Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Technician Find Community

432 members • Free

2 contributions to Technician Find Community
The $115K SALARY Tech
When a "Great" Candidate Might Still Be a Bad Business Deal. "If it doesn't work for the business, it doesn't work for anybody." -Chris I had a conversation with a shop owner this weekend that I can't stop thinking about. He found a tech who checked almost every box: → European and exotic car experience → Worked at two shops known for phenomenal quality → Sharp diagnostic skills (impressed the shop foreman in the interview) → Family man, stable, asked great questions in the interview → Even owned his own shop before, so he gets the business side The guy wanted $115K salary. Straight salary. No flat rate. No hybrid. And the shop owner was ready to say yes. Then we started peeling back the layers. The first yellow flag: "I need all my vacation and sick days available immediately—10 days—because my wife is having a baby in February and we don't have anyone else to watch the kids." Okay, understandable. Life happens. The second yellow flag: "I can't come in for a working interview. I don't have any personal days left at my current job." Wait. You have 10 personal days where you are... but none left? Where did they go? The third yellow flag: "The shop is slow, that's why I'm leaving." But when the owner texted him during work hours, the response came hours later with "sorry, been slammed." Slow... but slammed? Here's what hit me: This shop owner—like a lot of us—was already mentally problem-solving how to make it work for the tech. "Maybe I can front him the days.""Maybe I can start him at full salary during the 90-day period.""Maybe he just needs a chance." And I get it. When you've been grinding for months trying to find someone, and a candidate finally shows up who seems like the answer... you want to believe. But I asked him a question that stopped him cold: "What happens to the whole shop if he starts, goes on paternity leave, takes his sick days, and you're paying $2,200/week for someone who hasn't turned a wrench in 60 days?" Silence. Here's the thing nobody tells you about hiring:
1 like • 3d
This one hits home. I’ve been that guy - mentally bending the business to make a “great” candidate work because I was tired of staring at an empty bay. I mean, could you blame me? I'm losing $2,000 every day that bay goes empty. And every time I’ve done that, it’s cost me more than just money. The $115K ask isn’t the real issue. Good techs should make good money. The issue is when all the risk lands on the shop before a single billed hour is proven. Salary, upfront time off, no working interview… that’s a lot to carry on good faith alone. But Chris, what I like about the “let’s prove it together” approach is that it’s fair to everyone. Clear numbers, a clear timeline, and a clear path to the goal. That protects the tech and the business.
WELCOME NEW COMMUNITY MEMBERS!
In order to get acquainted and and help fellow community members, please share: 1. The name and location of your shop. 2. Your biggest frustration with finding techs. 3. How you found your last tech.
1 like • 3d
Hiya Mike here: 1. Owner of Mike's Shop 2. Oh man, my biggest frustration has to do with reaching out to techs and not hearing back from them (even when they seemed very interested) 3. My last tech came from a referral from my master tech
1-2 of 2
Mike Todd
1
3points to level up
@mike-todd-1992
Mike Todd | Owner of Mike's Shop

Active 19h ago
Joined Dec 22, 2025
Powered by