Not really, most of my clients are well to do.
I hope it won't be. Hr hasn't been my strong suit. We actually hired a PEO to take over because I suck at it, but it hasn't been implemented yet.
This person needs to hold a rope idk. I mean I can do stuff alone. I'd make more money doing sales for someone else if that's the case though. What's the point in being a glorified one man show?
Different stroke for different folks.
I'm not suggesting you be a glorified one-man show.
A burnt out show is no good.
Are you trying to grow at an organic and sustainable pace?
I'm curious what you are looking for from your employee. Do they work around pruning/ removal/ grinding cleanup 95% of the time?
Do they drive? Prune? Fell? Grind? Bucket op?
I was surprised to hear from one owner that washes his own truck, not the employee.
Some people only use an employee for job site things, I guess.
I use them for basic shop maintenance, as well.
There's an local, solo arborist who has done only ground-based pruning for a very long time with a BC625 and a Tundra. I saw his rig the other day... met him 15 years ago, once. He used to climb. Some injuries and bad experiences worrying for others, something, something.
I do lots of solo work because it pays the bill, continues to expand my client base, it's so super chill, scheduling is easy, and I never spend time or energy changing plans if an employee is unexpectedly unavailable. Lots of stuff is too much to ask another a person to do (important felling,
heavy rigging, machine- feeding the chipper).
I take days off when I feel like it. If I want to take an overnight, weekday rock climbing trip, I do without being concerned about what's happening at work.
4 weeks off this summer for family time.
When I do have good help, I'm happy. I stay away from any problem employees because I never Need them. If they don't want to work safely and predictably, communicate well, and be reliable, they can go down the road. No worries.
I don't want fancy new (finicky, hard to fix) machines, and I can replace anything, if needed, right away with a dealer's machine.
Overall, my best employees were short timers pursueing training or education. My current employee is an engineering student. He doesn't have training or experience but he is smart and can be trained for simpler things.
It's tough to have top of the line equipment and nobody to operate it, while having payments to make.
IME, so much is personal preferences and tailoring to your market in running your business.
Does your market support/ require your service levels? It sounds like it might, if your in with enough of the right people.
Where are you advertising?
What do you have in your knowledge bank about housing for incoming employees? Schools? Other employment opportunities for an employees partner.
Giving out-of-towners some resources might help them explore.
Right this minute, customers of mine have a rental house available that is literally walking distance to work, like 0.5 miles. WorkSource is a WA State employment agency.
We have lots of State and City jobs locally that could match an employees' partner.
We have a community college, state college and private college in town.