wheelieking71
Diamond
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2013
- Location
- Gilbert, AZ
I have a really good life insurance policy. Pretty sure the plan is for my wife to retire when I have a stroke at 50.![]()
Yea, me too. My old-lady will be set if I kick the bucket. (I turn 51 in April, LOL)
FWIW I have found the one-man-band to be practically impossible if you are going to run a "legitimate" job shop.
By the time I pay for utilities, software, insurance, rent, taxes, etc... That's over 100k/yr before I even start drawing a salary. There's a pretty significant minimum overhead, unless you are working on BobCAD out of a building zoned for agricultural use.
I can make $250k/yr by myself easy, but keeping the lights on costs so much I won't make over 100k in salary unless I have some employees to help amortize all of the costs associated with just having a machine shop of any size.
As discouraged with this trade as I am right now, I am in a killer position. Shop is at home, tons of capability/capacity for a one man shop.
Just let my software maint. go, so that expense is gone. Payroll will be zero in less than a month. Switching from S-corp back to LLC.
No more workman's comp. ins. Probably going to drop the comprehensive on the iron. May even nix the accountant (not cheap!)
I'm pretty sure we are going to take a small chunk of our "nugget", and just pay the two machines I still owe on, OFF.
My overhead should literally be utilities, consumables, and shop maintenance very soon. It isn't impossible to attain a successful one man job shop status.
But it is not easy to get there! I can not imagine it working well in a non-owned shop/space. Lease/Rent is wasted money as far as I am concerned.