wgoforth wrote:...
I knew an older preacher who retired and moved to a community and began attending a church there. As it turned out, they were looking for a preacher. They asked him if he would preach for them while they were looking for a preacher. He immediatly said "Sure....how much you going to pay me?" They were floored, but agreed to an amount.... he then would put that check back into the collection plate. He said he did it for several reasons (1) If he did it for free, they would have probably stopped looking for a preacher, since they could get him for free. (2) If he had done it for free, it wouldn't have been fair to the next preacher, as they would then think they could get his services for free or cheap (3) People, he said, don't seem to appreciate free preaching as much. I believe those last two points apply to the CHL classes as well.
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I'm new here, been lurking for a while, waiting for my CHL to come back, and have been "MPA carrying" while I wait. This post piqued my interest because:
- I myself reached a similar solution to the one above
- My CHL instructor did something similar to what I'm going to suggest to the OP
First, here's the situation similar to the one above. I'm a computer network engineer by trade. I've done it for about 23 years now, and make a pretty decent salary. In the past, I also did the same work as an independent contractor, and billed at a pretty decent hourly rate.
As I got more experienced in my job, and as friends and acquaintances (church, clubs, etc) learned what I do, I pretty regularly got "Hey, can you look at my computer, it's doing xyz". I usually (reluctantly) agreed. then one evening I noticed that I had spent over 3 hours working on a computer given to a pastor friend "for free", and it occurred to me that had I billed my regular rate, it would have paid for almost half what a
new computer was worth. I really didn't mind doing the work, but felt that those that asked probably had no idea how much I got paid for doing (somewhat) similar work in the business world (at the time, I billed $75 an hour, it's gone up since then).
A business owner (one that I contracted with) had long told me that people will typically not place a higher value on your work than what you present to them. In other words, if I charged nothing, they thought it was worthless.
I came up with a solution that has worked well for me. I send a regular bill, including my hourly rate for the number of hours worked. Then I show a discount for whatever the $ amoun that comes to. This way, the person realizes that's what I normally get paid, and they get an sense of the value of what was done for the. It's usually an eye-opener for them. It also has the side affect of making them somewhat hesitant to offer my "free" services to their friends. "He fixed it for me for free" suddenly becomes "He fixed, and usually charges a lot, but he discounted it for me." It's also worth mentioning that if you do this for a 501(c) group, you can count it as a donation for services in kind.
Now, on to my CHL story - A lady that is a CHL instructor at our church has two kids who grew up involved in the youth group. She felt she wanted to give something back to the youth department, but didn't have a lot of money to donate. Instead, she offered a CHL class to those at the church that were interested, charged a very typical $100 per person, and stated the money would go to the youth department. 15 of us (she filled the class) got our CHL instructions, and the youth department got a $1500 donation. That was a cool move!
So, here's what you may want to consider - I agree with some other comments I've seen, that you really won't make a big dent in adding new gun-owners by charging a discounted rate. How about instead, charge the standard rate, and then donate the money back to one of the organizations fighting for more "constitution friendly" gun laws? You'd probably get more bang for you buck (no pun intended), you wouldn't degrade the market for other instructors, those attending the class would get their money's worth, and a good cause would benefit.
Sounds like a win all around.