A couple of years ago a friend's son had just graduated from tech school with an auto mechanics certificate. He was on the fence about what job to take. I pointed him to a local dealer group that offers a tool allowance of $750/year for HF, Snap On, or Matco (your choice). $750 is given up front and annually for a total of $2250 after 2 years. And they have a nicely fleshed out info. webpage for new techs outlining their program where they get to be mentored under a 30 year ASE certified master technician.
I thought that is an awesome idea to attract new technicians into the field. My dad was a mechanic all his life and was trained in Army in 1960s and was a mechanic the rest of his life until 2015 when he was still working part time. Anyway he had some horror stories about how new techs are treated at dealerships. My dad had his own shop 90% of the time but sometimes worked for other businesses. A Chevy and a Ford dealer at 2 different times.
There was a young man in stall next to him at the Chevy dealer who was having trouble with an engine rebuild. My dad would go over once every couple of hours if he was having problems. He did this after his first rebuild was not right. He was on his 2nd rebuild of the same engine. And since it is flat rate, the kid's check would be abysmal. The service manager got angry and told my dad to get back to work. My dad quit. It was a toxic environment.
A tool program for new techs just seems like a great idea -- shows you care, you are helping insure your new techs have some crucial tools they may not have otherwise, it's a tax write off for the business, etc.. The mentoring of new techs is even better than the tool allowance program.
And with the Icon line of tools at HF now, that $750 can buy quite a lot of quality tools. Or if the new tech is really short on tools, perhaps go for the Quinn sets. Then later replace with better stuff.
I thought that is an awesome idea to attract new technicians into the field. My dad was a mechanic all his life and was trained in Army in 1960s and was a mechanic the rest of his life until 2015 when he was still working part time. Anyway he had some horror stories about how new techs are treated at dealerships. My dad had his own shop 90% of the time but sometimes worked for other businesses. A Chevy and a Ford dealer at 2 different times.
There was a young man in stall next to him at the Chevy dealer who was having trouble with an engine rebuild. My dad would go over once every couple of hours if he was having problems. He did this after his first rebuild was not right. He was on his 2nd rebuild of the same engine. And since it is flat rate, the kid's check would be abysmal. The service manager got angry and told my dad to get back to work. My dad quit. It was a toxic environment.
A tool program for new techs just seems like a great idea -- shows you care, you are helping insure your new techs have some crucial tools they may not have otherwise, it's a tax write off for the business, etc.. The mentoring of new techs is even better than the tool allowance program.
And with the Icon line of tools at HF now, that $750 can buy quite a lot of quality tools. Or if the new tech is really short on tools, perhaps go for the Quinn sets. Then later replace with better stuff.