How Much Bowling Ball Drilling Owners Make: $278k Year 1 Model

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Description

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • More paid drilling volume spreads fixed overhead and lifts profit.
  • Average ticket rises with add-ons, raising profit without more capacity.
  • Gross margin and rework control determine owner take-home.
  • Referrals and staffing keep revenue steady through slow seasons.


Owner income iconOwner income$278,497
Net margin iconNet margin28.2%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$989,000
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyMedium

Want to test your own drilling income?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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68%
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18%
8%
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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.



Want to see owner income in the full Bowling Ball Drilling Service forecast?

This Bowling Ball Drilling Service Financial Model Template shows revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and owner pay—open the model.

Owner-income model highlights

  • $988,500 Year 1 revenue
  • 566% gross margin case
  • $105,600 fixed overhead
  • $175,000 payroll load
  • $278,497 operating profit
  • Low/base/high scenarios included
Bowling Ball Drilling Service Financial Model dashboard summarizing key KPIs, runway/cash and performance with a dynamic dashboard for investor-ready reporting and clarity on cash-flow blind spots

Can a bowling ball drilling business scale?


Bowling Ball Drilling Service can scale, but owner income depends on capacity, skilled labor, and steady referrals. Volume can grow from 2,200 paid units in Year 1 to 6,600 in Year 5, or about 42 to 127 jobs per week, while payroll rises from $175,000 to $378,000. Here’s the catch: if the owner stays the only skilled fitter, turnaround time becomes the hard cap on revenue.

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Growth levers

  • Extend shop hours for more jobs.
  • Build bowling center referral ties.
  • Capture tournament traffic consistently.
  • Train drillers to raise throughput.
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Scale risk

  • One fitter limits turnaround.
  • Capacity drives owner income.
  • Payroll grows with volume.
  • Referrals must stay steady.

What is the bowling ball drilling profit margin?


On the model provided, Bowling Ball Drilling Service shows a 566% gross margin in Year 1 and 596% in Year 5; if you're building the plan, see How Do I Write A Business Plan For Bowling Ball Drilling Service? for the setup. The gap comes as variable fee rates ease from 120% to 100%, but profit still gets squeezed by inserts, thumb slugs, plug materials, drill bit maintenance at 0.5% of revenue, calibration at 0.6%, rework, rent, and paid technician time.

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Model return

  • 566% Year 1 gross margin
  • 596% Year 5 gross margin
  • Fee rates fall from 120% to 100%
  • Higher volume can lift spread
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Margin risks

  • Pro package: $12,550
  • Grip service: $3,350
  • Mid package: $9,450
  • Entry package: $6,750

Can a bowling ball drilling service pay the owner a salary?


Yes — the Bowling Ball Drilling Service can pay the owner a salary if it first covers job costs, fixed overhead, staff coverage, reserves, and reinvestment. The model includes a Lead Pro Shop Technician at $72,000 a year, so owner labor can sit there if the owner actually works that role; keep that separate from profit distributions. Year 1 operating profit is $278,497 after modeled payroll, and Year 5 reaches $1,408,821 with 70 FTE — not tax or payroll classification advice.

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Salary math

  • $72,000 can be owner pay
  • Only if owner works that role
  • Profit comes after payroll
  • $278,497 Year 1 operating profit
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What to watch

  • Cover fixed overhead first
  • Keep reserves before drawings
  • Separate salary from distributions
  • $1,408,821 Year 5 operating profit



Want to see what drives owner take-home?

1

Drill Volume

42/wk

At 42 jobs a week in Year 1, more fittings quickly spread fixed shop costs and lift owner cash.

2

Ticket Mix

$449

A $449 average ticket shows how balls, drilling, and add-ons raise revenue per visit without much extra overhead.

3

Job Margin

57%

This is the cash left after direct job costs, so pricing and waste control change take-home fast.

4

Overhead Load

$8.8K

Monthly overhead sets the break-even floor, so lease, software, and admin discipline matter every month.

5

Labor Load

$175K

Year 1 payroll is a big fixed drag, and adding staff before volume catches up cuts owner income.

6

Referral Flow

High

Steady league and tournament referrals keep the bench full without heavy ad spend, which protects profit in slower periods.


Bowling Ball Drilling Service Core Six Income Drivers



Paid Drilling Volume


Paid Drilling Volume

Paid drilling volume is the count of billed custom-drilling jobs that actually close. It is the strongest profit driver here because more jobs spread the $8,800 monthly overhead over more units and raise owner take-home when fit quality stays high. The model scales from 2,200 units in Year 1 to 6,600 in Year 5, or about 42 to 127 jobs per week.

Volume depends on booked appointments, show rate, fitting speed, and rework. Break-even is about 21 jobs per week using Year 1 ticket and margin. Missed appointments, slow fittings, league-season peaks, and rework can push cash flow down fast, even when demand looks strong.

Raise Weekly Jobs

Track weekly booked jobs, completed jobs, and rework rate. Show rate means the share of booked customers who actually arrive. If the gap between booked and completed jobs widens, owner income falls because fixed costs stay flat while revenue stalls. Keep turnaround tight before adding staff or tools.

  • Track booked-to-completed jobs weekly.
  • Cut no-shows with reminders.
  • Schedule fittings around peak league nights.
  • Log every rework cause.

Use a simple capacity check: if output slips near 21 jobs per week, overhead can outrun profit. The goal is not just more tickets; it is more paid jobs that close cleanly, on time, and with no unpaid redo.

1


Average Ticket And Add-Ons


Average Ticket And Add-Ons

Average drilling price rises from $449 in Year 1 to $481 in Year 5 as the mix shifts toward higher-end packages like $850 pro, $550 mid, and add-ons such as fitting, layout consult, inserts, thumb work, plug-redrill, and accessory kits. Here’s the quick math: at 100 jobs a month, that $32 lift adds about $3,200 in monthly revenue before supply and labor costs.

This driver helps profit because the same fitting slot can earn more without adding much capacity strain. But poor-fit upsells can hurt trust, repeat demand, and referral flow, so the owner needs the right package mix, not just a higher invoice.

Track Mix And Add-On Rate

Track package mix, add-on rate, and rework cases by technician. The key inputs are jobs sold, average ticket, and how often fitting, inserts, or thumb work are added. If ticket rises but rework also rises, the extra revenue may not reach owner pay.

  • Price each add-on separately.
  • Review upsell fit acceptance weekly.
  • Flag any rework tied to sales.
2


Gross Margin After Supplies


Gross Margin After Supplies

This driver is the gap between drilling revenue and the direct items used to deliver each job: inserts, thumb slugs, drill bits, calibration, and rework. In the model, Year 1 unit COGS totals $154,600, revenue-based COGS adds 158%, and selling variable fees add 120%. If these costs creep up, owner take-home drops even when sales hold.

Here’s the quick math: modeled gross profit is $559,097, or 566% of revenue as shown in the forecast. The risk is simple: mistakes, unpaid rework, and worn tools can eat that cushion fast. Track direct cost per job, not just monthly supply spend, or margin leaks can show up only after cash gets tight.

Cut Supply Waste Fast

Measure unit COGS as direct materials plus consumables and redo labor tied to each ball. Use the disclosed inputs: finger insert set $600, thumb slug material $550, drill bit maintenance at 0.5% of revenue, and equipment calibration at 0.6%. One clean rule: log every redo against the job that caused it.

  • Track cost per ball by package.
  • Log free rework minutes weekly.
  • Separate consumables from overhead.
  • Raise price when inputs rise.

If worn bits or fit errors rise, gross margin falls before owner pay does. Tighten fitting checks, cut scrap, and price add-ons to cover real material use. The goal is simple: keep supply cost tied to each job so more sales turns into cash, not hidden waste.

3


Fixed Shop Overhead


Fixed Shop Overhead

Fixed overhead is the monthly cost you pay before owner pay shows up. In this model, it totals $8,800 per month, or $105,600 per year, made up of $4,200 lease, $1,500 marketing, $850 software, $450 insurance, $600 utilities, and $1,200 professional services. If sales dip in a slow month, these costs still hit cash flow first.

Here’s the quick math: lower fixed overhead raises the share of revenue left for profit and owner draws, but a weak location can cut demand and erase the savings. Keep equipment upkeep and depreciation reserves separate from overhead so the shop does not run tight when tools wear out or fittings slow down. That matters most when traffic is uneven.

Track the burn rate

Measure overhead as a monthly burn rate and compare it with booked jobs and cash collected. The owner should watch the $8,800 baseline, then test which line moves with volume and which does not. The goal is simple: cover fixed costs early each month so owner income is not the last claim on cash.

  • Track lease, ads, software, insurance.
  • Watch slow-month cash coverage.
  • Reserve for tool wear and replacement.
  • Test location demand before signing long leases.

If marketing or lease costs rise faster than bookings, take-home pay drops fast. A shop with steady demand can absorb $8,800 better; a shop with weak traffic cannot. So the best control is simple: keep fixed costs lean, keep reserves funded, and do not count owner pay until overhead is covered.

4


Owner Labor Capacity


Owner Labor Capacity

Owner labor capacity is the ceiling on drilling volume before delays, mistakes, or burnout cut into income. In Year 1, the model carries $72,000 for a lead technician, $65,000 for an analysis specialist, and $38,000 for a retail associate. If the owner does the technical work, that cash stays in-house, but only until the schedule fills up.

By Year 5, payroll reaches $378,000 across 70 FTE, so labor is a major profit line, not just an operating task. Separate owner technician pay from business profit, or the draw gets blurry fast. The risk is simple: more staff can grow revenue, but if volume lags, margin and owner take-home shrink.

Track labor before it caps income

Watch jobs per tech, fitting time, rework rate, and owner hours each week. The model scales from 42 to 127 jobs per week, so labor must rise in step with booked work. If turnaround slips or fittings get inconsistent, you are already over the safe load and owner pay will feel it.

Protect margin by pushing routine retail work to the $38,000 associate and keeping the owner on high-value fitting and drilling. Forecast payroll against booked volume before hiring. Here’s the quick test: if a new FTE does not lift enough jobs to cover pay, labor is adding cost faster than it adds income.

5


Seasonality And Referral Demand


Seasonality And Referral Demand

When referrals are steady, the shop can soften the gap between league-season spikes and slow weeks, so owner pay is less jumpy. The model’s volume path rises from 42 to 127 jobs per week over five years, and that only works if demand comes from league bowlers, tournament bowlers, youth programs, coaches, and host-center relationships instead of one busy month.

What this driver includes is source mix, conversion rate, average ticket, and repeat service frequency. If one center or one season drives most jobs, cash flow swings hard, fixed costs still hit, and the owner’s take-home gets trapped in the peaks and valleys. One clean rule: more referral sources means steadier draws.

Track Referrals By Source

Use a simple referral log and break it out by source, conversion rate, average ticket, and repeat visits. That tells you which channel really pays. If league bowlers close well but youth referrals bring more repeat work, the mix matters more than raw lead count.

  • Count jobs by source each week
  • Measure booked-to-paid conversion
  • Track repeat service frequency
  • Watch one-center concentration risk

Push for a wider base of host-center relationships so slow months still cover overhead and owner pay. If one channel drops after a tournament season ends, the gap shows up fast in cash flow, not just revenue.

6



Scenario objective: Compare break-even, Year 1 base, and Year 5 high-volume owner income assumptions

Owner income scenarios

Owner income swings with job volume, ticket size, and fixed payroll. At low volume it can sit near break-even, then improve fast as the shop scales.

Low, base, and high cases show how volume and staffing change owner income.
Scenario Low CaseBreak-even Base CaseOwner-operator base High CaseScaled staffed shop
Launch model This is the lower earnings path where volume stays tight and owner pay is limited. This is the modeled owner-operator path with steady volume and a workable profit pool. This is the stronger earnings path where the shop runs at higher volume and spreads fixed costs well.
Typical setup About 1,104 jobs a year at a $449 average ticket drives roughly $496,000 of revenue, with $280,600 of fixed overhead plus payroll keeping the shop near break-even before owner distributions. About 2,200 jobs a year produces $988,500 of revenue, $559,097 of gross profit, and $278,497 of operating profit under the base operating plan. About 6,600 jobs a year drives $3,175,500 of revenue, a 596% gross margin in the model, and $1,408,821 of operating profit with a larger staffed setup.
Cost drivers
  • Job volume
  • average ticket
  • fixed overhead
  • payroll load
  • staffing efficiency
  • Job volume
  • ticket size
  • gross profit
  • labor mix
  • operating overhead
  • Job volume
  • revenue scale
  • fixed cost dilution
  • staffing scale
  • service mix
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves Near break-evenNear break-even $278,497Base profit case $1,408,821Upside scale case
Best fit Use this to stress test a slower opening year with thin owner draws. Use this if you want the most realistic staffed-shop planning case. Use this to test upside from high throughput and a fully staffed shop.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or owner distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Using the model assumptions, Year 1 revenue is $988,500 and operating profit is $278,497 before taxes, reserves, debt service, reinvestment, and owner distributions That is based on 2,200 paid units, about 42 jobs per week, and a $449 average ticket