Corps_Ag12 said:
Roger That said:
lead said:
Aggietaco said:
ABATTBQ11 said:
I'm in the wrong business
20% doesn't go that far.
Please enlighten me. How far does it have to go…what expenses does a GC have that I'm not aware of? Thanks
The GC expense is their time
Putting up with an endless amount of bull**** from the customer.
Putting up with subs halfassing their work and apologizing for them
Dealing with pandemic shortages and getting creative with the leftovers
…
…
This, plus office staff you're not billed for, fuel you're not billed for, trucks & maintenance you're not billed for, the office rent, etc. I can keep going if you'd like.
Now in commercial construction work, all of these items are part of what's called general conditions, which can be an agreed upon lump sum amount or a maximum budgeted price that the contractor bills against.
I can add...
Clothing/shoes/safety gear
Tool and vehicle maintenance/cleaning
Dealing with injuries/sickness
Purchasing...chasing down errors, doing returns, scouring the internet for specific things
Warranty work...hardly any job of size doesn't have some type of call-back...and may not be your fault?!
Employee issues
Needy or high maintenance customers (repeating this one from a previous post because it can be huge.)
It all adds up.
In a super-organized (probably larger) company, or maybe in certain fields of contracting, some of these may be minimized. Costs and profit levels may be monitored much more closely. It may be niche work that limits variety and you can focus on efficiency. Yes, there are some contractors who make lots of money....
But most of us don't. We do okay, maybe we write a lot of personal stuff off with our companies and that helps...but after 32 years of doing this (interior residential reno) there is always something that comes out of left field to make you ask 'why am I doing this?'. Overall enjoy it, but like every job....sometimes....SMH.