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Last month, I wrote an article about what dumb things contractors do, so I find it only fair to write an article about smart things contractors do.
Monroe
PORTER
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I’m not talking about the federal or some other government wage regulation. I’m talking about what is the minimum wage required to hire a worker who will show up every day, has a driver’s license and some work ethic.
The current minimum wage is $7.25 an hour but very few — if any — people will show up for that. For most areas of the country, it tends to take at least double that amount to hire entry-level workers. So how do you determine pay? Research what fast food, warehouses and other physical labor pays. If you pay below a living wage, employees cannot afford to buy a new tire, pay a ticket and other things required to make it to work. Websites can give you this number for your area. For your local wage survey, simply ask or call. Everyone is hiring. Entry-level wages have dramatically increased and advertising below that threshold will yield no applicants.
See how your search comes up on a computer that isn’t in your office. Make sure whatever the name on your truck matches what the search engine finds. Everything is going digital, make sure you are up-to-date. Hire someone to help you as the formats constantly change.
No disrespect intended. I’m an old guy easily frustrated with technology. There are a lot of young people who can help you. Some are students, some are friends’ kids, some have small businesses. Thirty years ago, I had a broken computer in my office. I was going to throw it away, but my secretary’s 12-year-old son was there, and he wanted to take a shot at fixing it. When I came back from lunch it was in 50 pieces laying on the office floor but two hours later it was fixed. He did my computer work part-time for years. Hire someone who can help you.
This could be explained in a long rambling article, but here is the simplest way to evaluate your pay system. List employees in the order of who you would layoff first, second, etc. Next, write each person’s pay by his or her name. See if the two lists match. This is a good way to evaluate someone who’s learned rapidly and deserves a raise. Don’t let the only way your up-and-coming employees can get a raise is to quit. You can also evaluate that list by grading who has the ability to become a foreman or lead person. Study the list as a whole and constantly look to improve it.
Hiring too many family members or putting them in jobs where there is a poor fit for their skills is not fair to the family member or company. Family communication styles can carry over into family business communication. Family communication tends to be emotional with some families being hot and heavy communicators and others who simply ignore things. Do your best to manage family members like you manage anyone else. Try to avoid mixing family and business discussions at family gatherings. Do your best to separate family and business.
Contractor startups are always challenged with hiring, as there is little or no employment reputation. It takes time to develop an organization. Do your best to grow or hire several key people you can build around. If you feel like there is no one in your organization you can build around, think hard about why that is. Are you hiring the wrong people? Do good people leave? You are only as good as the people around you.
Make sure your financials are in a format you understand. Also, try to record expenses with the same logic used for estimating. For example, if a superintendent is estimated as part of overhead, the cost should be recorded as overhead. If you add field hours to the estimate to cover superintendent costs, the expense should be recorded as part of field labor. Job cost each and every job. Track closing ratios by sales or estimator, foreman, project manager and type of work. Know where you make and lose money. It’s difficult to argue with math. Using math as a management guideline takes much of the emotion out of management. Business is pretty simple. You have to take in more than you spend, or you will go out of business.
Branding is built through repetition. Use the same-colored trucks, job signs, stationary, company attire, etc. throughout your organization. Remember, you want people to see your name and then search you on the web and call. Few people actually write down a phone number. Residential contractors should be visible in community events. Commercial contractors should participate in target industry functions. Remember, a value branded contractor can always discount to get work, but an unbranded contractor struggles to get premium pricing.
Monroe Porter is president of PROOF Management Consultants. He can be reached at 804-267-1688 or monroe@proofman.com.