Glad you liked the video, you may want to check into the channel membership there is LOTS of great tips there, or just keep watching some of the other stuff that will help also, good luck to your new business
WoW Outstanding again! What a tip $500... Cha Ching!. I've been in restoration for the longest, looking to make the leap into the Hauling & Balling lifestyle, just wondering how to charge for the service... you know bid correctly. Any insight on how to go about this... maybe example?
I'm doing it. I did 3 loads by myself yesterday and made great money. Today I'm working on marketing (and resting). Work 3-4 days ( hauling junk) a week at least and use the other days for other business needs like marketing and such.
Good question, you can break lots of things down and make things that are too heavy easier, you can offer curbside discounts so people will bring things out to the curb and that will help you can also invest in a Lift gate, hire day labors for a day that has difficult jobs.
We feel you can start this business with very little money then reinvest and make it bigger. It’s good to make sure junk removal will work in your area. So I wouldn’t spend a bunch of money at first
We don’t give our exact prices so we can stay competitive on our area, but really you could take the total amount we tell you we made for the day and divide by how many jobs we did and get a pretty good idea what we charged.
Do you ever come across smelly jobs? Do you charge extra for bio hazard conditions? Like those hoarders that have condemned homes full of feces and bacteria.
@@SonomaStrong Thank you for the reply!!! Follow up, do you try and separate items? save oils/hazmat for the end? Or will YOUR landfill charge extra for them to separate it?
@@SonomaStrong As a NorCal Native living in Florida now, I appreciate all your videos. I'm watching all of them and learning. Just need to take that leap! 👍👍 Thanks for the inspiration and motivation! (I'm from Sac and my wife is from Fairfield)