Hi guys,
I never really come on here to be honest, but I thought I’d get the opinion of a world of unknown to me electrical contractors because why the hell not.
Even though the position I’m in drives me up the wall, it’s one of those “good problems to have”.
I’m spoilt for choice, I can take my company whichever way I want, I have a vast array of experience in plenty of different areas of electrics. Industrial is my favourite but commercial is what I’ve done most of.
The last two years I’ve turned over 350k and this year turned over just under 600k. It’s quite a lot for me as it’s only myself and a third party construction specialist admin / accounting company that assist with the day to day… other than that it’s just me and anything between about 4-12 subbies at any one time. My GP was about 40 so not too bad.
I’m 37 years old and am questioning which direction to head in. I’ve proved to myself I can make money on a heavy workload (after a couple of years of not doing so well in that department), but the workload takes over my life and I can’t think of anything but work all the time and it really gets in the way of all the other things in life like diet, exercise, friends, family, hobbies and anything else non-work related!! So work life balance is massively out of whack.
Anyway, as far as I see it, I have 3 options in front of me….
1) carry on full steam ahead as I am at the moment - I’ve pretty much decided this is not the way to go for me.
2) a merger with a bigger company has become a potential option, I’m not sure how much bigger, but more established. This seems like it could work, as I would be a contracts / project manager and my new partner would be in sales, and they have an estimator on board so I would basically be a shareholder that has a job to do - rather than run my whole company on my own and worry about running out of work when coming to the end of big projects but not having the time to look for more! And all the other things that need juggling. The only thing that worries me here is the potential partner wants an exit in 5 years time…that would leave me back in square one all over again!
3) stick to my own company, take on one big job at a time and get all my best workers along for the ride and drive that GP up to around 65 / 70. Less work, less stress, more control, more time spent focussing on one job at a time rather than 3 or 4 and a load of other business related problems to tend to behind the scenes. I know the one big job at a time is unrealistic on a constant basis because I will feel obliged to say yes to jobs that will stretch me to coming back off the tools again to oversee everything…but I know I’m equipped to be able to handle that if it does get out of hand from time to time!!
Anyway, I was wondering if anyone else has ever had similar predicaments, what path they chose and whether they have tried them all and now have the answer?!
37, male, and fully stressed most of the time on the inside!
I never really come on here to be honest, but I thought I’d get the opinion of a world of unknown to me electrical contractors because why the hell not.
Even though the position I’m in drives me up the wall, it’s one of those “good problems to have”.
I’m spoilt for choice, I can take my company whichever way I want, I have a vast array of experience in plenty of different areas of electrics. Industrial is my favourite but commercial is what I’ve done most of.
The last two years I’ve turned over 350k and this year turned over just under 600k. It’s quite a lot for me as it’s only myself and a third party construction specialist admin / accounting company that assist with the day to day… other than that it’s just me and anything between about 4-12 subbies at any one time. My GP was about 40 so not too bad.
I’m 37 years old and am questioning which direction to head in. I’ve proved to myself I can make money on a heavy workload (after a couple of years of not doing so well in that department), but the workload takes over my life and I can’t think of anything but work all the time and it really gets in the way of all the other things in life like diet, exercise, friends, family, hobbies and anything else non-work related!! So work life balance is massively out of whack.
Anyway, as far as I see it, I have 3 options in front of me….
1) carry on full steam ahead as I am at the moment - I’ve pretty much decided this is not the way to go for me.
2) a merger with a bigger company has become a potential option, I’m not sure how much bigger, but more established. This seems like it could work, as I would be a contracts / project manager and my new partner would be in sales, and they have an estimator on board so I would basically be a shareholder that has a job to do - rather than run my whole company on my own and worry about running out of work when coming to the end of big projects but not having the time to look for more! And all the other things that need juggling. The only thing that worries me here is the potential partner wants an exit in 5 years time…that would leave me back in square one all over again!
3) stick to my own company, take on one big job at a time and get all my best workers along for the ride and drive that GP up to around 65 / 70. Less work, less stress, more control, more time spent focussing on one job at a time rather than 3 or 4 and a load of other business related problems to tend to behind the scenes. I know the one big job at a time is unrealistic on a constant basis because I will feel obliged to say yes to jobs that will stretch me to coming back off the tools again to oversee everything…but I know I’m equipped to be able to handle that if it does get out of hand from time to time!!
Anyway, I was wondering if anyone else has ever had similar predicaments, what path they chose and whether they have tried them all and now have the answer?!
37, male, and fully stressed most of the time on the inside!
- TL;DR
- Pursue high turnover and reasonable profit margins, lower turnover and high profit margins, or partner up share responsibilities and skyrocket the turnover but have a team to lean on.