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-   -   Need to hire another technician (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1070179-need-hire-another-technician.html)

Shaun @ Tru6 08-13-2020 05:03 PM

Need to hire another technician
 
I'm looking to hire another technician. Have one great guy but work keeps coming in and need at least one more and probably another starting 2021. If anyone knows of someone with the qualifications below, please have him/her contact me. There's a lot of potential in the position for the right person. My tech started 6 months ago at $15/hr and will hit $25/hr by the end of the month. He wrote the ad below.

Restoration Technician
Tru6 Restoration & Design is looking for a Restoration Technician to join our team. Tru6 is an automotive restoration company specializing in restoring parts for air-cooled Porsche 911s and 50s-70s vintage Ferrari's. We also do work for other Porsche models, as well as BMW and Mercedes.

We are looking for someone who is extremely detail-oriented. Restoring 30-50 year old parts to the standard of Tru6 requires a good eye and a close attention to detail at every step of each process. We pride ourselves in making each part that comes through our door as close to factory new as possible or most times better.

At Tru6, it’s our greatest satisfaction seeing an old beat up part restored to the beauty it once was, and we have fun doing it. We take great pride in holding ourselves to the finest standards in the industry. If this sounds like you, please apply.

The Restoration Technician must be able to
• pay attention to fine details and be extremely thorough at every stage
• have patience, and be willing to go back and redo parts that can be done better.
• take criticism in a positive way, and act on it.
• enjoy the process

The Restoration Technician will be responsible for:
• checking in parts that are shipped in: unpacking, taking detailed pictures, sorting
• cleaning dirt, oils, paints and sealants off of parts, including small hardware like bolts, nuts, screws, etc., using a variety of different chemicals
• sanding or grinding rust off of parts, and sometimes reshaping parts
• using a media blaster to remove rust, oxidized metal, or other impurities from metal surfaces.
• using acid to remove old plating from parts
• developing sanding techniques to shape parts and remove imperfections.

Beyond the basics, there are growth opportunities in Cerakote application and complete car restoration.

Starting pay is $15-$20 an hour with opportunities for raises based on performance.

mattdavis11 08-13-2020 05:38 PM

Wow. No offense, but dairy queen hires at $12 an hour to flip burgers here. And after Mass taxes, what is that $3.25 per hour that you are offering?

You can't find any good help in Texas for that, and every is lower, taxes, housing, etc...

No offense, but I would not apply.

harvardma 08-13-2020 05:45 PM

In our manufacturing location west of Boston we are hiring in new people at $15/hr with good opportunities for growth. It is definitely not easy to find the right candidates as like Shaun we are looking for people with the right attitude. We have been successful bringing on board 3 people since June so they are out there.

asphaltgambler 08-13-2020 05:49 PM

I think it is an excellent opportunity for a either a young person who wants to break into a speciality area in the business as opposed to changing tires / oil at a chain store - OR - someone who is retired that has that experience and desires to do something useful.

john70t 08-13-2020 05:59 PM

I disagree with about ninety percent of what he believes in that other forum and the fifty year old me would probably want to end the day in fisticuffs. And as a LL I'd be kicking him out in a jiffy for hot wiring my building. ;)

But the younger me would leap at the chance to work in that environment for as long as I could take it and if money was not the main issue. Shaun is driven, demanding and a perfectionist. It shows. That is more of a life experience and a building block for those motivated. There is a lot to learn there.

masraum 08-13-2020 06:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by john70t (Post 10984748)
I disagree with about ninety percent of what he believes in that other forum and the fifty year old me would probably want to end the day in fisticuffs. And as a LL I'd be kicking him out in a jiffy for hot wiring my building. ;)

But the younger me would leap at the chance to work in that environment for as long as I could take it and if money was not the main issue. Shaun is driven, demanding and a perfectionist. It shows. That is more of a life experience and a building block for those motivated. There is a lot to learn there.

I try to stay away from the politics around here completely, and try to forget anything that I see that folks are involved in. PARFy subjects can bring out the worst in folks that are otherwise great people.

I have no doubt that working for him would be very educational and could lead to many great things later in life. Working at McD may pay almost as much, but what are the odds that you could make a good career out of it. If I could choose McDs or working for Shaun as a young man, I'd hope to work for Shaun for sure.

masraum 08-13-2020 06:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mattdavis11 (Post 10984728)
Wow. No offense, but dairy queen hires at $12 an hour to flip burgers here. And after Mass taxes, what is that $3.25 per hour that you are offering?

You can't find any good help in Texas for that, and every is lower, taxes, housing, etc...

No offense, but I would not apply.

So if you were 18-25 and looking for an entry level job, you'd prefer McDs over doing what Shaun does?

jyl 08-13-2020 09:06 PM

Dairy Queen won’t move you to $25/hr after six months if you prove yourself.

aigel 08-13-2020 10:29 PM

It is "Ferraris". A detailed oriented technician will tell you that right away. :D

More unsolicited advice:
I know it isn't going to work too well with only one employee, but the best hires are referrals. Offer your employees a referral bonus to be paid if the referral is in good standing after x months. If you have a good work environment, your employees will be glad to recommend the company to a friend or former coworker.

Glad to see this take off so well for you. People restoring 100k+ cars will not be the first ones running out of play money either.

G

ckelly78z 08-14-2020 01:40 AM

Good luck finding some good help. Hopefully some young guy with a good work ethic will see the opportunity here to work on cool, exotic cars, in a good environment.

So many entry level jobs are in a toxic environment, it's no wonder that folks would rather stay home collecting unemployment.

wdfifteen 08-14-2020 01:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mattdavis11 (Post 10984728)
Wow. No offense, but dairy queen hires at $12 an hour to flip burgers here. And after Mass taxes, what is that $3.25 per hour that you are offering?

You can't find any good help in Texas for that, and every is lower, taxes, housing, etc...

No offense, but I would not apply.

$12 an hour to flip burgers or $15 to $20 to do something interesting. If I was an entry level worker it would be a no brainer for me.

LWJ 08-14-2020 02:51 AM

Congrats on growing the biz!!!

mattdavis11 08-14-2020 03:44 AM

Entry level welding at a tool & die here in town is $24 per hour with opportunities for promotions. The owner will even let you fabricate some of your own things (on the side) to make a few more $$.

Parts guys at body shops make more than $15-20 per hour here, sit in an air conditioned office, don't get dirty and have health insurance. I bet most in that position didn't start out washing cars for the body shop.

Maybe it's just a really depressed labor market up there in Mass. Wouldn't fly down here.

Glad to hear you are growing!

Bob Kontak 08-14-2020 06:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 10984767)
I have no doubt that working for him would be very educational and could lead to many great things later in life.

+1

Shaun would be easy to manage. Just like that meme, let him know he's being unreasonable and he'll calm right down.

flipper35 08-14-2020 06:44 AM

Dad is retired and would take that in a heartbeat. Well, he would have 5 years ago.

Zeke 08-14-2020 07:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aigel;10984904[B
]It is "Ferraris".[/B] A detailed oriented technician will tell you that right away. :D

More unsolicited advice:
I know it isn't going to work too well with only one employee, but the best hires are referrals. Offer your employees a referral bonus to be paid if the referral is in good standing after x months. If you have a good work environment, your employees will be glad to recommend the company to a friend or former coworker.

Glad to see this take off so well for you. People restoring 100k+ cars will not be the first ones running out of play money either.

G

That's getting technical for sure. Just for the fun of it — when you pluralize 911 it is allowed to use 911's because it eliminates confusion from what could be construed to be a 911 S, or 911S as it is badged (not a real word). A perfect example is, "Don’t forget to dot all your i’s. Otherwise it would read, "Don’t forget to dot all your is".

He could have said, "...Ferrari's parts." ;):D

sugarwood 08-14-2020 08:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mattdavis11 (Post 10984728)
Wow. No offense, but dairy queen hires at $12 an hour to flip burgers here. And after Mass taxes, what is that $3.25 per hour that you are offering?

You can't find any good help in Texas for that, and every is lower, taxes, housing, etc...

.

There's nothing wrong with posting a minimum wage ad. He just needs to have the realistic expectations. As long as he know's you do not get Ivy League work ethic while paying minimum wage. You can't expect people getting paid minimum wage to perform anything beyond minimal work. You get what you pay for. Reliable, thoughtful, competent people are not hard to find. However, they don't work for minimum wage. And that is ok.

billybek 08-14-2020 08:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lwj (Post 10984954)
congrats on growing the biz!!!

+1

flipper35 08-14-2020 10:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sugarwood (Post 10985251)
There's nothing wrong with posting a minimum wage ad. He just needs to have the realistic expectations. As long as he know's you do not get Ivy League work ethic while paying minimum wage. You can't expect people getting paid minimum wage to perform anything beyond minimal work. You get what you pay for. Reliable, thoughtful, competent people are not hard to find. However, they don't work for minimum wage. And that is ok.

I would take young guy willing to work over Ivy League work ethic.

sugarwood 08-14-2020 10:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flipper35 (Post 10985441)
I would take young guy willing to work over Ivy League work ethic.

Ivy league work ethic is the very definition of people willing to bust their ass to the extreme. No one works harder.


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