J.
I’m in the Los Angeles area. We have a lot of custom installation companies in LA and I’ve heard a wide range of rates as well. Our scale is higher though. I’m not aware of anyone being at $50 anymore. More like $85 - $250.
This is where I would lean towards an academic answer. But I studied physics, not business. I would guess there is a business formula for calculating what your rate should be in order to make a profit. You probably need to know your daily operating costs and your percent of billable hours.
If you figure your daily operating costs are $100 and you usually have 75% billable time, then you know in 6 hours you have to make $100 + whatever you want to take home per hour. Let’s make the math easy and figure you want to make $50 an hour. That’s $400 for the day, plus $100 for expenses, so in 6 hours you need to charge $500 or $83.33/hour. Of coarse, this needs to equal an amount you can actual sell. Wouldn’t it be nice to just decide to charge $300/hour and know you could still get 75% billable time?
The way to increase the business income, of coarse, is to get more people working - you don’t make more per person, but the idea is it adds up more than you could get out of increasing the rate for any one technician. Let’s face it, any one technician is going to have a maximum revenue ceiling.
In closing, as you increase your rates you should step up the professionalism. Wear a uniform, use company invoices, have business cards, have someone who answers the phones, a web site, etc.
-Morgan