TubaTinker wrote:I don't mean to be argumentive here but I don't think anyone can show me very many repairman (working in a shop) making much over $20 and hour.
Dan, as you know, a fancy store-front has a lot of overhead that doesn't go into the compensation of the tech. Thus, the rate billed to the customer has to include the tech's pay and benefits, rent, unbilled employees (such as the cashier and the like), business costs (e.g., the accountant), and the owner's profit. And, lest we forget, taxes (social security taxes for the employee, corporate taxes, real-estate taxes, franchise taxes, local business taxes, use tax, and on and on). It is customary for the billed rate to go for much higher than the tech's pay, even when margins are thin.
And it isn't just the music biz. My billed rate is right at three times my pay, and that's on contracts that only pay an 8% fee (i.e., profit for the owners). The other two-thirds pays for all the support services required in the corporation to keep it going. It also pays for the time I spend chasing work, which I can't bill to my current clients.
The folks in your town are lucky to have a repair guy with such a low overhead, and the sole proprietor's ability to mix wages and profit.
Rick "who, as a stockholder, thinks his company pays too much, but who, as an employee, keeps forgetting to mention it" Denney