inactionman wrote: Tue Oct 29, 2024 2:04 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Oct 29, 2024 1:58 pm
inactionman wrote: Tue Oct 29, 2024 1:44 pm
I make money if the project works. I don't make money just turning up for 8 hours.
(it didn't work, btw - and it was mainly my fault - the designer did a very good job. I didn't make any money)
Risk vs reward in action then. The intention was to make money, but it didn't come off. I really don't see what the difficulty is that people are having with this. You take a risk in employing people and when it works the reward is better than you would have got if it was just one person working.
It's not necessarily money, it's things I can't do. I don't see what difficulty you're having with this. I earn well enough just wining and working for me, but there are projects I can't do everything for.
I'm not a body-shopping consultancy, my 'business model isn't to spend an age winning work just to hive it out to someone else.
My guess is those who have never run a business themselves are far more likely to hold a rather rose tinted view of what it's actually like.
Have well meaning friends working in salaried positions for years talk wistfully (and vaguely) about things like buying a pub, sharing stories with patrons from behind the bar watching the money roll in. The urge to slap full in the face with a two day old fish is overwhelming at times.
So here's the thing, we're a food producer making everything by hand and selling retail. Turnover c£120k p/a and we now employ four part time staff. In the past five years alone we've ridden covid (adapted full to personally delivering local to keep the lights on), utility rise of approximately 45% (sucked it up to literally keep the lights on), raw materials increases of anywhere between 25-60% and rising wage costs as minimum wage jumps about 6-7% a year. Also had to keep competitive in a local market where literally everyone in food and beverage is diversifying to the nth degree to grab or maintain footfall and market share. The average FB feed is swamped with them trying to attract your custom and most importantly: cash. Many have folded along the way. An eighty grand investment in a business turning to shit overnight as you fire sale your way out of an expiring lease. Recoup a tenth and that could be good going.
My wife and I pay ourselves up to the NI threshold and take dividends of whatever money's left over. Which, I'll be honest was never that much to begin with, and as your business grows so do your staff liabilities. Corp tax is 19% of your profits and dividend tax on the remainder around 9%. Despite all this, a newborn and being hospitalised midway through we've grown turnover by about 20k a year since the beginning and are still just about afloat. That's where the rose tint ends, along with the year on year income rise. We're at near ceiling now, and costs continue to rise.
Running a business you are in charge of
everything. Strategy, growth, innovation, market research, product development, sourcing, packaging, ordering, advertising, social media, comms, health & safety, food hygiene checks, accounting, payroll, insurance, pensions, equipment, recruitment, staff training and making damn sure the lights stay on through the tough times. And yes, in person working on the shop floor. In return you effectively give up a huge part of your life: physical, mental and social to keep this whole glass sculpture tottering down the road. You do not shut the door at the end of a 12hr day and just forget all about work, it follows you home, keeps you awake at night and is your first greeting in the morning. If you close to take holiday no money comes in and can't pay wages. If you get your pricing wrong you don't make enough or any money. If your employees get sick, you cover. If you get badly sick, no money comes in and you fail. If you personally have a breakdown you fail, and as your name (not your ltd company name) is on the lease your home could be taken away as a result. As times get tougher your friendships suffer, your relationships suffer and yes, so do you.
No one makes us do this, true. It's our choice to have our employees earning more than we do. And they do, on minimum wage. And we cover for them when they're sick, pay them when they take holiday and cover for them ourselves and/or pay someone else to cover them while they're away. In return we get to pay the bills, see our daughter grow up and not have to take whatever limited minimum wage jobs there are in the local area or commute 3hrs a day to the nearest city.
Sure, we could just hike our prices by a third and be done with it. A quarter of our customers probably wouldn't bat an eyelid as they have money and time on their hands, the majority would likely cut down on their purchases and an undisclosed number would silently drift away somewhere else or go without. It's something the £15 minimum wage crowd don't quite get, where is this money going to come from. And I'm all for better staff pay and conditions. We don't touch zero hour, we pay sick pay wherever possible and look after staff in kind. And each year your overheads go up and you try to maintain this balancing act to stay competitive, meet your costs, pay, motivate and develop your staff and stay in business.
If that all sounds like fun then jump in, the water's murky. Assuming you've got the hard cash or massive loan interest to get started and are willing to devote your life to it. Salaried employees wonder what it's like to run a business and be your own boss. Company directors on 80hr+ weeks start thinking this whole paid holiday thing and having a normal life sounds a fab idea. To talk truly about risk and reward, go and take some genuine risks. Then we can talk honestly about reward.