kingdomcomputer
New Member
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- Location
- West Tennessee, USA
Not even sure how to formulate my question, so please bear with me. I have been running a small computer repair shop for a few years now. I like to think that I am good at what I do, but admittedly, I don't know much about running a business. I believe my business has the potential to grow much larger, but guess I have come to an awkward point to where I feel like i have come to the end of myself, and feel like I am always chasing a dollar...
Mind you, my family is not starving or anything, it ain't like that. But I feel like I am nowhere near where I should be having been in the game as long as I have. I'd like to make some changes to help begin creating residual income, At the moment, I don't offer anything with recurring monthly fees, and that's something I am very interested in, so that during slower periods, there is still an expected level of income. I have thought about it almost like insurance... People pay their premiums and actually hope they never have to use the service. The same is true of alarm monitoring.
So, form some of you who offer something of the like, would you mind sharing some of what you do? My very broad scope idea is something like monitoring, perhaps using something like Nagios, with remote support options for basic regular maintenance. Something designed to keep systems running optimally, with minimal work on my part, and something that is comfortable for a client to pay monthly for that peace of mind to know that they are taken care of before a problem happens, and are in good hands in case something does go south.
I guess to sum up, I am looking for in depth conversation regarding how some of you went from feeling like you're still an hourly employee to being a real business owner. I am curious about service level agreements ( i think that is what I am looking for, anyway) and what products/services you use to monitor and maintain your clients' systems. I am open for discussion as to how you determine your pricing for said SLA's. I know pricing will vary greatly depending on location and target client.
I don't expect anyone to give me a magic bullet or formula that will solve my issues. I just want to open up the discussion and hopefully find the catalyst that will trigger something in me to think outside of where I am.
Last thing I wanna say, let's try to keep things semi-budget minded as well. I don't make a million bucks, but we do well because I don't spend much and won't borrow money... Don't wanna dig a deeper hole to get out of one, if you know what I mean.
If there's any further information you might need from me in order to better answer my "question", fire away.
Thanks in advance for your time and any suggestions, stories, whatever you got...
-myk
Mind you, my family is not starving or anything, it ain't like that. But I feel like I am nowhere near where I should be having been in the game as long as I have. I'd like to make some changes to help begin creating residual income, At the moment, I don't offer anything with recurring monthly fees, and that's something I am very interested in, so that during slower periods, there is still an expected level of income. I have thought about it almost like insurance... People pay their premiums and actually hope they never have to use the service. The same is true of alarm monitoring.
So, form some of you who offer something of the like, would you mind sharing some of what you do? My very broad scope idea is something like monitoring, perhaps using something like Nagios, with remote support options for basic regular maintenance. Something designed to keep systems running optimally, with minimal work on my part, and something that is comfortable for a client to pay monthly for that peace of mind to know that they are taken care of before a problem happens, and are in good hands in case something does go south.
I guess to sum up, I am looking for in depth conversation regarding how some of you went from feeling like you're still an hourly employee to being a real business owner. I am curious about service level agreements ( i think that is what I am looking for, anyway) and what products/services you use to monitor and maintain your clients' systems. I am open for discussion as to how you determine your pricing for said SLA's. I know pricing will vary greatly depending on location and target client.
I don't expect anyone to give me a magic bullet or formula that will solve my issues. I just want to open up the discussion and hopefully find the catalyst that will trigger something in me to think outside of where I am.
Last thing I wanna say, let's try to keep things semi-budget minded as well. I don't make a million bucks, but we do well because I don't spend much and won't borrow money... Don't wanna dig a deeper hole to get out of one, if you know what I mean.
If there's any further information you might need from me in order to better answer my "question", fire away.
Thanks in advance for your time and any suggestions, stories, whatever you got...
-myk