Reading beyond the curriculum — written for contractors, by people who have actually run the jobs, missed the numbers, made payroll, and lived to write about it.
The best career employees do not wait to be promoted. They position themselves, build their reputation, and pursue the next opportunity before it is posted.
Apprentice → Journeyman → Foreman → General Foreman → Superintendent → Project Manager. Each rung exists. Each one pays more. None of them happen by accident.
Managing a crew of twenty is an MBA you earn with your boots on. Every skill transfers — to a bigger crew, a bigger company, or a business of your own.
Ordering materials. Managing production. Enforcing safety and policy. Running a crew of twenty. That is not a job title — that is running an operation.
Eight years in Local 472 Carpenters taught me things that no business school could. The union is not just a job — it is a system designed to grow you.
The best carpenter on the crew is not the one who swings the hammer the hardest. It is the one who stops swinging and starts leading.
Survive first. Stabilize second. Grow from strength.
Wage + burden + administrative time. The full picture before you hire.
Problems are inevitable. How you handle them determines everything.
Ten minutes of planning prevents hours of chaos.
Year One is proving the concept. Year Two is stabilization. The contractor who understands this does not panic in Month 8.
Hiring too early kills more businesses than hiring too late.
Record actual hours per task after every job. After 5-10 entries, the average becomes your production rate.
They pay for quality, reliability, and professionalism — not the lowest bid.
Before and after on every job. Visual proof is your most powerful credibility tool.
Ask every client. Make it easy. Respond to every review.
A detailed proposal communicates value. A text-message quote communicates desperation.
Five minutes on the phone saves an hour of driving.
50% margin does not mean 50% profit. It means costs × 2 — and the difference funds everything else.
The first job you overprice, the second you underprice, the third you price right — but you can't tell which is which.
You are not picking a number. You are building one from traceable components.
They come from your personal network. The lesson is about process, not skill.
Qualify, present, follow up. No pressure. No manipulation.
Google Business Profile, reviews, portfolio photos — your 24/7 sales team.
Client pays → direct costs out → remaining is 100% business money.
A $20/hour employee costs $24-28/hour. FICA, Medicare, FUTA, SUTA, workers' comp.
Areas, tasks, materials, owner labor, employee labor, buffer, margin. Guessing is not a step.
Buy what you need for the next job, not what you might need someday.
Every task has a duration. That data becomes your estimating library.
Starting while employed gives you every advantage: funded household, low risk, time to build.
The minimum hourly number below which you never work. Calculated from your life.
Six dimensions determine your opportunity. The Market Analyzer scores 600+ markets.
Financial reserves, legal structure, pricing system, pipeline, production data, family alignment.
Operating, tax reserve, personal. Prevents the most common financial crisis.
General liability, workers' comp, commercial auto, tools coverage.
Revenue, a review, and a portfolio photo. If it cannot produce all three, reconsider.
Your paycheck covers BASE. Your day job is your training ground. Use both deliberately.
The difference is structure — LLC, insurance, bank account, records, pricing system.
From predictable biweekly pay to variable monthly revenue.
Revenue is not income. A $250K business might pay you less than your old job.
Benchmarked Roadmap — Information & Development — Growth by Execution.
Both answers are valid. The key is deciding with data, not emotion.
Both answers are valid. The employed tradesperson who stays with full awareness chose wisely. The one who goes with full preparation chose wisely too.
The canyon has a bottom. Most who jump find it.
Between skilled tradesperson and business owner is a canyon of knowledge nobody talks about.
Your home and your business. For people like us, these are the wealth builders.
Before you can price a single job, you need to know one number: what your household must generate every month.
9% of businesses reach $1M. In the trades, 33% do. The opportunity is real — but the odds demand strategy.
Every skilled tradesperson hits an income ceiling. More skill stops producing more income.
Every dollar of debt raises your BASE, your floor rate, and your prices.
15.3% on top of income tax. Your employer used to pay half.
$35/hour sounds solid until you do the full annual calculation.