IT LOOKS TO BE A ROUGH MONTH FOR SERVICE, WHICH WE COUNT ON FOR MAKING OUR NUMBERS. LOOKS LIKE WE”™RE NOT EVEN CLOSE TO WHAT WE NEED TO BILL OUT. WEATHER CAUSED SOME INTERRUPTIONS. HOLIDAYS DON”™T HELP. AND A LOT OF FOLKS HAVE BEEN OUT SICK. IF WE”™RE DOWN THREE TO FOUR PEOPLE PER DAY MULTIPLIED BY FIVE TO SEVEN DAYS EACH, BETWEEN HOLIDAYS, VACATION, SICK DAYS AND BAD WEATHER, WE LOSE OVER 25 PERCENT OF OUR SERVICE STAFF. SUGGESTIONS?
THOUGHTS OF THE DAY: Knowing your numbers and what you have to do to hit your goal is a real start to solving the problem. Over deliver is one way to reach your goals. Look into temporary services to fill in and free up your people to do more of the technical work. Develop some shortcuts to get people out on the road to jobs sooner and keep people out in the field longer. Use overtime if you have to.
Calculate the number of workdays per month, not including holidays. Count up the number of people working on an average day and multiply workdays by the number of people. Deduct a typical number of vacation and sick days based on historical records. Multiply by the number of on-the-job hours per shift, not including breaks and travel time. That”™s how you get to likely monthly work hours.
Estimate the typical number of hours per job. If it”™s a big range, figure out how many small, medium and large jobs you do and figure out the median number. Divide available hours by average or median job hours per month, and that”™s how many jobs you”™ll be able to get through in a given month. Compare that to the typical number of service calls your company handles each month to see if you can handle the typical workload.
Assume that some things will go wrong out in the field ”” whether it”™s a truck breaking down, a piece of equipment or supplies that aren”™t on the job or anything else that can disrupt the workflow. If your plan is to get to 10 jobs per day, plan on getting to 8 and be thrilled if you hit 10.
Calculate whether or not you can hit your numbers if each person hits their minimum daily goal for service calls. If the numbers work out, keep going. If they don”™t deliver enough revenue, figure out whether you have to increase prices, add more service techs or add clients needing service calls.
Set a minimum daily and weekly goal per person for service calls that adds up to hitting your monthly revenue goal for service. Publish that number and hold each person accountable for meeting or exceeding that goal on a weekly and monthly basis.
Consider bringing in temps to help out, whether in the office or in the field. Add people to jobs requiring the least amount of skill and training. Free your people up to get more work done because they have helpers.
Pack up equipment at night, drive equipment to job sites ahead of time, have people go straight to job sites, plan out routes for travel efficiency and track where people are via GPS. All of these actions can help insure your teams are maximizing their billable hours.
If you need less than 20 hours of overtime to hit your numbers, it”™s probably more profitable to pay for overtime than to hire an additional person. Your people will probably appreciate the opportunity for some extra pay. And when you don”™t need the overtime, you don”™t have an extra person on the payroll to worry about.
BOOK RECOMMENDATION: “Service and Operations Management,” by Cengiz Haksever and Barry Render.
Andi Gray is president of Strategy Leaders Inc., StrategyLeaders.com, a business-consulting firm that teaches companies how to double revenue and triple profits in repetitive growth cycles. Have a question for AskAndi? Wondering how Strategy Leaders can help your business thrive? Call or email for a free consultation and diagnostics: 877-238-3535, AskAndi@StrategyLeaders.com. Check out our library of business advice articles: AskAndi.com.