Labor Projections

2 MIN READ

Last month, we used a spreadsheet to calculate how much a lead carpenter should produce in a month. Change some variables, and you can also use the spreadsheet as a quick way to determine how much additional labor you need to hire to handle growing sales. In the following examples, we’ll assume a revenue growth goal of $500,000 (to a total of $2 million) and the same “givens” as last month: overhead of $440,000 and an employee pool of three leads (at $35/hour), two carpenters (at $25/hour), and one helper (at $15/hour).

All small jobs. If most of the new work consists of small jobs, a single lead carpenter could probably handle each project on his own. But the spreadsheet shows that, all things being equal, his productivity limit is about $350,000.

Mixed-skill jobs. If, as is more likely, the new work varies in size and complexity, you will need to consider hiring a lead plus a lesser-skilled carpenter. The spreadsheet shows that these two additional employees can handle about $433,000 worth of new work.

Changing overhead. Adding two people brings the crew total to eight, which raises the question of whether the company can function without also adding a production manager. Such a hire may increase overhead by, say, $100,000, but with the increased revenue, overhead percentage drops to 27% ($540,000 ÷ $2 million). If this nine-person team works as efficiently as the eight-person team, the company could pick up about $20,000 in additional net profit.

With this information, we will adjust the spreadsheet. –Tim Faller, Field Training Services, www.leadcarpenter.com.

  All Small Jobs Mixed-Skill Jobs Changing Overhead
A Avg. # of people on crew/hour 1 1.5 1.5
B Avg. cost per person $35.00 $28.75 $28.75
C Avg. crew cost per hour [A x B] $35.00 $43.13 $43.13
D # of hours per month * 166 166 166
E Labor cost per month [C x D] $5,810 $7,159 $7,159
F Labor as a % of production costs 33 33 33
G Total production costs [(E÷F) x 100] $17,606 $21,693 $21,693
H Reciprocal of gross profit ** 0.6 0.6 0.63
J Produced volume per month [G x H] $29,343 $36,155 $34,434
K Produced volume per year [J x 12] $352,121 $433,864 $413,203

* Based on 1,992 working hours per year

** 40% in first two columns; 37% in last column

About the Author

Tim Faller

Tim Faller, known as the “Master of Production” at Remodelers Advantage, recently retired from his post as senior consultant where, for 17 years, he worked with hundreds of remodeling companies, large and small, to help improve profits by creating smooth, efficient production systems. Prior to his work with Remodelers Advantage, he worked in the field for 25 years as a production manager, project manager, and lead carpenter. He is the author of the The Lead Carpenter Handbook and Dear Remodeler.

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