing a job in your  "spare time" will save.
General contractor and carpenter for 50 years.
Retired now!

Kingcha

Jake I think the same way as in money you do not have to spend by doing the work yourself is a pretax saving.

I value my time as to what I am doing.  There are many things I would happily do for $15-20 an hour.   In my next of the woods jobs do not pay that much for my skills.   To earn any reasonable pay I would have to go back into restaurant management.   I do not want to work 50+ hours a week.   Part-time work even with my experiences I would be lucky to find something for near $12. 

So I have to say I value my time too much to work full-time or part-time for someone else.    If I am doing something for myself my time is worth $10-$15 an hour.
a Wood-mizer LT15 10hp Electric, 45hp Kioti tractor, electric smoker, wood-fired brick oven & yes a custom built Solar Kiln

WIwoodworker

I don't calculate the worth of my time in dollars. I calculate it in time. There are things I have to do and there are things I want to do. The more time I can do what I want to do the happier I am.






Peterson 9" WPF

Delawhere Jack

Quote from: hackberry jake on February 01, 2013, 02:07:23 PM
I set mine at around $10 an hr. I know this seems low, but it's cash money (pretend) that I don't pay income or sales tax on.

It really is "pretend" money that we deal in everyday, dontcha know... :o



 

Something tells me this is not a coincidence........

drobertson

This is the beauty of our great country, supply and demand.  I believe if someone has a supply, and the need is in demand, then it can cost what ever the demand is willing to pay. sometimes, quite often, with a very satisfied result, other times the demand is met with resentment and bitterness.  Much like what we pay everyday for our fuel cost and grocery cost, but we still pay, (demand)  As far as specialized crafts or technical support or advice, it is worth what ever, in my opionion, what one feels willing to pay.  Many are satisfied, and many will never be.  david
only have a few chain saws I'm not suppose to use, but will at times, one dog Dolly, pretty good dog, just not sure what for yet,  working on getting the gardening back in order, and kinda thinking on maybe a small bbq bizz,  thinking about it,

zombie woods

Trouble is convinceing the guy on the other end .
The most valuable peice of advice (that I never really heeded )was laid on me by uncle when I was about 19
" If you and making money while you are sleeping you ant making money "
Now I get it , too late to start over
so I just keep telling it to my kid .


saxon0364

This is interesting.   But hard to figure.  If you have a "day job", that pays the bills and you don't have to have side work you can wait for the jobs that pay pretty well.   You don't have to take work just to make the bills.
    On the other hand, if your a farmer, or a logger, (I'm a logger but farm on as well) you cant even begin to look at hours.    If I'm logging, or plowing, making hay, whatever, and everything is running, I'm doing good.  When a machine breaks down and you spend 10 hours lying on your back in the mud and snow, then another pile of hours running for parts, the hourly rate you were getting while actually moving logs or whatever begins to drop, real fast.     Its the nature of the game. 
     For me, its a way of life. Hours mean nothing, its what I love to do.    As long as I can feed my family Ill keep doing it.   Ill never be rich, never have a pension, never go on vacation, never stop working till my body quits on me, same as my dad and his before.   
    As long as there's work and the banks not calling that's all I need. 
One more thing Ill say is Ive never dreaded my work day like some with "regular jobs" do.   I get up every morning excited to get it done.   I'm almost 50 and Ive got my self respect and my freedom to make my own decisions.       Thats worth more than money to me.
Nothing wrong with quiet.

drobertson

Amen, saxon, I really wanted to say what you just did,  it is a way of life, nothing more can be said. We do what we must and live with it with as much joy as we can, keeping as much peace as possible in the process.  david
only have a few chain saws I'm not suppose to use, but will at times, one dog Dolly, pretty good dog, just not sure what for yet,  working on getting the gardening back in order, and kinda thinking on maybe a small bbq bizz,  thinking about it,

m wood

Hi jake, to me it depends completely on doing what you enjoy, vs. not happy with your job/paid hours.  i may sound jaded at the moment cuz i just received my pink slip...got 2 months left...at a job i took a significant pay cut for, with better chances of advancement...outperformed everyone by a sizable margin...promised the sky...9 years with company and 2 years at new post...210% production increase during my floor supervision tenure...BUT due to a lost contract, and my 2 years in department i am last man in and first out, (and seniority will only be considered within specific dept).  Bright side(and this sounds sad) is my family has adjusted to lower pay and modest lifestyle so finding something to match our current needs shouldnt be so hard. DanG! 

Jay C White Cloud, I had a family law professional with 6 minute incriments on her clock when she picked up the phone with a client.  I also feel that at my age and with my skillset(s), I should be able to charge consultation fees of 75.00-90.00 per hour.  Problem is, I guess I fall into tooo many categories, jack of all, master of none.  Trucker, equipment operator, builder, painter, plumber, electrician, teacher.  I'd do any of it for between 15 and 20 per hour and feel grateful for the chance. (except over-the-road, never again).  I squeek out my land taxes to NY every year without complaint because I have never been happier than when I am out in my woodlot.  I may be willing to say 10 per hour and give 10 to 12 hours each day, many days on end, if it were all done out there in the company of my wife and kids who love "the land" as much as I do.  But then I'd like to think that her time spent was able to capture an aditional 10/hr. and my young teenager when working the woodlot should be capable of close to that too...so, between 20 and 30 per hour if we were all together would be a priceless scenario.  BUT bills still gotta be paid, and we still gotta eat and stay warm, so priceless comes with a pricetag.

Thanks Jake, for the chance to vent.
I am Mark
80 acre woodlot lots of hard and soft
modified nissan 4x4/welding rig
4x4 dodge plow truck
cat 931b track loader
Norwood mark IV
4' peavy
6' peavy
stihl 034
"her" wildthing limber saw
ALL the rustic furniture  woodworking stuff
check out FB

Jay C. White Cloud

I have been reading along with everyone else but M Wood, moved me.  I'm so sorry to hear about your pink slip.  I don't think this is the place for all I'm think'n, but I will say this, I can't stand most business models, I don't like union.  I wish there still were real apprenticeships with Guilds and the loyalty that went with them.  I joined a group of timber wrights a few years back, and the first thing I did for the "head honcho," is fire all "His people," as he put it.  Then said to them as  a group, you want to work, come back and work, but as your own boss.  The owner wasn't none to pleased but he wanted what I had and was a friend.  If more businesses realized that they don't really exist without the folks at the bottom, I don't think we would be in the "pickle we are, as a country. 

It's funny, M. Wood get's "pinked out," because the upper echelon of a company looses some contracts, but when a CFO looses billions for bad banking or selling weapons to the wrong side, or looses  contracts, he leaves with a 120 million dollar severance package, happens every day.  I love the work I do. I also love that it's gonna cost a hell of a lot to get me to do it for some folks. 

I have meet some wealthy folks, in my different careers, that are the absolute salt of the earth, and others that think paying your for services rendered is some how a personal affront to them.  Funny most of the time they are either bankers, investors, politicians or trust fund types, and it's o.k for them to make $40/minute of every day in a year, but about have a stroke when I tell them their 5th house in Colorado's Ski country is going to cost a minimum of $500/square foot to turn key.  Yet I can work for an estate house in Greenwich, Ct for 6 years, meeting there gate keeper/handy man for tea and cookies when I get my check, and he is covered in dirt, has been splitting wood all after noon, and would like company for dinner, because his grand kids are away.  Come to find out, he owned the whole "shebang," and moved to the gate house when his wife passed away...to say he was the salt of the earth wouldn't even scratch it...I miss him.

Point is charge what you think what you are doing is worth, and if you have a chance to help someone the needs help, you should, no matter who they are.  Be at peace in your skill or craft, and Jake don't worry about the hours, look to your craft and your joy in it, the rest will sort it's self out as you learn.

My turn to apologize for venting.

"To posses an open mind, is to hold a key to many doors, and the ability to created doors where there were none before."

"When it is all said and done, they will have said they did it themselves."-teams response under a good leader.

Magicman

There are many of us that have been "pinked out".  I was "downsized" at age 51.  I am just saying that there are opportunities there, doors that can be opened, and ways to make a living.  Niche markets can be elusive, but they are there.  Sometimes they can be found when you are not actually looking for them.  I did.   :)
Knothole Sawmill, LLC     '98 Wood-Mizer LT40SuperHydraulic   WM Million BF Club Member   WM Pro Sawyer Network

It's Weird being the Same Age as Old People

Never allow your "need" to make money to exceed your "desire" to provide quality service.....The Magicman

Kingcha

With time I think most will get over being Pink slipped.   Its been almost 30 years since I was shown the door.  Today that still stands as my favorite job I have ever had.  But that's all it was, a job.   Within 2 years I was in business for myself.   It was the best thing that ever happened to me though I did not feel that way at first.

Today I control what I do with my time.   
a Wood-mizer LT15 10hp Electric, 45hp Kioti tractor, electric smoker, wood-fired brick oven & yes a custom built Solar Kiln

m wood

Thanks MM, your stories, knowledge base and, dare I say, humility, has impressed me over these past few months.  I surely mean no offense and simply say that you obviously come here  to share your experiences for the betterment of others...and to have a good time sharing.  Kingcha, this was a shocker, but by no means a TOTAL life changing event.  We are smiling again already.

Jake, as you can imagine, there are many a calculations happening under my roof these next few days.  But with my wifes nervous tendencies she still admires my ability to smile in the face of adversity.  I am the eternal optimist and I bring her calm...we fit well, she keeps me on my toes and keep her focused on the "glass half full".  She was told on the same day last week that her job was nearing an end, quickly.  We were stunned all of Wed and Thurs but gettin it together by Friday morn. 

I am prone to run on and on in explaining my position ( the high school teacher in me), my kids tend to tune me out on the 3rd anecdotal evidence to a question they ask of me...my wife just smiles and hints "that I'm doing it again".  I am learing to not be offended by it, and I am still learing every day how to better interact with others.

We are convinced that a sawmill is still a requirement, as the woodlot offers free raw materials and extra income,  just that now it is a slightly bigger gamble(so to speak).  Niche markets are still present in our general vicinity if I enlist some added value by building with the lumber.  Mr. White Cloud (and others) have touched on the point to not sell yourself short on your own worthiness and ability.  There in lies the rub (and what Jakes OP was about); charge for your talent what you and your end product is really worth, and what the market will bear.  Research and gleaning knowledge will surely help keep our heads above water(oh yeah, lets not forget HARD WORK).
:) :D ;D
Thanks guys

PS,  PMs would be welcomed, Your all the greatest and fairest resource I have seen on the www.  Suggestions and how-tos are awesome, and will be reciprocated when possible   
I am Mark
80 acre woodlot lots of hard and soft
modified nissan 4x4/welding rig
4x4 dodge plow truck
cat 931b track loader
Norwood mark IV
4' peavy
6' peavy
stihl 034
"her" wildthing limber saw
ALL the rustic furniture  woodworking stuff
check out FB

mesquite buckeye

Here is one more guy run out the door at age 60, after 21 years of service to the organization. Thank heaven for that what used to be a part time and fun sawmill.  :(

Thanks all, for your thoughts about things like this. Nice to know I'm not the only one.
Manage 80 acre tree farm in central Missouri and Mesquite timber and about a gozillion saguaros in Arizona.

rmack

One thing for certain... If you let other people decide what your time is worth, they will.

If you learn a high demand skill, even if it is vocational, you can make a pretty good dollar. If you use that $ to subsidize the things you enjoy, you can have a lot of fun. :)
the foundation for a successful life is being able to recognize what to least expect the most... (anonymous)

Welder Bob
2012 LT40HDSD35 Yanmar Diesel Triple
1972 Patrick AR-5
Massey Ferguson GC2410TLB Diesel Triple
Belsaw Boat Anchor

Kingcha

Glad to hear you are still smiling  M Wood.   Sometimes that's all you can do about things.   I have learned life is a gamble, you can only do what you think is right as we do not control the out come.   
As a poker player I have learned you can only make your best educated decision and get in GOOD.   

I have found this site very helpful as i am sure you have too.   I plan to order my mill within the next 2 months, I can't wait.
a Wood-mizer LT15 10hp Electric, 45hp Kioti tractor, electric smoker, wood-fired brick oven & yes a custom built Solar Kiln

Magicman

"Never allow your "need" to make money to exceed your "desire" to provide quality service."

The above is in my signature and I take it very seriously.  Learn your sawmill and learn to produce a quality product.  "Practice" on  your own logs and make your initial mistakes there. (and there will be mistakes)

Just because you may have an expensive sawmill, work hard, and need an income, does not mean that you can justify charging a customer for less than a quality product or lower productivity.  Your customer has a right to expect both quality and quantity for his $$$.
Knothole Sawmill, LLC     '98 Wood-Mizer LT40SuperHydraulic   WM Million BF Club Member   WM Pro Sawyer Network

It's Weird being the Same Age as Old People

Never allow your "need" to make money to exceed your "desire" to provide quality service.....The Magicman

1woodguy

   a good thread!
I enjoy seeing how others think lots of great viewpoints!

Experience is a rough teacher first you get the test later comes the lesson!

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