Where to find part-time workers without paying for expensive job postings?
Has anybody used Indeed or another site to hire part-time workers for landscape/gardening work? It looks like Indeed wants $55/day minimum to list job postings. That's pretty expensive for us. What are other small businesses doing to find workers?37Views1like15CommentsWhat are the best hiring platforms to find qualified workers?
What hiring platforms to you use to find qualified workers I've done Indeed, craigslist, Facebook and other social ads. But no serious suiters. The best thing that's been and always has worked is word of mouth from current employees. Any suggestions.................30Views1like1CommentWhat kind of employee bonuses are you offering your team?
I recently listened to this Masters of Home Service episode with Cory Byron (WiringByron). It got me thinking, how are you all handling employee bonuses? Has your current approach improved team performance, or have you faced challenges? Share your experience below! Give the episode a listen if you want to learn about: Building a simple bonus system that's easy to manage Common issues a bonus plan can address How regular communication keeps your team motivated Never miss an episode of Masters of Home Service. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
18Views1like1CommentHow to compensate employees for mileage and drive time between jobs?
Howdy y'all, we're looking for new and/or experienced cleaners in Austin, TX and given the expanse of our service area (drives could be up to 50 miles) I'm trying to source cleaners who live in all four quadrants of the Greater Austin area. [Any recommendations of folks who would make great employees in my area, please shoot me a message!] Understanding that there are a multitude of ways to compensate for mileage or drive time, I'm curious who has found a balance between efficiency and cost. Say a cleaner does 3 cleans in a day and goes directly from home to their first job, and from the last job back to home. Those first and last are 'commute' drives, so we could calculate either a) the distance between jobs 1, 2, and 3, and pay per mile , or b) record the time of arrival at job 1 and the time of completion at job 3, and instead of paying per mile offer an extra $1 or $2 per hour rate so that it is all encompassing. Love to hear your thoughts - thank you!72Views5likes3CommentsPros and Cons: Hiring an Employee or Contractor in a Cleaning Business
Our Business has been around for 10 years, and the most painful area has been when we hire contractors and begging poaching customers. We always have to have a plan in place, but when they start acting and we have to run and put fires down some areas in the operation are affected greatly. ]Any Input? Advise or similar experiences?57Views0likes4CommentsThe Quickest Firing I've Ever Done (And What I Should Have Done Differently)
In the trades, we talk a lot about "hire slow, fire fast." I've lived by that principle — long applications, phone screens, in-person interviews, and working alongside our team for a couple of shifts before anyone flies solo. As a skilled labor company, I need to know someone is reliable before I trust them on their own. So when I let someone go recently after just a handful of days, it wasn't a surprise to me. What was a surprise was how much of that situation I had created myself. Here's what happened: I'd gone through the full process with a candidate who looked great on paper — strong experience, excellent finish work, exactly the shower remodeler we were looking for. There was a lot of back and forth on his start date since he was wrapping up another project, and when he finally said he could start on a Friday, I jumped at it even though my schedule was a mess that day. Instead of doing a proper onboarding, I handed him off to my operations manager and told myself we'd sort out the details later. We didn't sit down together to go over expectations, I never walked him through Jobber, and — maybe worst of all — I never confirmed that his new hire paperwork was actually completed. I sent it. I just never followed up. He worked a couple of shifts and the feedback was decent — promising, but still being evaluated. Then Tuesday came, and because we hadn't properly briefed him on the schedule or made sure he understood how our system works, he showed up to a unit turnover job with no context. He felt blindsided, and honestly, I get it — he came on as a bathroom remodeler. His reaction, though, was the problem: attitude with the crew, visibly disengaged at our team meeting, and a text to me saying he couldn't trust us. That was enough. I let him go, and I'm confident it was the right call — his attitude made it clear it wasn't going to work. But I also have to be honest: we didn't give him — or ourselves — a fair shot. The lesson I'm taking away isn't just "fire fast." It's that hiring slow has to extend all the way through onboarding. I was so eager to get him into the pipeline that I skipped the very steps that exist for good reason. If I couldn't carve out the time to do a proper onboarding — paperwork signed, systems explained, expectations laid out clearly — I should have pushed the start date until I could. Going forward, I'm building out a simple onboarding checklist so that no matter how busy things get, nothing gets skipped just because I'm stretched thin. A great hire can become a problem hire real fast when you don't set them up to succeed.26Views1like2CommentsHow do you handle coverage when employees are out on vacation?
We’re dealing with this right now. Our best employee is moving out of state, which already puts us in a transition period. At the same time, 2 of our employees are taking vacation, so we’re going to be under capacity for the next few days. That means my wife and I are picking up the slack. And realistically, it’s going to be some very long days of scoops. This is one of those parts of running a route-based business that doesn’t get talked about enough. When everything is fully staffed, the schedule looks fine. Then one person leaves, someone gets sick, someone has PTO, the weather throws things off, or a route runs long, and suddenly you realize how thin the operation actually is. I don’t blame employees for taking time off. People need vacations. They have families, lives, and things outside of work. But as the owner, you still have to figure out how to protect the customer experience when capacity drops. A few things I’m thinking through right now: how much extra capacity should we have built into the schedule? when should we stop accepting new jobs temporarily? when does it make sense for owners to jump back in? how much notice should we require for vacation requests? should we cross-train more people across routes? how do we avoid burning out the rest of the team when someone is gone? The hard part is that smaller service businesses usually do not have a deep bench. One or 2 people being gone can completely change the week. This is also making me think more seriously about building routes and hiring plans around capacity gaps, not just normal weeks. Because normal weeks are easy to plan for. The stressful weeks expose the weak spots. When employees are on vacation or you’re temporarily short-staffed, do you: - reschedule customers? - have owners cover the work? - limit new jobs? - bring in part-time help? - build extra capacity into the schedule year-round? - something else?64Views1like7CommentsThoughts on hiring experienced workers ($$$), or newbies ($) for a new/small business
I am a small fine gardening business and am seeing the need to hire someone to take over the lions share of my day to day position out in the field. I have a part time person who works with me 2 days/week and they came to me knowing very little of the work. I don't trust them to go to sites without me over and over because their knowledge and skills are not there yet. Question is: do I spend more money and hire a knowledgeable person with extensive horticultural knowledge that I would have more confidence in (but also a higher risk of them leaving to go work on their own as many of us do in this biz), or do I find another newbie and try to give that a go again? Thank you! The goal is to free up my time to do more business and design work in the office rather than be out in the field every day and do office work in the evenings.116Views4likes7CommentsClaim your Territory!
Hello Jobber Community, My name is Mario Visin, Founder of Group7 Home Services LLC. We joined the Jobber community with a spirit of collaboration, learning, and service to the home services professionals who keep our homes, neighborhoods, and communities running. I believe the home services industry is entering one of the most important seasons in its history. Blue-collar workers are becoming entrepreneurs by the thousands. Handymen, roofers, painters, landscapers, installers, restoration experts, and specialty trade professionals are no longer just working jobs — they are building businesses, serving families, and creating the foundation for generational opportunity. The home services industry represents hundreds of billions of dollars in economic activity each year. Large suppliers, big-box retailers, and national construction brands have created tremendous wealth from this industry. Yet the heart of the industry has always been the person swinging the hammer, climbing the ladder, knocking the door, answering the emergency call, and doing the work that homeowners depend on. That person is you. That person is me. That person is the blue-collar professional who deserves better systems, better connection, better opportunity, and a clearer path toward building a meaningful life through the trades. One thing I have noticed across many industries is that people often struggle to connect with one another in ways that truly make a difference. We are entering a time where connection and community will matter more than ever. The future will not only belong to the biggest brands or the largest companies. It will belong to those who learn how to connect, serve, collaborate, and build trust with one another. At Group7 Home Services, we are designing a Live-Work-Play vision for the trades — a curriculum and platform strategy focused on helping home services professionals serve one another, grow together, and build wealth through shared relationships, better systems, referral opportunities, and a service-first mindset. This is not just about jobs. It is about lifestyle. It is about family. It is about creating a future so compelling that the next generation sees the trades as a path of pride, ownership, entrepreneurship, and purpose. Strategy matters. Systems matter. Technology matters. But the real transformation begins when good people come together with humility, discipline, and a desire to serve the need before serving the self. I believe larger technology companies serving the trades, including platforms like Jobber, play an important role in this new era. The right technology can help blue-collar entrepreneurs run smoother businesses, communicate better with customers, organize their teams, and create more professional experiences for the homeowners they serve. But technology alone is not the full answer. The real power comes when technology, community, service, craftsmanship, and vision meet at the same table. Group7’s broader mission is Building Thriving Cities by helping people connect around housing, entrepreneurship, education, and local economic opportunity. We believe the home services professional has a major role to play in that transformation because every strong city begins with strong homes, strong workers, strong families, and strong relationships. I am a visionary, and I understand that vision must be protected, refined, and shared with care. But I also believe the home services industry is ready for a new conversation — one centered on dignity, ownership, connection, and a higher conscious level of capitalism where the smaller parts come together to create something greater than any one person could build alone. The big brands we know today started with a dream, a strategy, and a willingness to work for decades. The next great wave of wealth creation may come from like-minded people linking their common threads together, weaving a much larger blanket of opportunity for families, workers, entrepreneurs, and communities. Being part of a community is just the beginning. How we connect matters. Relationships are everything. Work like your life depends on it. Best, Mario Visin Founder, Group7 Home Services LLC16Views0likes0CommentsWhen do you know when to start hiring?
Here at GB Plumbing, we knew we should be starting to hire when we were working over 70 hours a week and not seeing any slow down with jobs coming in. We’re now up to 3 trucks, and are looking to hire again as things continue to keep growing and we want to continue to provide more services to our community.2.1KViews6likes18Comments