I just bought a 2380 with a fel and GS0548. I have been kicking arround putting it to work picking up some smaller jobs. Wondering how many guys here have been successful starting a business with a small tractor?
I love that pick which 12 hours I want to work. I know that's the truth! I'm a toolmaker now and preyes you will quickly learn a LOT. One, the government wants over half of what you make so you have to be prepared for that. And, then what Hokie said-all truth there.
Owning/running a business is very rewarding, or should I say it CAN be, but you have to stay on top of EVERYTHING. It is work. The nice thing is you set your own hours, and you only have to work a half day. The problem is deciding which 12 hours you want to work.
When calculating how muchOnly thing I can say - be careful, not so much for your safety - please be safe, but rather expect the totally UNEXPECTED when it comes to .........
- you did a bad job, I am not paying you!
- you messed up my grass - I am not paying you!
- you hurt my prized bush - I am not paying you!
Be prepared to see an ugly side of human beings - I hope you never have a problem, but problems seem to find everyone ....... at least one time.
Get stuff in writing -
get paid at least half up front when you show up-
calculate what you will need for you money wise AND more IMPORTANTLY what the tractor needs.
Many more people will give you advice - listen them all!!!
I am not trying to talk you out of anything - just be careful and check ALL the boxes needed to do work on the side.
I'm really wanting to try somthing on my own. I'm really wondering if the ends justify the means. I have a full time job as a toolmaker so I can't devote a full 40 hours a week to this side business and with taxes and insurance I wonder if I would come out ahead or just be working for nothing.'jobs' ? What kind of 'jobs' and who IS your competition ? Small tractor with loader and box blade..wondering just what jobs are out there,but it is YOUR neigbourhood.
We'll assume you have pickup and trailer, and as said before LOTS of insurance !
Consider that for every hour you're actually doing a job, making money, you'l put 2 hrs into 'office' an d 'shop' work. The books, banking, taxes, paperwork, advertising, maintenance,repairs, getting fuel, fixing flat tires.
One of those 'look before you leap' situations. yes, it sounds GREAT, a job here, nuther there..until at the end of the day (2AM), when you finish the books, you see you've LOST $2300........
Grab a pencil and paper,really, REAL paper, write down 3 columns.. Pros, Cons, Costs. WRITE down everything you can think of, then go onto the net and see what you didn't consider, write them down...
If you're single...forget about the bar beers...no time for that, if you're married and kids...better choose wisely !!
Hay, small businesses built our countries but it is a very,vert tough 'row to hoe' these dayze !
I older guy and his son run a very respectful business that do all kinds of remodeling - all top notch work at a very reasonable cost. A couple of weeks in the summer I help and get paid well too."- you did a bad job, I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
"- you messed up my grass - I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
"- you hurt my prized bush - I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
You did a great job, love it, but don't want to pay you. And now I'm suing you!
I've been through all these scenarios!
Having dealt with squeaky floors, I can tell you for certain there was something moving with respect to something else to cause the sound.I older guy and his son run a very respectful business that do all kinds of remodeling - all top notch work at a very reasonable cost. A couple of weeks in the summer I help and get paid well too.
So - kitchen remodel - THE OWNER tears up the underlayment (breaking in the floor while removing the existing tile floor. We lay down all NEW floor and then tile over with 12x12 tile ....... 24 hours later the wife comes and walks on it .......... the floor squeaks ..... the tiles are moving, NO MATTER what the explanation was, your husband ripped up the floor before we got there or the fact the tiles were NEVER moving .......
we had to tear up the entire tile floor and do it again .................
re: tile floors
odds are good the floor joists and subfloor were not spec'd for tiles. I've passed on many tile jobs unless joists are 12oc, 5/8T&G screwed every 6" and glued.
Congrats.I just bought a 2380 with a fel and GS0548. I have been kicking arround putting it to work picking up some smaller jobs. Wondering how many guys here have been successful starting a business with a small tractor?
Sometimes it is better to do some overtime than it is to do work on the side for yourself unless you know very well the people that you are doing the side work for.I love that pick which 12 hours I want to work. I know that's the truth! I'm a toolmaker now and pre
When calculating how much
I'm really wanting to try somthing on my own. I'm really wondering if the ends justify the means. I have a full time job as a toolmaker so I can't devote a full 40 hours a week to this side business and with taxes and insurance I wonder if I would come out ahead or just be working for nothing.
Just because you closed the business, doesn't mean that you are not still responsible for filing the state returns. You need to notify the state that you are no longer in business and that you are requesting them to cancel your registration to collect sales taxes. The penalty is based on filing a return on a timely basis, even if no tax is due. If you were a corporation then you must dissolve the corporation with the state of incorporation, otherwise, you are still responsible for filing returns.Congrats.
There are many of us on here that fit that category. I just started another LLC recently, but I had my landscaping business a decade ago using a BX23 (older version). Made a crap load of money with it at the time.
Just be sure to do things the right way, don't be a scab. Form the business, get appropriate insurances and know (or learn quickly) what jobs suit your interests/skills/equipment. Be sure to check if your state requires that you register with them, and need to obtain a contractor license. Many people don't know that if someone performs work without a license, there is no obligation to pay them for that work. Don't be that guy that learns the hard way.
Make sure that you consult an accountant. There are many business write offs that you can leverage.
Be careful on just how you provide quotes and what terminology to use when describing job types. Depending on your state, most "maintenance" type jobs require you to collect and report sales tax. That can be a real PITA. I closed my first business about 10 years ago. I still get reminders from them that they are looking for any state owed sales taxes.
Since you have another source of income, that allows you to pick and choose when and how you want to work. I was in the same situation (and I'm there again). That's a great position to be in. I found that there were many smaller 1/2-2 day jobs that the large landscaping services would pass on as being "too small" to be of interest to them. You can clean up ($) on those.
Best of luck to you in your decision.
No good deed goes unpunished."- you did a bad job, I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
"- you messed up my grass - I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
"- you hurt my prized bush - I am not paying you!" And now I'm suing you!
You did a great job, love it, but don't want to pay you. And now I'm suing you!
I've been through all these scenarios!
Done, did it...Several times! Including official paperwork from my accountant. E-Tides (electronic filing system) is a joke.Just because you closed the business, doesn't mean that you are not still responsible for filing the state returns. You need to notify the state that you are no longer in business and that you are requesting them to cancel your registration to collect sales taxes. The penalty is based on filing a return on a timely basis, even if no tax is due. If you were a corporation then you must dissolve the corporation with the state of incorporation, otherwise, you are still responsible for filing returns.