PO Box 2240 Suite 729, Toluca Lake, CA 91610          Phone: 1-818-505-0022          Toll Free: 1-800-850-4949          Fax: 1-818-505-9972
  ENX Magazine     Archives     Media Kits     Editorial Calendar     ENX Mexico & Latin America     In The News     Industry Calendar     Contributing Writers     Contact Us
 Ronelle Ingram

Calculating Your Service Burden Rate

Lately, a wide variety of businesses have been requesting my help to determine an appropriate labor rate to attach to the various levels of products and services that dealerships offer. I recently talked to the owner and his service manager of a $40,000,000+ authorized dealership with multiple offices in five states.

This is a successful company that has been in business for over 30 years. The owner candidly admitted, “I know our hourly labor rate is upwards of $90 per hour. But how do I prove that number to my sales department? We have attended all these MPS and service management seminars. We are told that our service department can make 50%+ profits. The problem is most of these profits are supposed to be charged back to our own sales department.”

If your field technicians are regularly assisting with sales, end-user training, setting up equipment, working on MPS bids, doing equipment installations, etc. without the service department receiving their fair share of the revenue, you are reducing the hours the tech is available to generate revenue. Your service department will never be able to achieve 50%+ profitability if their available working hours are given to your sales department.

“I have the power to shift some of the cost burdens from the service department to the sales department. But I am receiving pressure to substantiate these high costs of the service burden rate. If I pay a senior OEM factory trained, CompTIA Net+ or CDIA certified tech $20 per hour, how can I prove he actually cost the business $90 per hour?”

An additional issue dealers face is the desire to improve their efficiency to reduce their burden rate. The problem is intensified because they are not sure how this burden rate is actually calculated. A small dealer from the Great Lakes area asked me, “I know my techs are costing the company about $85 per hour. That’s what the experts keep telling me. But how can management improve our efficiency when it is a mystery to all of us how this $85 per hour is calculated?”

These questions are asked by conscientious dealers who realize just matching the competition’s pricing is not the appropriate way to set your own pricing standards. The need to redefine the structure necessary to accurately calculate an appropriate hourly burden rate is a sign of MPS dealers refining the pricing process.

There is no way to appropriately determine the actual cost of any of the services provided by your technical or solutions staff without thoroughly understanding the actual cost of each labor hour. If the labor of a field or in house service technician is used in the performance of duties, it is imperative that the correct labor cost be added to the cost of each required sale.

If your company offers any of the following mentioned items, ask yourself how your company calculates the labor cost that must be anticipated when determining an appropriate cost of these items:

• Maintenance agreement

• Hourly service call rate

• Cost Per Copy

• Managed Print Services

• Installations

• Solution Sales

• Training of end users

• Warranty work

• Sales assistance

• Document management services

• In shop labor

• Bid preparation

There is no accurate way to determine the cost, price, or profit of any product or service your company offers that involves a service technician if you do not know how to accurately determine what each hour of your service technician’s labor costs your company.

The most common mistake made by those trying to figure out a ballpark estimate of the cost of their own service technician’s burden rate is to take the tech’s hourly wage, add 13% to cover the cost of governmental required fees and then add a little bit more. Usually another $5 or $10 per hour should do. Example: The tech makes $15 per hour X 13% = $2 + $10 misc costs = $27 per hour.

A savvy business person immediately knows this rate is too low. Owners, controllers and those returning from a multiday MPS or service seminar are consistently told the cost of the service burden rate is somewhere between $70 - $120 per hour.

Some dealers are lulled into passive acceptance believing their operating system automatically calculates the precise click cost of each machine, group of equipment, or customer. Most are totally unaware of what hourly burden rate is being used in the calculations. The pre-designated field, which lists the hourly burden rate, is usually located in an obscure changeable field in the software that has never been changed.

Those who obsess over a mil or two are missing the greatest deviance in the pricing process. In most office equipment service departments, labor is your number one cost. Without an accurate service labor rate in the equation that is calculating click cost, the resulting answer has no validation. Your measured pricing and profit calculations are completely oblivious to representing your financial reality.

I challenge my readers to actually find someone in your dealership who can tell you what dollar value is being used in the hourly labor rate field. Once found I believe the number will be lower than your actual cost. This means any software generated calculations of click cost are totally bogus without your accurate burden rate being used.

The reality is most dealers are not fully aware of the most critical component of their costing formula that determines their supposed cost per click. Your current pricing for Maintenance Agreements, CPC, MPS, installations and even a basic one hour long service call has little actual mathematical justification without knowing your true cost of your hourly service labor burden rate.

When calculating your technician’s burden rate you must determine the total hours for which the tech is paid; normally this is 2,080 hours per year. Then figure out how much of that paid time is actually available for paid field work. These paid, unworked hours include: vacation, sick days, holidays, jury duty, mandatory daily breaks, car trouble, training, travel and wait time, and meetings.

Additionally there are all those government-mandated taxes including FDIC, workman’s comp, social security and Medicare. Plus most employers have chosen to offer costly perks that workers have come to expect including heath insurance, long term disability, mileage and tuition reimbursement, tools, uniforms, training, 401K, etc.

Next, there is the responsibility of every employee who generates revenue within your company to carry a portion of your businesses’ overhead. This normally amounts to another $13 to $17 per hour that must be added to the cost of the hourly burden rate.
Once all these calculations are made, the dealer can adjust for (add to the hourly burden rate) the percentage of profit that is expected. By appropriately adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing all these pertinent expenses and time allotments you can establish a more realistic cost of each hour that is actually available for a trained technician to be able to generate revenue for your company.

The need to understand and be able to calculate the cost of the service hour, or burden rate is essential. There is no accurate way to determine the actual cost of the services provided by the technical staff without fully understanding and being able to mathematically substantiate, the actual cost of your service labor hour.

To receive a copy of the Excel spreadsheet Ronelle uses to calculate the service technician’s burden rate call or email Ronelle Ingram @ 714.744.9032 or ronellei@msn.com.

Ronelle Ingram, author of Service With A Smile, also teaches service seminars. She can be reached at ronellei@msn.com

 
FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO IMAGING INDUSTRY PROFESSIONALS
FOR MORE INFORMATION EMAIL: enx@pacbell.net
 
www.enxmag.com