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Industry Markups

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by JWY, Aug 20, 2014.

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  1. JWY

    JWY Senior Member

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    From a captain on another thread: "I make considerably more doing an oil change (plus fuel filters, zincs, etc etc) than running a boat. Not only am I making the same hourly or more, I'm also making the markup on all of the parts that I use to do the oil change."

    Is this common practice? Accepted procedure? As a yacht broker, I never make money on anything other than commission from the sale of a yacht. I don't get referral fees, kickbacks, etc. If offered a commission for services or referrals to other vendors, I ask the savings to be passed along to the client.

    What is the standard operating procedure? Do the owners know about the markup? Transparency?

    Judy
  2. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    But you're talking two different businesses, Judy. I think, yes, boat managers are expected to charge retail for parts and buy them for less. Just like anyone making repairs or servicing a boat. Clearly a shipyard marks up parts. A salaried captain would not. But a management company would operate like any repair facility in that regard. Similarly they might engage mates to help transport a boat or load it on a ship and would charge more for the mate's time than they paid.

    A captain, hired simply as a captain, would generally charge the items directly to the owner and would not make a markup.

    As to a broker, I think making any money other than the brokerage fee would be wrong. You use the words referrals and kickbacks and they would both be wrong. That's not what a management company is getting. They're making profit on their work. Your profit is set and agreed to be limited to your commission.

    Now there is one other type entity. That's the large brokerage that also has other divisions or functions such as build management, general ship management, and sometimes even chartering and/or providing crew. Those may or may not be separate divisions. I do think they put the broker in a precarious situation because suddenly the broker is selling other services too and getting a fee based on that. I haven't seen their disclosure forms so can't speak to how transparent it is. A recent example of one that didn't work out might be Fraser on the 90' Northern.

    So, back to what I'd expect as an owner. I would not expect my captain, employed full time or part time but solely as a captain, to make any money from me other than his salary. I would fully expect a management company to make money on all they provide including parts and other labor. For parts, they simply charge what anyone would. They purchase at wholesale and sell at retail. I wouldn't expect them to get any fee from any service facility such as a canvas maker. Simply on the work they performed. However, they would get paid for supervising and managing the work of the canvas maker. I would expect a broker to get nothing other than the commission. And, when it comes to these multiple service large brokers I would want everything clearly spelled out in the agreement. And, frankly, I get disturbed over many such relationships there. If the broker is referring to in-house yacht management, I want to know if the broker is getting a commission on that.
  3. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    Since this thread is about something that I said, I will respond to it. My statement that was quoted was directed to NYCAP, who also is a Day Captain and at least was not employed in the past by one person as their Captain. (I am not sure what his employment situation is on this Great Loop trip).

    I own a Yacht Management business that does a good amount of repairs and maintanence and am a Captain as well that does daily Captaining, trips for owners, deliveries, managing a vessel. BUT, I am nobody's full time Captain with the owners credit card in my pocket to pay for their repairs. I float every and all expenses. I am also using my own funds to pay for all of these parts, helpers, and buying all of the tools and equipment that I need in order to do the repairs as well as paying for a vehicle and it's expenses in order to do them. I am the mechanic doing the work, this is not a "kickback" from another service for doing the work. I am operating a business that is providing a service to an owner. Then I am billing the owner and waiting 2-4 weeks to recoup my investment, sometimes a lot longer. For example, I bill my customers monthly. If I do an oil change on the 2nd, then I bill them on the 30th, and then get a check in the mail on the 10th. That's almost 40 days. I also have the various business expenses of operating a business, same goes for things like health insurance etc.

    I also do 5 or 6 figures each and every year with many of the parts wholesalers and parts dealers and am a business, so therefore I get a good discount on parts which is typical in just about any business that is reselling goods. No different than the grocery store buying milk from a vendor and selling it at a profit. This markup also goes to expenses for having to warranty a defective product. If a product is defective in the first year, I end up eating the labor to replace it and many times buy the owner a new part with my own money and then wait to get the part warrantied by the vendor, so there is no inconvenience to the owner. For example, a reputable pump company had a string of defective macerator pumps. I ended up having to wait 6 months to get my money back on 2 macerator pumps that were defective and ate the labor to change them twice. I have a shelf full of brand new odd-ball livewell pumps, bilge pumps, this' and that's, because of this. I also do not charge them time to go get the parts in order to do the job. Getting all of the parts together to do above said oil change could easily take 3 hours of my time between going to one dealer for the engine stuff another dealer for the generator stuff and another dealer for miscellaneous parts, not to mention wear and tear on my vehicle, gasoline and etc. My labor rate is also less than half what the dealer charges, I also don't charge drive time (unless it's an hour or further away), or a mileage fee. I also pass on some of that discount to my loyal customers and typically price out their parts at a 10% discount BELOW what they could drive to the store and buy them for themselves. If you hired the dealer or as an owner or Captain and walked into the dealer and purchased the parts, you would be paying the normal retail price on those parts.

    The same thing goes for sub-contractors. I'm the person hiring AND paying them with my money and then selling their services to an owner, they too give me a discount due to the amount of volume I do, and I do pass on some of those savings to the customer. Also every once in a while you get burned and have to eat it. However, my services and parts and everything else are priced a lot less than what a lot of other management companies charge or what they could hire the company for themselves and spend their time supervising it and making the phone calls and so forth. Also and this is the biggest difference, I ALWAYS employ properly skilled and trained people and vendors, factory parts or the best part for the job, not the cheapest hack with little experience that's walking the dock which I see ALL of the time. In situations where the owner is paying the vendor directly, like say the Detroit Diesel dealer for a complete service I don't make anything, but will charge them for my time to supervise if they ask me to. I also have one customer who gave me a credit card for the boat and I buy their parts on their credit card and simply charge them the FL sales tax and my time at a reduced rate (1/2) for picking them up and pass on the entire discount to them, but they are very very good to me with tips and so forth as well.

    For a Captain (that is a full time employee of the owner) or a Yacht Broker to get a kickback, that would be illegal. A Captain wouldn't be getting a discount on parts anyways, typically.
  4. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

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    Most of the marinas on Long Island insist that journeymen bill through the marina, and they take a cut. Generally they add it to the bill, but sometimes they take it off the journeyman's side. It can often be up to 1/3 of the bill. They also take a markup on all parts used in a repair as Capt. J does. For your business and mine this would be a conflict of interest, but most businesses today seem to be going after every last dollar that can be squeezed from a customer. Just look at banks. At one time the paid interest on deposits and collected interest on loans. Now their big money is in fees. Same with the airlines, same with the phone companies. To me it feels dirty, but it's the norm today.
  5. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    Parts mark ups have always been standard in this industry and others. This is why in order to buy from parts wholesalers you need to show a tax resale certificate and/or a business license. They don't sell to retail customers, or if they do it's through their stores which are a seperate entity and at retail. Such as the difference between Port Supply and West Marine. If I'm delivering the parts to the boat AND selling themto you for 10% below what you could walk into West Marine and buy them for, you should be thanking me not complaining about it.

    Parts markups go to pay for all of those business expenses and all of the costs of running a business. There are many weeks I'm shelling out $150-200 a week just for gasoline. You also have taxes, licenses, insurance, accounting to do, and many other expenses in order to operate a business that you would not have as a full time Captain. There are times I spend 2 hours of my time just researching where I can even find and buy some oddball part, which I don't charge for.

    I've seen a lot of Boat Yards add 20% right on top of an outside contractors invoice and it is clearly stated on their walls and in their contracts, down here.
  6. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Actually that is a quite welcomed approach in my mind. In the past and still in some places, the contractor billed them and they then billed you and you never knew what the contractor had charged. The other way was them charging the contractor a fee. When they do it as you describe it's very clear and transparent and a relationship that benefits the customer, the contractor and the boat yard.

    As to everyone trying to get all they can, as long as they're transparent and honest, I have no issue. They've made the investments and they're in it for profit. Fees for services is an adaptation but makes sense. I don't like all the nickel and diming (well more like dollars and more dollars) but in many cases I have to admit it's fair. Why should the person traveling with no luggage have to pay for the one with many pieces. Baggage handling is a big expense.

    As long as everything is fully disclosed I'm ok with most practices. You choose to deal with the person or not. However, I'm not ok when it's hidden and non-standard. Kickbacks are never ok. If a management company wants to charge a fee for all yard work such as 10% for supervising and monitoring or if they just choose to charge for their hours, I'm fine. If they, however, got a kickback for referrals, then that would be wrong.

    As to a captain employed on a single boat, the agreements we have with ours are very clear and they are in writing and in our policies manual. They cannot accept a penny, cannot accept presents. They can't even allow the vendor to take them out and pay for the meal. That one is really for their protection as some vendors suddenly think that earns them business.

    The other thing that merits disclosure is any other relationship that exists. For instance, even if a broker wasn't getting anything on a referral to a surveyor, if they also have another business relationship with that surveyor (say they co-own a training company) then that should be fully disclosed.

    Be open, honest, and transparent.

    But you do fully expect any independent company performing work on your boat is buying parts wholesale and selling them to you at a higher price and hiring help and billing you more than they pay the help.
  7. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    NYCAP

    Just a typical example: You come into my shop. You are looking for filters for your Mans. I have them on my shelve. I give them to you for your DIY project. Aren't I entitled to something$ over and above my cost? Same if I install them? In your desired scenario, I'm just a pass thru - I'd be out of business in a month or have bare shelves. Its a very "clean" and straight forward business transaction that has worked very effectively for centuries. Does your beer distributor just hand you cans off his shelf? Or say, ok, I'll get that from my supplier tomorrow, but don't worry there will be no additional cost to you? Don't think so....

    As for the subcontractor. He is using my bathroom, my sink, my parking, my docks, my electric, my recycling bin, leaves crap all over, he's my liability risk, etc, etc. - bring your boat to his shop (if he has one). BTW, could I stop at your office so I could make some parts orders and customer calls....maybe shower if it is a really hot day. And don't worry, that Boom box I bring won't bother your seasonal customers who are trying to enjoy their boat at the dock
  8. 1000 islands

    1000 islands Member

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    As a yacht broker your base income is the commission received upon selling a boat, but................

    But, if you are asked to source a marine surveyor you should put something in it for yourself to cover the related costs.

    If the surveyor bills you, just mark it up. If the surveyor bills the client directly, then the surveyor should pay you something for finding him/her the business.


    In reality, anything above and beyond the advertising, showing, sea trial and drawing up the various paper work is extra and should be billable. And that should be told to the client up-front.
  9. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Actually a broker can not have any financial benefit in a surveyor referral. That would be a serious conflict of interest. Judy doesn't do it and no other reputable broker would.

    Broker's commission is a cover all fee. Unfortunately, covers a lot of wasted time with window shoppers, covers deals that fall apart upon survey. The only exception might be if the broker or their company also provided a management service and managed the boat somehow while waiting for the sale, but that would have to be a separate fully disclosed contract. If they just engaged a manager, the broker can get nothing for doing that.

    Back on the original post, we're talking about a variety of persons.
    1. Captains employed on one boat.
    2. Management companies and captains
    3. Brokers
    4. Brokers who are part of larger companies that provide additional services.
  10. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    My rant on behalf of boatyard owners is irrelevant, then.
  11. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

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    That would be an absolute conflict of interest, and unethical. As far as the community is concerned you'd be recommending the surveyor based on who will pay you the most rather than who will do the best job for the customer.

    In my business I've had boat brokers offer to split commissions with me or give me a "finders fee" for steering clients to them. That puts them right on my do not recommend list.

    We have 2 different scenarios being discussed here. 1) markup on retail items (Normal. You sell things to make money), and 2) professional ethics. Having your ethics questioned as a broker or a captain will end your career. We're not selling items or operating an employment agency. What services we render outside of our direct job is called customer service. That's different from what capt. J does. He has a maintenance company it seems. I get the impression that's similar to the mobile mechanics we have on LI. Part of his income is the markup. Legit. If I bought an item for a client's boat I would buy it retail and hand him the invoice. No markup, because that's not my business, just customer service.
  12. Fishtigua

    Fishtigua Senior Member

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    The 'commission' paid to Skippers and crew in the Med used to be big business in the old days. A Chandlery or Service Supplier would deliver to the boat and then pass over a brown envelope with the Skipper's cut for using their services. This used to anger me and my fellow crewmembers, as we were very well looked after by our Boss, so insisted on having the commission taken off as extra discount from the invoice. Doing this got weird looks from the suppliers and p*ssed off other crews. Maybe we were naive and not greedy enough, but we were honest. I think this is one reason to how Yacht Managers became so popular for big boats.

    As Capt J said, if a client is spending XXXX$$ with me for parts month in/month out, I'll give them a good discount, much more than any Skipper or Owner would get. I'll also make sure the parts are there really promptly. As a supplier of parts, I will look after my big customers first, it's simple business. That's not to say you will ignore the smaller ones, that's a poor idea.
  13. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Similar practices exist in various parts of the world in all industries. Working for a US parent company it was often hard to get the point across to those elsewhere in the company that you take a bribe or kickback or any other fee, you make anything personally on company business and you're immediately terminated. When you're an employee then your allegiance is to your employer. Boat owners generally entrust a lot to their Captains, if they have captains who work solely for them. The moment they can't fully trust them, then the relationship is destroyed. Often they're trusted to manage $10 million to $100 million boats and paid well and if they will take advantage of that for extra money on the side then what will they do.

    I do know of one marina that was giving captains 10 cents per gallon cash. After the wrong owner found out that practice was eliminated.
  14. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    I think it is relevant, as what boatyards charge on subcontractors is included in the thread. I also think many people forget the strain that a subcontractor puts on a boatyard and that does cost you money to a degree.
  15. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    There are people who think boatyards should just let anyone come in and do what they want for free or very little. Why? They aren't in business to make profits for others but none for themselves. I like those who are upfront and clearly spell out their charge.

    I also want to see boatyards make money. If they don't, we have nowhere to turn and their employees have no jobs.
  16. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    Yes, but I have also know of 2 boatyards that have higher than the industry standard insurance requirements to keep MOST subcontractors out, meanwhile their own subcontractors don't carry the insurance.......or have to.........Both of these yards are like high schools and all of the subcontractors have their little torts with each other. Neither are full service yards, but full of subs. One sub actually told me he wouldn't do his work because I had another sub work on the boat (he did a job that the other sub didn't even do). I always maintain a low profile and am very polite with everyone and fly under the radar.....

    One of them the subcontractor booked my slip under their covered shed at an outrageous daily price, because we needed a covered area, then the yard office tried to kick the same subcontractor out who booked the slip with them 3 days later. Not to mention their ****** shed left rust ALL over the **** boat, rust pieces everywhere.
  17. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

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    That would be like an airline, doctor, cable or phone company advertising the actual price you will pay including all the fees, taxes, etc. My phone bill actually has a fee with my name. My $19.99 cable bill is about $35. Ethics and being up front have been lost on business. When I quote my day rate it's exact whether I basically play for 2 hours or work my tail off for 12. More often than not I'll end up with a tip that sometimes more than matches my salary, but I leave that completely up to my clients. I've found that when you're honest and up front it's so appreciated and that appreciation is worth more than the money to me. Guess I'd never cut it as a big time business person.
  18. Chasm

    Chasm Senior Member

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    As a shop you have to make money. Which usually is both in part makeup and labor.

    That said, shops have sometimes ...interesting part markups.

    I can buy a car part retail, overnight it, rent time on a car lift, exchange the part in ~15 minutes. With confidence, I did it before. - And still pay less than half than the shop price for the very same brand part. Which is of course not in stock ("tomorrow maybe") and would also have to be installed by the shop at additional cost. ("at least a hour")

    The marine market is of course a bit more captive than cars.
  19. timvail

    timvail Senior Member

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    not always reasonable

    my experience has not alwaus been positive as far as a closed shop at a marina, especially if the same company owns several marinas in the area. i dont mind paying for the time it takes to do a certain job, but not a flat rate. i have experienced charges over the past few years that seems to be getting a bit crazy. at the current marina they try and charge you a summerization fee when your boat goes back in spring time. if your there at launch there is still a minimum charge unless you squawk about it. i have been at the current marina for the past four years and have not received a correct service invoice yet. ofencharged for parts that never were installed as an example. with the same company owning several marinas in the area it is difficult to move when i know the same thing may very well happen. takes the joy out of boating to some degree.
  20. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    Every yard should be detailed and transparent about its charges and its work. its just good customer relations. I know a yard that uses a GroPro camera during diagnosis so he can show the customer exactly what the problem is, and provides a box with the old parts at the end of the job - minus of course the stuff that has a core value, But that gets recorded with a photo. If he finds additional problems as he is working, its back to the Go Pro to get authorization. He can send the video over the internet from the slip directly to the customer for authorization