Zac
Mediocre Designer
From an installers perspective...I started at my first sign shop as a part-time 1099 employee making $9.00 in AR where the min wage at the time was 7.25. Owner eventually went out of business and I got a job the next day at a sign manufacturer that also did a bit of retail for $10.00 an hour sweeping floor/trash/learning. After 2 years I was running the entire shop by myself when it was originally 4 guys, and making 15.00 hour salary and managing 2 other people.
After they screwed me over with salary promises, I'm now at a competitor's shop as an installer making $15.00 non-salary (only been there 2 weeks but I'm experienced) just doing vinyl/banners/wraps and it's cake work, but our owner pays everyone really well (about 20 employees, but only 2 of us are considered the sign shop guys), with no part-time people, pays full healthcare and has a company lunch every month. My old bosses were shady but this guy bought a printing company 16 years ago and had people move with him to the new location and people staying from the old business who are still there. That says a lot.
Lucky for me the old installer was pretty incompetent and lazy and the sign shop side is only 3 years old, so I'm expected to make an impression as I'm the most experienced guy. Having a boss like this gives me the motivation to make my job better by making his business better, and not questioning whether I'm getting screwed over or can make more money somewhere else by job searching. I can tell I'd like working for a lot of you as it seems to be mostly owners here (which I hope to be one day) but having a bad boss who doesn't appreciate you is not worth any amount of money. Even a good situation can turn into a sour one as business is constantly evolving and you never know what's personal and what isn't. It's communication that fixes all that.
After they screwed me over with salary promises, I'm now at a competitor's shop as an installer making $15.00 non-salary (only been there 2 weeks but I'm experienced) just doing vinyl/banners/wraps and it's cake work, but our owner pays everyone really well (about 20 employees, but only 2 of us are considered the sign shop guys), with no part-time people, pays full healthcare and has a company lunch every month. My old bosses were shady but this guy bought a printing company 16 years ago and had people move with him to the new location and people staying from the old business who are still there. That says a lot.
Lucky for me the old installer was pretty incompetent and lazy and the sign shop side is only 3 years old, so I'm expected to make an impression as I'm the most experienced guy. Having a boss like this gives me the motivation to make my job better by making his business better, and not questioning whether I'm getting screwed over or can make more money somewhere else by job searching. I can tell I'd like working for a lot of you as it seems to be mostly owners here (which I hope to be one day) but having a bad boss who doesn't appreciate you is not worth any amount of money. Even a good situation can turn into a sour one as business is constantly evolving and you never know what's personal and what isn't. It's communication that fixes all that.