Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7162450
01/30/21 05:57 PM
01/30/21 05:57 PM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 7,582 Louisiana
Aix sponsa
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 7,582
Louisiana
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What type of work are you wanting to get into?
There are many ways to charge, depending on the type of work, length of job, frequency of problems, customer expectations, distance to job site, costs, etc and the list goes on...
I’ve charged by the catch, by the hour, by the job, by the day. They all can have their place, but it depends on expectations. With beavers, only one matters and that’s the last one. What and how you need to charge is something that you will have to figure out, because what works or doesn’t work for me may work or not work for you.
Generally speaking, I charge a per trip rate plus mileage for beaver work. Usually a full charge for 1-2 locations, and discounted rates for multiple locations. I am almost always willing to work with customers on the arrangements if they want to. It could be $75 per trip, it could be $200+ per trip. It all depends. If they want to lock in a price, I look at the job, estimate the number of trips it’s going to take, and we agree to a price.
Jobs may be similar, but many have their own sets of challenges.
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Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7165295
02/01/21 04:36 PM
02/01/21 04:36 PM
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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,772 Nashville, TN 26 y/o
JoeyHalk
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,772
Nashville, TN 26 y/o
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I am somewhat new to this myself, but here is something to think about when you start planning how to charge.
These are prices I made up on the spot, but are relatively close to what they actually cost. These aren't all the things you will need and you may not need all of them I listed.
Insurance 1000 Commercial Vehicle Insurance 2500 Business Startup 500 Business License 50 Business Cards 20 Phone 1000 Website (could do your own) 200 NWCOA Membership 250 $5520
Say you plan to do 100 jobs this year. On a per job basis you will need an average of $55.20 for each job just to cover these costs. This number goes down with the amount of jobs you do, but remember they are all annual costs so they need to be planned for each year.
If you do 1000 jobs this cost goes down tremendously per job, but it is still there and something you have to remember.
Remember to not sell yourself short, but also remember to be fair. When I started by myself I was charging low prices, because I was paying (what I considered to be a lot) for advertising and didn't want to lose any potential customers because of cost. On occasion I did things for free or very cheap. Not a great business practice, but I can tell you it helped me get good reviews and those reviews matter.
Now I can do 1 job for the price of what I was originally selling 3 for. You can't be afraid to charge what is right or afraid to sell any extras. Many customers don't know the things they need, but actually do want them once you give them the idea and the peace of mind that it will solve their problems.
Sometimes when I hear what other companies in my area are charging for things I do, it makes me cringe. People are paying it though and I will work my prices up slowly but surely , as long as I think it is fair.
Often times, wildlife work can be won or lost based on a $10 difference in quotes. You don't need to beat the other guys by hundreds of dollars. If you are going to provide the same quality of service it should be valued the same.
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Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7173327
02/07/21 09:56 PM
02/07/21 09:56 PM
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Joined: Oct 2020
Posts: 28 PA
Coilspring67
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2020
Posts: 28
PA
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How many other WCOs are in your area? Call and getting pricing. You do not want to sell yourself short.. charge about what they charge if not the same.. undercutting your competition will only bring the value of our business down in that area over time. Do your homework, even if your new to this side of trapping.. your value is worth something..
Member PTA, NTA, FTA, PPHA
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Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7198461
02/27/21 07:06 PM
02/27/21 07:06 PM
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Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 9 Tennessee USA
Hemming Co.
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 9
Tennessee USA
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I was wondering the same thing. We are about to go full speed in about a month. We had a pond with muskrat and the old man wanted them gone we just trapped as a favor for him but it was about 8 traps we set, took about 2 hours because the whole pond was rock wall years back made it difficult. Me and my son were figuring $150 setup $35 per catch would have been what we may have priced. I dunno if that would be low of high. Local wildlife agency is charging $75 per catch but they really don't care if they make a catch or not.
Ill ad a new question here maybe someone can offer an opinion. I have a local time share group needing wildlife control. Do you all usually do a retainer fee or just charge as you are called?
Also curious, have any of you guys ever let customers make payment installments of a job? Where I live is a low income region until you get out of the country side. I considered this but it seems a bit tricky.
Last edited by Hemming Co.; 02/27/21 08:38 PM.
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Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7212104
03/11/21 09:30 AM
03/11/21 09:30 AM
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Joined: May 2020
Posts: 27 GA
Buckpasser
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2020
Posts: 27
GA
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I just started trapping for hire this year. The problem in my area is that there are hobby guys that go after the beavers and coyotes for free. I’ve found several willing customers over the last few months, but a good trapper that I know locally told me that he gave up on making side money because he could never find anyone that was willing to pay, and he’s a very busy electrician.
For me this is a supplemental job, but I’ve just tried to shoot for the $200/day average mark. I set out on the weekends and just maintain the line through the week before work. It’s tiring, but I want to build this into a real business that I’ll do for my “retirement job” someday.
I was told to make it worth my while, and we should all help one another by not crashing the market!
Some days I think I could trap anything anytime. Others I wonder if I’ll ever make another catch...
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Re: How do you guys charge?
[Re: Gone Trappin.]
#7232207
03/31/21 09:24 PM
03/31/21 09:24 PM
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Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 167 NY
trappermac NY
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 167
NY
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There is so much that goes into it, ease of access, distance, how you're treated by the client, is the client a business or a little old lady with a woodchuck under her porch. I have set rates but adjust accordingly after evaluating all the variables. Recent squirrel job I quoted 100 setup, 50 per squirrel. They were in the attic, actually a crawl space. Got 15 flying squirrels in three checks, sometimes 3 per trap. I knocked that price back quite a bit, they now refer me to others in their community FB site. Just finished up a beaver job for a state facility. They told me upfront they had to get three quotes to submit, state regs. So I quoted 150 setup 75 per beaver. Was easy access, very little sign. One guy they didn't like his approach and discounted, other guy quoted 300 setup, first two beaver free, anything after was 150 per. I could see there were only 1-2 beaver here. I figured quick in and out. I got the job for being cheaper, but either way it would have cost the same as there were only two adult beaver, a male and pregnant female. So much to think about, so many variables. Be flexible.
Member NYSTA, NTA, FBU
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