Muggs
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- Canuckistan
Some random thoughts...
I've found that the best way to keep guys is to make sure they feel like they're learning and growing. I always say "if you're not learning at work then you are missing out on a significant portion of your compensation". I look for climbing nerds at least half as obsessed as I am. You recognize these types almost instantly, within a day or two on the job. If they're not learning then it turns into "just a job" for them.
If you want to keep guys around then you have to go hard. You can't just work when you want to. We pay salary rather than hourly so everyone is incentivized to bang out the jobs and get it done.
Most young guys who get into the trade, at least around here, are trying to learn the absolute minimum they need to know before they feel confident enough to start their own business. We call it the 2 year syndrome. They'll work for you for about 2 years before going off on their own. Just the way she goes.
That being said, not everyone is entrepreneurial minded. If you can find guys who want to work for you then you can build a good long-term business around them.
Whenever possible, don't let your employees see how much the jobs are worth. Don't let them know how much money is coming in unless you are letting them see how much is going out. This, in my opinion, is the number 1 cause of the 2 year syndrome. Young guys see how much tree work sells for, and they just think of it all as profit. They have no idea how high the expenses are on the back end...
To the original question, grow as slowly as you can tolerate. Raise your prices if you really can't keep up. Fast growth can be a recipe for disaster. What grows quickly can crumble just as fast.
I've found that the best way to keep guys is to make sure they feel like they're learning and growing. I always say "if you're not learning at work then you are missing out on a significant portion of your compensation". I look for climbing nerds at least half as obsessed as I am. You recognize these types almost instantly, within a day or two on the job. If they're not learning then it turns into "just a job" for them.
If you want to keep guys around then you have to go hard. You can't just work when you want to. We pay salary rather than hourly so everyone is incentivized to bang out the jobs and get it done.
Most young guys who get into the trade, at least around here, are trying to learn the absolute minimum they need to know before they feel confident enough to start their own business. We call it the 2 year syndrome. They'll work for you for about 2 years before going off on their own. Just the way she goes.
That being said, not everyone is entrepreneurial minded. If you can find guys who want to work for you then you can build a good long-term business around them.
Whenever possible, don't let your employees see how much the jobs are worth. Don't let them know how much money is coming in unless you are letting them see how much is going out. This, in my opinion, is the number 1 cause of the 2 year syndrome. Young guys see how much tree work sells for, and they just think of it all as profit. They have no idea how high the expenses are on the back end...
To the original question, grow as slowly as you can tolerate. Raise your prices if you really can't keep up. Fast growth can be a recipe for disaster. What grows quickly can crumble just as fast.










