GameboyRMH wrote:
I don't have any part of a tow rig and probably couldn't afford the insurance. I don't think many people would pay for a tow rig anyway, nobody has to tow long-distance, and many drivers drive non-street-legal cars roped behind a support vehicle with a trailer plate on the car to get to the track legally for cheap.
What I could offer right now that I think could appeal to the racer who isn't made of money, is having a tent set up (one track here has no pits, the other has very nice pits and rents spots for "you have to ask"), catered food, a crew to do the routine/basic stuff when your car comes in including taking measurements and dealing with data loggers and/or cameras as necessary (equipment I could also rent out), and a mechanic on standby if anything breaks. I figure that kind of service could be worth a couple hundred bucks to the right person, they get to sit and relax when not driving instead of DIYing it and being in a mad rush all the time.
Yeah...this I can better relate to. I see it as more of a "Full service pit area" rather than "Race Servicing". They would have had to pay for food anyways. Tents are a pain and expensive, so yeah I would pay a fee for a tented pit. Have a welder and someone who knows how to use it and alignment gear on hand along with some strong backs and mechanical knowledge. Pray you don't have three clients needing lots of help all at once.
Thing is, the track is going to want a piece of your action since you are using their venue and taking $$$ out of their food concessions. You will also need some liability coverage for both your clients and your staff. You are going to end up needing a large transport vehicle sooner rather than later in this endeavor.
Staff the tents with Hooter's Quality staff and you might make a go of it. I know it is sexist, but hey, its what works.
What to charge?
500 for the week-end and five crews, so you have $2500 of income.
Staff of 8 people including yourself at $10/hour 12 hour days? $960 expense
Expense of getting your stuff and people on the track call it $200
Amortized cost of stuff (tent tools and whatever) $200/event over 5 years plan
Cost to cater figure $50/person/day (couple of meals and snacks & hydration) (I allow 2 people per race car, so each client is $100/day to feed and hydrate) Thats 10 people for two days, so $1000 to the caterer just to feed your clients, staff still needs to eat.
So, if I do the math, your $2500 of income needs to cover $2360 worth of expenses. That leaves $140 profit for two days work plus the logistics done during the week.
Wait, I forgot a bite for the track and the insurance companies. Lets say they are going to want $1000 (thieving bastards) Not looking good in the hole by ($860).
So assuming that I would want to take home $300/day at the end of the week-end, I need to raise other 600 bucks for myself and fill in the $860 deficit. That's 1720 that I need to distribute between the five teams. Will they pay and extra $344 each for a total of $844/team?
My gut feeling is that the real numbers are going to be much higher for expenses that I have not included or thought of. Shooting from the hip, I would say that your real number is going to have to be around $2000/team to make this work. There are people paying this kind of money to race, so the question is how do you get the message out to them. Oh wait, advertizing is expensive!