You should focus on assisted living contracts for junk removal, they have a very high tenant turnover rate, since tenants bring all their old stuff from the homes they lived in before moving to the assisted living facilities. So there's a lot of furniture that nobody wants once the tenant leaves the assisted living facilities. Another junk channel showed how he had on average 10 clean outs from one large assisted living facility every month. So that averages 120 jobs a year for one customer/location.
I have been handling the Pattern Wind Farms in my area. it has been nice to have the consistency but there are times it interferes with the day-to day rentals. Still worth it though!
I have a contractor paying $25/day and $395 per dump. This pricing probably wouldn’t work for the scenario you are mentioning. I would buy a dumpster just for that job, figure what it would cost monthly to pay it off in 12 months, charge them that price with a 1 year contract and figure your dump fee.
I'll like to hear your approach on the monthly rental too, I been getting calls asking about it but starting up with short inventory is hard to figure a price.
Yeah for sure. Inventory isn’t cheap! They can buy the dumpster or you can. A friend recommended charging $750 monthly and $65 per ton with two dumps each month.
$750 sound about right, and could be an steady income for the slow months but that will include you going twice a month? Or that will be extra like a dumping service fee plus the weight?
If you ever need equipment for your demos I can cover you. I have a small rental business located in surprise. But I service the whole state if needed.
that hose being clamped it wont need built. get the part number off of the hose and the length and then replace it at home. Two hose clamps and your home free!
So that you don't dilute the demo industry. The estimate to remove and dispose of the cinder block would have been $2,600.00. I'm going to guess you did it for $1,200. Your logic would have been well this won't take up more than half my dumpster so if I get a dumpster rental out of it $600 then making $600 for a few hours worth of work is not a bad deal. For a single individual It's not terrible but for a business responsibility know how equipment insurance maintenance anything under 2000 is a race to go out of business. PS I'm not sure it applies for equipment but Arizona has some kind of two year warranty thing on workmanship slim to none but it possibly might work out on your trailer hydraulic lines where the manufacturer does have to cover the repair. Plus most out of state manufacturers give you a one-year warranty so if they don't replace those lines you should put out their name so others don't do business with them
@Nova-m8d I completely agree with you If homeowners go and round up 17 guys and they are responsible for them So when they put a wheelbarrow into the side of a stucco house the homeowner takes care of it himself absolutely you can definitely have that logic But if you call somebody else and they have business insurance and their responsible if your house gets damaged then bro it's going to cost you a lot more than $50 😘 Oh yeah and I love how you exaggerated the 17 guys for $50 that'd be pretty awesome if it was true Plus since everything's just so easy I don't understand why any homeowners hire anyone 🤷♂️
You should focus on assisted living contracts for junk removal, they have a very high tenant turnover rate, since tenants bring all their old stuff from the homes they lived in before moving to the assisted living facilities. So there's a lot of furniture that nobody wants once the tenant leaves the assisted living facilities. Another junk channel showed how he had on average 10 clean outs from one large assisted living facility every month. So that averages 120 jobs a year for one customer/location.
Great info thank you!!!
I have been handling the Pattern Wind Farms in my area. it has been nice to have the consistency but there are times it interferes with the day-to day rentals. Still worth it though!
Use some heater hose or radiator hose to sleeve the hydraulic hoses
Good idea thank you!
We are getting the same inquiries for monthly rentals also. Looking at monthly rental plus haul and dump fee's.
It’s gotta make financial sense or it doesn’t work. The consistent revenue each month feels good. Can always reevaluate after 3 months.
I have a contractor paying $25/day and $395 per dump. This pricing probably wouldn’t work for the scenario you are mentioning. I would buy a dumpster just for that job, figure what it would cost monthly to pay it off in 12 months, charge them that price with a 1 year contract and figure your dump fee.
Good thoughts thank you!
I'll like to hear your approach on the monthly rental too, I been getting calls asking about it but starting up with short inventory is hard to figure a price.
Yeah for sure. Inventory isn’t cheap! They can buy the dumpster or you can. A friend recommended charging $750 monthly and $65 per ton with two dumps each month.
$750 sound about right, and could be an steady income for the slow months but that will include you going twice a month? Or that will be extra like a dumping service fee plus the weight?
If you ever need equipment for your demos I can cover you. I have a small rental business located in surprise. But I service the whole state if needed.
Awesome thank you! I’m sure we’ll need your help.
that hose being clamped it wont need built. get the part number off of the hose and the length and then replace it at home. Two hose clamps and your home free!
So that you don't dilute the demo industry. The estimate to remove and dispose of the cinder block would have been $2,600.00. I'm going to guess you did it for $1,200. Your logic would have been well this won't take up more than half my dumpster so if I get a dumpster rental out of it $600 then making $600 for a few hours worth of work is not a bad deal. For a single individual It's not terrible but for a business responsibility know how equipment insurance maintenance anything under 2000 is a race to go out of business.
PS I'm not sure it applies for equipment but Arizona has some kind of two year warranty thing on workmanship
slim to none but
it possibly might work out on your trailer hydraulic lines where the manufacturer does have to cover the repair. Plus most out of state manufacturers give you a one-year warranty so if they don't replace those lines you should put out their name so others don't do business with them
Bro, it's Phoenix. Home Depot has 17 guys in the parking lot that will do the job for $50.
@Nova-m8d I completely agree with you If homeowners go and round up 17 guys and they are responsible for them So when they put a wheelbarrow into the side of a stucco house the homeowner takes care of it himself absolutely you can definitely have that logic
But if you call somebody else and they have business insurance and their responsible if your house gets damaged then bro it's going to cost you a lot more than $50 😘
Oh yeah and I love how you exaggerated the 17 guys for $50 that'd be pretty awesome if it was true
Plus since everything's just so easy I don't understand why any homeowners hire anyone 🤷♂️
@@MIGHTYX2010 The average consumer doesn't have a clue business insurance exist.