Learn Before
An electrical contractor calculates a three-month hiring reserve of $12,000 to cover the $4,000 monthly gross salary of a new apprentice. However, when evaluating the total cash needed to keep the apprentice on payroll during a revenue lull, the contractor determines that the actual cost is $4,800 per month. When analyzing the components of this $4,800 monthly expense, which of the following best explains the $800 difference?
0
1
Tags
Electrician Business Operations
Running an Electrical Contracting Business Course
Related
Owner-Operator Ramp-Up Before the First Hire
When setting aside a hiring reserve before bringing on a new field employee, you only need to save enough to cover the employee's base wages for the reserve period.
An electrical contractor is preparing to hire their first apprentice and wants to establish a hiring reserve. According to best practices, how should the contractor determine the correct amount of cash to set aside?
You are preparing to hire a new apprentice electrician at a base wage of $3,000 per month. You decide to establish a three-month hiring reserve to ensure you can cover payroll even if revenue slows down. After checking current local payroll guidance, you determine that your specific employer payroll tax obligations add an additional 12% on top of the base wages. The total cash hiring reserve you must set aside before adding this employee is $____.
An electrical contractor is planning to hire a new field employee and wants to establish a hiring reserve to ensure payroll can be covered during revenue lulls or cash-intensive jobs. Based on best practices for mitigating financial risk, arrange the steps the contractor must take to accurately calculate and secure this reserve in the correct logical order.
Evaluate the following strategies an electrical contractor might use when planning to establish a hiring reserve for a new field employee. Match each proposed strategy with the correct critical assessment of its viability.
As you build your electrical contracting business, you are writing the company's standard operating procedure (SOP) for expanding your field crew. You need to formulate a hiring reserve policy that will protect your cash flow during seasonal lulls or cash-intensive jobs. Which of the following policy directives should you write into your SOP to properly establish this reserve?
Besides a period of slow revenue, which business scenario is specifically cited as a reason for an electrical contractor to have a hiring reserve in place before adding a field employee?
When calculating a hiring reserve for a new field employee, why is it recommended that an electrical contractor use current payroll guidance instead of a fixed, universal percentage?
To effectively manage the financial risk of hiring, an electrical contractor must distinguish between different parts of the payroll planning process. Match each term with its correct definition based on the course materials.
An electrical contractor calculates a three-month hiring reserve of $12,000 to cover the $4,000 monthly gross salary of a new apprentice. However, when evaluating the total cash needed to keep the apprentice on payroll during a revenue lull, the contractor determines that the actual cost is $4,800 per month. When analyzing the components of this $4,800 monthly expense, which of the following best explains the $800 difference?