our 12 dollar guy is moving on, his primary responsibility is infrastructure/tower work and backup installer. We have an option of going with a subcontractor thats got value
outside of a contract he will give use a 12 man hour day for around 850 per day, inside a contract we can bring that cost down dramatically as long as it is a use it lose it time based contract of around 30 12 man hour days per year. Realistically, I get maybe 12-20 hours labor time out of our 12 dollar guy per week, and the subcontractor can do the 20 hours in the 12. I even subcontract to him myself on the side, and I like the guys he crews. If I give them a clear scope of work, i dont question it will be completed the way I want. Im already prebuilding the majority of anything that goes out here in the shop, the 12 dollar guy just hangs and pulls cable for the most part or calls in while n site and I walk him through maintenance or whatever. Im just trying to decide whether or not to recommend hiring a replacement. There is alot of lost value with his exit, but its lost anyway regardless of whether we rehire. I have to train the replacement on anything that was of value like i did with this guy. I cant count on the installer to man up and pick up the slack, its not even an avenue thats worth a time investment. The way I look at it, since we do have a trustworthy subcontractor, I would rather see the expense of an hourly guy applied to growing than to paying another mope to sit idle most of the time. It puts a heavier load on me because I would have to start climbing towers again, but we are on so few towers its negligible and I will have to pick up all the unschedulable work which will push my day to day back into the evenings, but that might be a good thing since it will cut into my alcoholism time and preserve my liver. In you guys experience, in this case what would you recommend? My thoughts are as above while keeping our eyes open for a value add guy to put on the team if we find one, like if jaime decided to move up here and take a little paycut, might even be able to get the boss to go up to 12.25 for you jaime On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 9:32 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote: > +1 > > *From:* Adam Moffett <[email protected]> > *Sent:* Wednesday, March 09, 2016 7:20 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Yearly cost of a full time employee > > Yeah I was gonna say double was the rule of thumb I was given. > > > On 3/9/2016 9:15 PM, Paul McCall wrote: > > Multiply by 1.8 to 2.0 depending if there are benefits. > > > > *From:* Af [mailto:[email protected] <[email protected]>] *On > Behalf Of *That One Guy /sarcasm > *Sent:* Wednesday, March 09, 2016 9:08 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [AFMUG] Yearly cost of a full time employee > > > > If you have a 12 dollar an hour guy, what's the overall cost of that > employee in real dollars on average annually? I assume it varies by state, > and incidental benefits. But straight wage and average secondary costs with > no benefits. Is there an employer calculator out there for this sort of > thing? > > > -- If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.
