How To Start In The Skilled Trades | Who Makes The Most Money | THE HANDYMAN |

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The Handyman Business

The Handyman Business

3 жыл бұрын

This is the business management app I use to run my business go.getjobber.com/thehandymanb... Let me know how you like it.
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Пікірлер: 3 000
@DucNguyen-bd5ir
@DucNguyen-bd5ir 3 жыл бұрын
This is an exceptionally concise, accurate, and reality based analysis of the industry. It will help hundred of young people truly understand what they need to do to make a living in the construction trades. The funny thing ... everything you stated is also valid in the lower to mid tier of the IT and IS industries. Thank you. I am going to make sure I send this to a few young men and women I know.
@internet2812
@internet2812 3 жыл бұрын
As someone who works in the IT industry, yet spends my "free time" fixing properties and doing renovations, I agree 100%. The only difference is that the certificates mentioned in this video sound a whole lot more valuable than a 4-year college diploma. The biggest takeaway is that new people in any industry need to start at the bottom, and work your way up. There are not shortcuts for hard work, and doing it the right way. No matter the trade, installing drywall or computer operating systems, find a mentor and work hard to be successful. Also, don't start in an industry that doesn't have room to grow.
@bowmanjeff8
@bowmanjeff8 3 жыл бұрын
@@internet2812 I couldn't agree more
@rdot980
@rdot980 3 жыл бұрын
@@internet2812 I work in IT and spend free time fixing/renovating too.
@triplea6174
@triplea6174 3 жыл бұрын
@@rdot980 which job/area in the it/computer world would you guys recommend to study, obtain. As I would like to have a back up plan in case I get injured.
@touyang2846
@touyang2846 3 жыл бұрын
@@internet2812 they don't tell you that in grade school...
@rhetthathaway1593
@rhetthathaway1593 2 жыл бұрын
Late bloomer here. Started as a plumbing apprentice at age 28 making $15 bucks an hour. Age 31 now and just made 6 figures as a residential service plumber! Best decision I’ve ever made.
@waynewayne8419
@waynewayne8419 2 жыл бұрын
Good stuff dude!
@user-ls4wm9jj1v
@user-ls4wm9jj1v 2 жыл бұрын
I’m 25. Good to know it’s not too late
@bdaley11145
@bdaley11145 2 жыл бұрын
I’m 28! This is super motivating. All my life I felt like a late bloomer
@able5119
@able5119 2 жыл бұрын
Residential? Tf, good shit man
@BlklimitedX
@BlklimitedX 2 жыл бұрын
You don’t know me but this is the comment that just changed my life. I’m 29 working at the post office and am considering switching careers into plumbing with a buddy of mine. I was worried that having been in the post office for 8 years now and almost 30 it’d be to late to switch but I’m finding the courage and motivation to do it.
@rainshadow5795
@rainshadow5795 2 жыл бұрын
Haha “17, 18, 19 years old” dude I’m 27 and still don’t know what I’m doing. Thanks for the video
@juancho1269
@juancho1269 3 ай бұрын
What are you now?
@Hockey567899
@Hockey567899 3 ай бұрын
maybe he died@@juancho1269
@mountassaralimi8884
@mountassaralimi8884 3 ай бұрын
Same here
@Mechabang
@Mechabang 3 ай бұрын
33 and wanting to enroll into tech school. Looking at welding for both the trade and creative possibilities.
@rainshadow5795
@rainshadow5795 2 ай бұрын
@@juancho1269 I’m an arborist. It’s too dangerous for the money follow this guys advice while you can
@multiskilledelectrician1
@multiskilledelectrician1 Жыл бұрын
I am an electrician from Ghana 🇬🇭 West Africa. So I went through apprenticeship training for 5 years without pay but something small to support me in feeding whiles at the job. I graduated in 2010, worked for few private companies that doesn't pay you for your worth but I did it all for the experience. Now I have my own small electrical company, have 3 apprentices that I take good care of, and though from a 3rd world country I make some good money. I've never regretted going on the path of artisan.
@GJKLEE
@GJKLEE Жыл бұрын
Congratulations to you.. THAT'S GREAT NEWS
@multiskilledelectrician1
@multiskilledelectrician1 Жыл бұрын
@@GJKLEE yes, thank you!
@dogeofamp6037
@dogeofamp6037 Жыл бұрын
Nice man heck yah keep it up your more important than those dumb celebrities that for sure
@jasonk7921
@jasonk7921 Жыл бұрын
Good stuff just don’t send Americans any email abt your uncle passing away and giving away millions
@multiskilledelectrician1
@multiskilledelectrician1 Жыл бұрын
@@dogeofamp6037 thank you!
@stevenjover5840
@stevenjover5840 2 жыл бұрын
Plumbing saved my life . Have 3 kids and I am 27 years old. I’ve worked for warehouses, Restaurants, concrete, Tile and honestly plumbing was what did it for me . Been in the trade 10 months exactly bought my tools the first month I started it was tough it was hard it was nasty but now I work smarter I gained the trust of my journeymen and other techs and took something I liked and put it into my own craft it’s gotten to a point where we rough a house I’m doing my own thing and the journeyman is doing another you gain that confidence. Please choose a trade and I promise you your life will change forever not only in your financial status but your mental too . Love the channel just subscribed!!
@solaropposite6112
@solaropposite6112 2 жыл бұрын
Trade school or HVAC?
@matthewwax4434
@matthewwax4434 Жыл бұрын
@@solaropposite6112 get an apprenticeship that will pay for your schooling that’s what I’m gonna do
@jplaza7210
@jplaza7210 Жыл бұрын
Why not tile
@chadwolf5596
@chadwolf5596 10 ай бұрын
I'm a journeyman plumber and gasfitter, I'm about to pay my home off cash because of my trade. It pays off in the end , no one wants to work hard
@GIUL7301
@GIUL7301 10 ай бұрын
Good for you. Keep it going. I've been in the trades 51 years. Contractor now, semi retired working about 700 hours a year making $40, 000 after taxes. I don't have to work but more of a hobby now. It's FUN now. Mostly I frame stairs, cut conventional roofs and layout. I don't carry material but it still keeps my gut flat. Best part I get to pass on my knowledge.
@Steve-yj4kp
@Steve-yj4kp 3 жыл бұрын
My dad was a plumber in Laguna Beach, California for 36 years. Everyday I ask myself why I did not follow in his footsteps. All that money and time wasted on college, stockbroker licenses, etc. He died in 2002 and the majority of the people who attended the funeral church service were his customers. I used to work with him in the 70's, 80's. and 90's. And all of those kids who gave me a hard time in middle school saying things like "your dad just sticks his hand in toilets all day long", and other nasty things. I never saw him do that. Really wonder where those people are now at age 55. Please do not put down this career. You will make a lot of money.
@McOwnagez
@McOwnagez 3 жыл бұрын
My dad is a Pipefitter, His dad was a pipefitter. I do HVAC they both switched into the HVAC commerical side after 20 years of wielding so I figured I could skip 20 years of time an get right into it. Man did I make the right choice. I'm turning 25 in July. I get my journeyman card in June, both my grandfather an my father have good lives built off of hardwork.
@ricksflicks-
@ricksflicks- 3 жыл бұрын
Competent tradesmen are the backbone of the whole damn society. A Hollywood actor or NFL player or rockstar isn't going to save you when your basement is flooded. Good plumbers are incredibly important. I really wish i would have learned a useful trade at an early age.
@justinwinkler450
@justinwinkler450 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a pipefitter. My dad's a pipe welder/fitter and my grandfather was a fitter. I make pretty decent money. I'm getting 32 an hour and 140 a day per diem. Anything over 8 hours a day is time and a half. Saturday is automatic time and half and Sundays are automatic double time. It's not the same on every job. But I usually won't even put my boots on for less then 28.
@oscarbear7498
@oscarbear7498 2 жыл бұрын
I went to college bachelor's in chemistry, feel like I wasted my early 20's. I wanted to become a welder or electrician but my parents saw it as fools work, that only a college degree is worthwhile. College is garbage 🗑😪, most professors are garbage to busy with research to teach the class so your left watching KZbin or having someone (teaching assistant) teach you. It's typically not about you learning it's a competition where the bottom end fails. In some classes you have to cheat.. like straight up cheat in exams because even the brightest of students score a 50 on the exam and the 2 fraternity students who were drunk the night before get perfect 100 scores by having the answers to the exam before taking it :( It's stupid. I met too many depressed PhD students and PhD Post Doctoral working making shit pay. Like less then 35k a year. wtf
@MVP_13
@MVP_13 2 жыл бұрын
Dang I needed to hear this been doing it since October 2019 (after I graduated high school at 19 years old from ET) but sometimes I feel like quitting because COVID really fucked my earnings but I was thankful to be able to work during the whole pandemic with a little bit of experience. Btw I live around Laguna Beach in Mission Viejo
@MeatBallSplash
@MeatBallSplash 3 жыл бұрын
Drywall finisher here, non union. I make $80k at the company I work for. I make on average an additional $60k from side work. I might not have a life for most of the year but when I take time off, I vacation in style.
@paynewilliams4790
@paynewilliams4790 3 жыл бұрын
Best comment I've read so far... Love this
@cristianmunoz2480
@cristianmunoz2480 2 жыл бұрын
Drywall is a hard job bro. The drywall is heavy ass fuck. You gotta get them weird angles on walls and ceilings. It's a very underrated job.
@justj3014
@justj3014 2 жыл бұрын
I love drywall jobs, once the hanging is done, it gets fun for me.....I schedule my work, and take small breaks between projects while doing handyman work, and I also vacation and live in style 😉👍🏾
@HardHeadMilitary
@HardHeadMilitary 2 жыл бұрын
You dont live in Texas making 80k a year in drywall lol… move down here and start your own company
@kershaw1450
@kershaw1450 2 жыл бұрын
how the hell does a drywall guy make 80k a year. Most electricians/HVAC and plumbers barely make 80k
@gamblerscop7769
@gamblerscop7769 2 жыл бұрын
I joined a pipefitter union apprenticeship after I graduated welding school. By my second year I started welding. The rest is history. 55 bucks an hr and 20-30 hours of overtime a week if want it. Not everyone's path but I enjoy it. Can be stressful at times needing to make xray welds in hard to get places. Benefits are: 3 pensions, 401k, vacation and holiday pay, great medical and dental. Best part is you don't need to know anything to start.
@arinbk6841
@arinbk6841 Жыл бұрын
God bless America 🇺🇸
@stevethomas760
@stevethomas760 5 ай бұрын
Union Ironworker here, I always got nervous when they xray my work. Worked on the Alaska Pipeline in '76. You had to pass a welding test before you went out. Being certified just got you the test. A guy at the rooming house took the test, "never failed one yet" (you know the rest of the story). Retired with a pension, it matters.
@TBJK07Jeep
@TBJK07Jeep 5 ай бұрын
Local 100 here. HVAC Service mechanic.
@northstar7413
@northstar7413 4 ай бұрын
Just turned 21 working a regular job you recommend going to welding school and finding a job right after school with a good pay?
@gamblerscop7769
@gamblerscop7769 4 ай бұрын
@northstar7413 most won't hire a first job welder with amazing pay. However after some experience, roughly 2 years, I would start somewhere else and ask for 20% pay increase
@shonuff2382
@shonuff2382 10 ай бұрын
I'm a Low Voltage Tech apprentice. Started at age 51, and i LOVE IT. About 8 months into it atm. I'm a high school grad, with an Associate's in Network Admin. Problem is i have a very old drug felony, (age 21) and can't find work in that field. Had a lot of other jobs, including the military. Currently making 25 an hour, and will top out at about 85k per year as a journeyman. Talk about being a late bloomer 😂
@paulkaufman5031
@paulkaufman5031 Ай бұрын
Better late than never!! Good luck to you brother!
@judepadilla3881
@judepadilla3881 4 күн бұрын
It's called "The Fresh Start Program" they will squash and or drop to misdemeanor any non violent crimes 7 yrs old or older. Took about a year I had stuff in three counties and they squashed them all , no one can see them except the FEDS
@justsid
@justsid Күн бұрын
Not too far behind ya, man. I find your story inspiring.
@llaist26
@llaist26 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a high school drop out. I have my GED. That's all it takes. Got into a electrical company at 18. Went thru 5 years of their schooling. Became a journeyman at 23. Now I'm an industrial instrumentation technician. 6 figures a year. Best decision of my life.
@tape6818
@tape6818 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome Luke......My story mimics yours ......and it has nothing to do with LUCK.....Drive and ambition is key.......
@tape6818
@tape6818 2 жыл бұрын
What state are you from....?... I used to work construction electrical with a guy named Luke......I'm sure it's not you.. But who knows...It's a small world.....
@jermainemyrn19
@jermainemyrn19 2 жыл бұрын
@@tape6818 in a world where you have a GED. That's luck buddy
@tape6818
@tape6818 2 жыл бұрын
@@jermainemyrn19 Wrong......and I wasn't talking to you.....
@jermainemyrn19
@jermainemyrn19 2 жыл бұрын
@@tape6818 it is not the norm for a GED person to get a job anywhere, but ok
@adampottmeyer452
@adampottmeyer452 3 жыл бұрын
My kid hated school, so he joined the Navy when he graduated. Four years working in an office for the Navy taught him he didn't want an office job. After he got out, he spent a year working for UPS. Uncle Sam sent him to a 10 month trade school for HVAC. Got a job right away doing industrial refrigeration at $25, with lots of overtime and occasional prevailing wage jobs. He's 25, has no debt and a good pile of cash in the bank. He knows where he's going now, and he didn't have to mortgage his future to find out.
@bunsguns8222
@bunsguns8222 2 жыл бұрын
Ammonia refrigeration? Tell him to join the United Association union, depending on location he will double that wage and get an excellent retirement.
@captainwallard2788
@captainwallard2788 2 жыл бұрын
@@bunsguns8222 Can confirm. I'm a member of UA449 doing HVAC/R Service. My yearly package is $130k. That's at a straight 40hr/wk.
@captainwallard2788
@captainwallard2788 2 жыл бұрын
@Chet Muggins Roughly $2k/yr
@captainwallard2788
@captainwallard2788 2 жыл бұрын
@Chet Muggins For sure my brother. :)
@onkar2111
@onkar2111 2 жыл бұрын
@@captainwallard2788 what did u study in college?
@marekwitkowski2109
@marekwitkowski2109 2 жыл бұрын
I am 24, have been in the HVAC industry for 5 years. All around, commercial always pays better than residential. If you have no certificates, and no experience, then you need to be willing to show that you will be willing to work your ass off. Show that you deserve the position more than the guy in line behind you who did in fact go to trade school, or has 8 years experience. An awesome work ethic will go a long, long way.
@YOUR_NARRATOR975
@YOUR_NARRATOR975 2 ай бұрын
Commercial is always better than residential. And from what I've heard from my HVAC teacher, as long as you get it working, they're not gonna bother you much like residential customers would.
@Icehso140
@Icehso140 2 жыл бұрын
Drywall is so much fun...especially when your building is 11 stories high and the crane can only reach the 7th floor. Humping up 4 floors of wallboard, one sheet at a time up the fire stairwell will make you think twice. Especially when the electricians are watching and wondering who you pissed off in a former life. LOL
@KptKritical
@KptKritical 2 жыл бұрын
Hey, in highrise condos, going that high sucks with a water heater on your back too but, at least they're smaller and less awkward
@benmeyerink9745
@benmeyerink9745 3 жыл бұрын
Started in construction at $12/h out of highschool. Spent some time finishing, siding, framing. Eventually committed to framing custom homes, now im 24, self employed and picking up 40k-60k contracts. Other trades make better money, but being able to build my own house start to finish will pay off in the long term.
@mustafaahmad1755
@mustafaahmad1755 Жыл бұрын
Often overlooked aspect of the trades is the real life skills you can gain. Shtf I would rather be an electrician than an accountant
@k47marie71
@k47marie71 Жыл бұрын
Let’s work together man would love to build a company
@Thinking.Man.
@Thinking.Man. Жыл бұрын
@@k47marie71 lol so random.
@Joe-oi6eh
@Joe-oi6eh Жыл бұрын
31 running another guys company framing big customs, often for days alone, I gotta figure out how to get in the game and bid contracts
@skyjacksonA1
@skyjacksonA1 Жыл бұрын
​@@Joe-oi6eh welding is better it took me on 3 months to get certified
@multidimensional_holographer
@multidimensional_holographer 3 жыл бұрын
It’s difficult to automate a plumber.
@adammartinez8873
@adammartinez8873 2 жыл бұрын
thank you, this was extremely helpful, I'm 19 and I've been considering getting into the trades for a while now and never new where or how to start, this video helped me broaden my perspective.
@BigRed-
@BigRed- Жыл бұрын
Exactly what happened with me, started making “rustic furniture” in my garage and selling it on Facebook marketplace. Then a year later went to trade school for 2 years majoring residential remodeling and learning basically how to build a house from the ground up. Talked through my family and found someone who was in construction and now I work for him. Started doing small shit and now doing more and more. Never the same stuff and I love it. Side jobs are also important to talk about. Also a video on taxes would be helpful and I’d enjoy hearing your thoughts.
@LVCJXXX
@LVCJXXX 3 жыл бұрын
Stay Hungry. The problem is most people want to do the least and expect to be paid the most. The more knowledge you gain, the more skill you acquire, the more valuable you become. Put the work in. Start at the bottom and do whatever is required of you. Show respect, initiative, focus, and drive. Become a sponge. I am a Plumber. Started 25 years ago, 4 years after a college degree and a horrible white collar job. I hold contractors licenses in 3 states. Love what you do. Take pride in your work. Strive always to improve. Money will follow.
@brianperry4815
@brianperry4815 3 жыл бұрын
@LVCJ Money is one thing BUT......The big thing you didn't mention. THE PRIDE and satisfaction of being a blue collar worker. You built that,fixed that ,produced that,made that. Can any white collar worker really say that. We are the ones who built America. The steel/Iron workers blacksmith, the coal miners,the carpenters, then later the road workers factory workers, then plumbers,electricans,mechanics, ect... Sure a small amount of white collar can say the same like architects,city planners,technicians but not most. And when we do our jobs we can say I made someone's life better,can a white collar person say the same??? I THINK NOT.
@neogigo
@neogigo 3 жыл бұрын
@LVCJ this advice can be applied to anything in life. Great job for dominating your life goals
@547Rick
@547Rick 3 жыл бұрын
I was very fortunate. After highschool I got an apprenticeship in the electrical trade through the IBEW. It opened doors to a future career in maintenance management in a GM component division. I retired in as a Skilled Trades Labor Representative for GM. It was a wonderful career!
@isaacblake4201
@isaacblake4201 2 жыл бұрын
Is retirement going well for you ?
@s.zepeda2323
@s.zepeda2323 2 жыл бұрын
I’m trying to get into the IBEW right now but I’m 40…
@inothing7370
@inothing7370 2 жыл бұрын
@@s.zepeda2323 me too, but I'm thinking HVAC
@SpaceAlley
@SpaceAlley 2 жыл бұрын
@@s.zepeda2323 age is nothing but a number as long as you get it done. I'll be 29 in January and I'm going to apply my next pay check
@Tramplyfe
@Tramplyfe 2 жыл бұрын
@@s.zepeda2323 best decision you can make. I’m a JW out local 613
@toddfrank9233
@toddfrank9233 Жыл бұрын
This is great for young people to know. I personally started as a janitor’s kid, and had no skills in construction. I went to trade school… first for auto body repair. Then I realized I needed more money than that trade pays. SKIP THAT. I went to trade school at 21 years old to be an electrician, and learned quickly that I knew nothing when I started working as an apprentice in a local union. But they worked with me and I eventually learned. Went to class one day a week. Still made multiple times the money as body repair. My 20th year in the trade I earned $270k doing service work at odd hours for a contractor. I enjoy the service aspect of the trade.
@shigg7855
@shigg7855 Жыл бұрын
as an electrician?? could you explain your working hours?
@yousifyaqo83
@yousifyaqo83 Жыл бұрын
@@shigg7855 there's someone that is self employed he charges people 140 an hour and he make 268k a year just by being a self employed electrician.
@peterapazidis8889
@peterapazidis8889 Жыл бұрын
You said you did one class a week. I have a full time job right now and I would like to work a trade job on my weekends. How do you think I should approach this?
@cubatogo2003
@cubatogo2003 Жыл бұрын
Sure you did, $270 grand, lol, those are rookie numbers…..I’m a pipe fitter and last year I made over $7 million…..
@yousifyaqo83
@yousifyaqo83 Жыл бұрын
@@cubatogo2003 why you lying
@letfreedomring43
@letfreedomring43 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos. Very clear cut , informative, detailed without giving to much detail which can sometimes be more confusing than helpful. Thank you and please keep making them.
@landmarkcreations1183
@landmarkcreations1183 3 жыл бұрын
Self employed is the way to go for sure. Learn a trade, save your money while still at home, get a plan together and start your business while your young. I started my business later than I wanted to but am so thankful I did. Better late than never
@dmbkersh
@dmbkersh 2 жыл бұрын
How old were you when you started your business?
@landmarkcreations1183
@landmarkcreations1183 2 жыл бұрын
@@dmbkersh 37
@benjamynmckell1846
@benjamynmckell1846 2 жыл бұрын
how do you start a business ?
@zestooo6932
@zestooo6932 2 жыл бұрын
So when should you start a business?
@alvincurtis7344
@alvincurtis7344 2 жыл бұрын
That's my plan honestly. Currently building fences and sometimes do deck work. 21
@Ethanphelps
@Ethanphelps 3 жыл бұрын
I’m almost a year into my electrical apprenticeship and I’ve been slowly buying all the tools. My boss said don’t worry about it other than the basics, but now I have pretty much everything that I need to rough a whole house on my own and when the time comes, he can count on me to get something taken care of my own. And most importantly I can do side jobs no problem.
@RM-lk1so
@RM-lk1so Жыл бұрын
Right on. Side jobs is the GRAVY. That's your fun money. Or what ever.
@muckey7800
@muckey7800 Жыл бұрын
Get it. Gravy is good. Side work is boat money, truck money, gun money, all around fun money. 😎
@multiskilledelectrician1
@multiskilledelectrician1 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations 🎊!
@Invictus231
@Invictus231 2 жыл бұрын
Started construction in commercial low voltage/data at $18, (I was started at a higher rate as I had experience running wire with satellite installation). Hit some slowdowns in work and got wind that the cabinet guys were looking to hire some on site assemblers. It was piece rate, which I prefered over hourly (learned that with satellite). Averaged around $35/hr or so, eventually moved into doing cabinet installs, now averaging $50+/hr.
@daxota_6750
@daxota_6750 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad my dad showed me what hard work is and the essential skills in life. I've hung and finished drywall, cut and laid tile, paint, EIFS/STUCCO, laying and tacking shingles on roofs, and some plumbing/electrical. We're just a hard working middle class family 💪 I'll be sure to pass these traits on down the line
@WhiskeyWille23
@WhiskeyWille23 3 жыл бұрын
I got my first job as an electricians helper calling every company in the area and badgering them till I got a job. Bought a bunch of tools(not all ones I needed lol) and got my first job cause someone took a chance on me. No experience but I worked hard and did what I was told. Got called “shithead” for the first few months but the guy quit after I started responding “what do you need fatass?” Gotta have thick skin in the trades
@divulgewithchip1099
@divulgewithchip1099 3 жыл бұрын
LMAO
@xslabcabxhearsex
@xslabcabxhearsex 3 жыл бұрын
I started the same as you.been with the same company for 31 years now.i do hvac and sheet metal and you better have really thick skin
@littleredhen3354
@littleredhen3354 3 жыл бұрын
Teehee, that's cute! And yep! Gotta have thick skin! I started my business by doing retrofit curb cuts in sidewalks for ADA compliance in the city. I posted flyers I printed on every corner til I got calls. I used my dodge dart to haul busted cement to the landfill. I literally started with nothing and worked it up to a Commercial/industrial/specialty residential business where we were building malls and post offices etc. If you are motivated, honest, conscientious and personable you can go far in the industry.
@littleredhen3354
@littleredhen3354 3 жыл бұрын
@@vcash1112 I don't think so, mostly they are just smartasses lol. There are quite a few who are jerks to us women though, but I didn't hire those types.
@MrEvldreamr
@MrEvldreamr 2 жыл бұрын
@@littleredhen3354 are you a female electrician? Hows that experience like? Im thinking of leaving the military to be an electrician but idk know any females that do it
@AndyGarcia-sk8yf
@AndyGarcia-sk8yf 3 жыл бұрын
I was very lucky. My dad me gave some hand tools, a drill and got me a job as an electrician with his cousin doing a 43 story complete remodel. I was literally given tools and put on the job.
@phatlokki
@phatlokki Жыл бұрын
Journeymen Electrician here. I'm one of those 9% that didn't finish high school. The strategy mentioned, I found a job that had multiple trades and I got in as a laborer. I didn't know what I wanted to do yet. I was 18. I looked closely at the trades around me, and as I made a name for myself there, I got the opportunity to become an apprentice electrician. Ive been doing electrical now since 2009 and I obtained my Journeymen ticket in 2014 with a 98% average in my class. You MUST put in the work and you MUST have a good attitude. You can achieve your goals with not the best education. (I was young and dumb) BUT I learned eventually 😉
@HeriB1994
@HeriB1994 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I got my ged couple years ago, studied the book myself with no teacher and passed it. I think i can learn electrician quickly with teachers and focus
@dibakarbiswas5324
@dibakarbiswas5324 Жыл бұрын
I’m in college and I’m thinking about going to trade school soon. I don’t think college is for me and I always wanted to work with my hands. I liked that a lot more, I’ve been looking into trades and the electrician trade is something I was very interested in. I Graduated top 30 of my class witch consisted of 336 students. I know I’m smart. And i have the drive. Can u give me some tips on how I can make the most with my time and be at a better positions 10 years from now. Possibly work up to a journeymen.
@aliennetwork08
@aliennetwork08 8 ай бұрын
Trying to get there now starting from zero at 23
@manminusblood
@manminusblood Жыл бұрын
I’m an old guy. Done many things. Have a 4 year academic degree but never reached where I wanted in life. At 39 years old, I’m starting the millwright and machinist foundation program (6 month program). I’m nervous but I am really excited to start something new. I’m not sure it’s all young people that can start a trade. It’s never too late to learn.
@eminiscalperpro9729
@eminiscalperpro9729 Жыл бұрын
39 and you are an old guy? Construction must be hard on the body. Nobody should be talking about being old until at least 55. Stop that way of thinking now please.
@zacstephenson3734
@zacstephenson3734 Жыл бұрын
hows that program going? I have thought about it but seems like it has over a million things to learn and remember
@manminusblood
@manminusblood Жыл бұрын
@@zacstephenson3734 it’s super rad. Loving it!!!
@NoOne-hn6gs
@NoOne-hn6gs Жыл бұрын
@@eminiscalperpro9729 it can destroy your body.
@davidscinematography8571
@davidscinematography8571 Жыл бұрын
@@manminusblood Hey man im actually very interested in it and was wondering is it hard? and are you getting paid while you learn or is it a full time learning program?
@digdig-cp8lv
@digdig-cp8lv 3 жыл бұрын
Iive in north Florida. Passed my master plumbers test at 25. Got married and divorced before age 30. Now at 55 years old I have every thing paid for. No bills except for cell and electricity.
@kyleclemente5939
@kyleclemente5939 3 жыл бұрын
I want to move to Florida and get the f out of CA.
@Marco-jm1mo
@Marco-jm1mo 3 жыл бұрын
@@kyleclemente5939 Move , just do it
@LeoInterVir
@LeoInterVir 2 жыл бұрын
@@kyleclemente5939 yes do move. Just please don't vote for the same issues that made California shit. So many people move, vote the same way, and wonder why their new place is going to shit. So please do move and break the mold.
@zone4garlicfarm
@zone4garlicfarm 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a painting contractor in a state with few foreign born workers. Most of my work is in vacation homes near a ski resort. I'll pay an 18 year old with no experience $15/hour. I give him (or her) a list of hand tools he is expected to have within 4 weeks. When he has those tools I give an instant $1.00 raise. If he doesn't have them on Monday of his 5th week he's fired. From there the pay only goes up. My two top workers earn $35/hour. I charge more than my competition because I can complete more demanding jobs and I pay more because I want quality workers.
@zone4garlicfarm
@zone4garlicfarm 3 жыл бұрын
@@fml5910 What's sad is most new hires won't spend the $225 to buy the tools and let themselves get fired. A few see how quick the investment pays for itself and buy the tools with their first paycheck or sooner.
@fml5910
@fml5910 3 жыл бұрын
@@zone4garlicfarm That's amazing, go figure.
@Okayokayokayokayoh
@Okayokayokayokayoh 3 жыл бұрын
@@zone4garlicfarm hell yeah where the fuck do I sign up
@iitzDiRTY
@iitzDiRTY 3 жыл бұрын
How many hand tools does a apprentice painter need? A paintbrush, a small roller, paint pale & some painters tape???
@dapfitz5
@dapfitz5 3 жыл бұрын
I wish you would move to Fort Worth TX
@Casey-summer
@Casey-summer 8 ай бұрын
These are very valuable info for anybody who wants to get rich. Unfortunately, most people who will watch this video will not really be able to apply the knowledge embedded in it. We may not want to admit, but as Warren Buffett once said, investing is like any other profession-- it requires a certain level of expertise. No surprise that some people are losing a lot of money in the bear market, while others are making hundreds of thousands in profit. I just don't know how they do it. I've got $150k set aside to put in the market.
@sloanmarriott5
@sloanmarriott5 8 ай бұрын
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. I know someone who made over $350k in this recession-influenced market, but to the best of my knowledge, it was through an F.A `
@mellon-wrigley3
@mellon-wrigley3 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, financial advisors could make a lot of difference, particularly in a market such as this. Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of investors raking in 6 to 7 digits in a space of months. So, I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look. I have been using an FA since 2020, and the least I returned was $95k ROI, and this does not include capital gain.
@louie-rose7
@louie-rose7 8 ай бұрын
​ *@heathermellon7826* I've been thinking about going that route. I have a lot of stocks that I have maintained, but they are beginning to lose value, so I'm not sure if I should hold onto them or sell them. I feel hiring your investment coach would make it easier to restructure my portfolio.
@mellon-wrigley3
@mellon-wrigley3 8 ай бұрын
I'm guided by Camille Alicia Garcia an experienced coach with extensive financial market knowledge. While you can consider other options, her strategy has yielded positive results for me. She offers valuable insights, including entry and exit points for the securities I concentrate on.
@louie-rose7
@louie-rose7 8 ай бұрын
I've taken the initiative to research "Camille Alicia Garcia" online and verify her credentials. I'm impressed with her expertise, and I've reached out to her to share my financial market goals in detail.
@devindean9125
@devindean9125 2 жыл бұрын
22 1/2 years in construction now at this point. 18 of that was in commercial with 15 of that in Construction Management. Started off by packing foundation forms, then framing, then installing fixtures for commercial and so on. The best way to move up in construction is to understand that you will get out of it what you put in to it.
@artisticdrywall7368
@artisticdrywall7368 3 жыл бұрын
Find a trade you enjoy then get obsessed with it then buy the tools of the trade and get a helper and go out on your own lol
@ciprianghenghea7779
@ciprianghenghea7779 3 жыл бұрын
Can't decide between plumbing and carpentry
@TacosRLegit3473
@TacosRLegit3473 3 жыл бұрын
@@ciprianghenghea7779 I’m a first year plumbing Apprentice at 37. The projected number of licensed plumbers set to retire in the next 5-10 years is staggering. Watch Roger Wakefield’s channel. The journeymen that I work under make more on the side doing a couple small jobs than they’ll make all week working for the company. Whatever you decide I would say pick one that will give you a license that will last all your life. In North Carolina its 4000 hours book work, and 4000 hours documented working/training hours. All self taught and open book. Once licensed there’s no continuing education requirements even though it would be smart to never stop learning and growing in your chosen trade. Technically I can have enough hours on both sides to get my journeyman card in two years time even though it’s a four year program. All books provided by my company, etc. Check out your state requirements and see how it works. If there’s a union nearby even better. Around here there are tons of companies offering approved apprenticeships by the department of labor DOD, and others in several trades.
@pumarodriguez3964
@pumarodriguez3964 3 жыл бұрын
I started out as a commercial electricians helper right after High School with my pops telling myself I was going to take a year off of school and then go back to pursue computer engineering....15 years later I am a Licensed electrician, a Sr Industrial Electrician for the Government, and I just started my small electrical company. Needless to say, I am happy as hell I didnt go back to college...
@platform2094
@platform2094 2 жыл бұрын
Ok so electrician is good
@LeoInterVir
@LeoInterVir 2 жыл бұрын
I wasted my time and went back to finish the degree. Still don't have a job in the field. Burnt out from the experience. How long to get a license?
@dakotareid1566
@dakotareid1566 2 жыл бұрын
@@LeoInterVir depends on the license, you need to be a apprentice for four years to go for journeyman electrical license, then four more year to get a masters license, after that you can start your own business
@drewjorde
@drewjorde 2 жыл бұрын
Just started my apprenticeship 3 months ago. I was a chef for 12 years and finally had enough. First job was a commercial building but shortly I got put into an industrial job doing a brand new meat plant. Can’t wait to see where this path takes me
@pumarodriguez3964
@pumarodriguez3964 2 жыл бұрын
@@platform2094 the electrical field has been very good to me 💯
@Israel_alive_forever
@Israel_alive_forever Жыл бұрын
Immigrated from Russia years ago, started in construction and studied for home inspection. As a home inspector made 180k first year, 320k second year (not counting houses I flipped) and ended up owning excavation company making up to 2 millions a year and still doing wholesales and flipping houses. There’s no bad or low pay trades. It all depends on your personal ability to organize yourself and business you do. I know one couple who do flooring only, and they make hundreds of thousands a year. I know a countertop contractor who started as an installer and now produces countertops, sells and installs them (of course he built a great team). And many more cases. And non of them born here in US. God Bless America! Not to offend but you people haven’t seen shit and don’t know what the struggle is. All the opportunities been given to you by the fact you born here. So use them! Good luck construction brothers!
@blabla903
@blabla903 Жыл бұрын
And then everybody clapped
@Freedom17762
@Freedom17762 Жыл бұрын
I agree it’s not so much what trade you get into, it’s more important that you make good investments with your time and money.
@jetaime9359
@jetaime9359 Жыл бұрын
Привет из России, земляк👋Согласна по всем пунктам. Тоже планирую в США уехать. Мне вот интересна тема ремонтных и отделочных работ, возможно создание предметов мебели и декора, столярное, плотницкое дело, woodwork, в целом тематика строительства, декорирования пространств, особенно если какие то оригинальные, необычные идеи. Но изучив инфу, поняла, что зарплата для начинающих работников в этой сфере ну прям очень низкая. Понятное дело, что большие деньги там где свой бизнес и высокий уровень профессионализма. Но меня как то пугает идея о том, что когда только начинаешь, какое то время придется жить на минимальную зарплату, можно ли вообще выжить на нее? Насколько плохо это будет ощущаться?Сколько лет придется жить именно так? Боюсь, что при несправедливой оплате труда мотивация че то делать просто упадет, дойду до эмоционального упадка, депрессии и разочаруюсь в этом деле, да и вообще в жизни:) Уже даже начала думать в сторону "практичных" профессий, но более оплачиваемых с самого начала. Типо какой нибудь Physical Therapist Assistant, Dental Higienist, Sonographer и другие. Типо так, чисто как повод остаться в стране и зарабатывать денег хотя б нормальных для жизни, параллельно пытаясь обучаться всему тому, что написала выше и постепенно пытаться брать какие то заказы, работая на себя, идти в сторону бизнеса. Хз. Звучит тоже не особо, потому что инвестиции временные не на то, когда успевать делать все сразу? Наверно, строительство не то же самое, что получать в других сферах минимальную зарплату, потому что рост сферы и востребованность, особенно в плане хороших специалистов высоки. То есть есть некая лестница по которой можно очень далеко идти, чего кстати в тех медицинских профессиях, как бы и нет, потому что одна должность и все, ты там застрял, никакого развития, есть потолок. А так, да, ты начинаешь с минимальной оплаты, но знаешь, что это просто этап, тебе есть куда расти и оно того стоит. Не знаю какой путь будет лучше, потому что страшно, что до того самого уровня профессионализма не вырасту и застряну на минималке, тотально неудовлетворенная, да еще и в новой стране. Хочу именно trade карьеру и связать скорее всего с этим бизнес, как минимум на себя работать, так может даже лучше. Касаемо всей медицины думала, может реально понравится дело? В принципе интересно, но напрягает, что объекты труда люди, больше с ними взаимодействия, чем в строительстве, где у тебя есть любимые инструменты и материалы как объекты, контакта все же меньше с людьми. Электрика, сантехника и другие не так интересуют, хотя они более оплачиваемы. Сложная диллема😅 Спасибо за возможность излить душу на родном языке, человеку с родной Земли, да ещё и связанному с этой всей тематикой!
@FelipeRodriguez-eh6ty
@FelipeRodriguez-eh6ty 11 ай бұрын
Stay humble clown
@rooster-zg4oo
@rooster-zg4oo 10 ай бұрын
exactly..people move here and become successfull all the time. if you were born in the US and you cant make a decent living then its your own fault and nobody elses.
@mattwalker534
@mattwalker534 2 жыл бұрын
Got my first handyman experience as the broom boy/truck loader for a friend of a friend. Once I was confident to accept jobs on my own, quickly went from charging $20/hr to $50 over the course of 2 years of weekends and evenings working during college. Now that I bid by the job, I generally take home $1500 for a long weekend of work with 1-2 helpers. Main tip/takeaway? Carefully choose what city or even ne neighborhood to work in. In large cities there is always work to be found, every hour of every day, so this is good for people who are fully self employed doing this as their main job. In mid-high income suburban areas, the jobs are harder to find but so are the contractors, allowing you to charge more as a side-hustler.
@imout671
@imout671 3 жыл бұрын
My church deacon hired me $4 an hr to help build cement forms and clean up after. I worked 16 hours a day every summer starting when I was 13. (I was 200 lbs and near 6ft tall.) I was a rich young man in 1983. Paid cash for a Yamaha 400 when I turned 14 and no longer had to walk to work or ride that evil school bus for an hour a day.
@daveray6335
@daveray6335 3 жыл бұрын
Yamaha 400, huh? You must remember the original Honda Odyssey! For you young folk: no, it was not a minivan.
@norgepalm7315
@norgepalm7315 2 жыл бұрын
Did he touch you too
@Nickpaintbrush
@Nickpaintbrush 2 жыл бұрын
@@daveray6335 My Yamaha 400 was an RD 400 2 stroke flying machine back in 1983!
@cussmustard4748
@cussmustard4748 Жыл бұрын
In my 8 years since graduating high school I went from residential hvac install to industrial refrigeration service. Lots of opportunities in between & the bigger the job title doesn’t always equate to a higher income. HVAV/R is definitely a set your own worth trade.
@dangerousideas5356
@dangerousideas5356 24 күн бұрын
do you need to be good at math?
@timox7676
@timox7676 Жыл бұрын
This is a great video for anyone considering trades as their Career. Great advice and appreciate you sharing your experience. I think you hit the “Nail-on-the-head” with your comment on value. In my opinion, the best thing you can do to start, is to show your value. Be respectful, be punctual, show interest, try hard, make your mentor/supervisor/boss’ job easier with your help. They will value that, and typically honour it by sharing their knowledge. Once you gain enough knowledge and experience to be certified and provide value to customers without your mentor/supervisor/boss’ support you are in your career. You can continue to learn and improve skills to stay competitive, desired and fulfilled.
@bobwhite8440
@bobwhite8440 3 жыл бұрын
Once had a woman say to me she thought my prices were too high and she was going to check my competition. I said," Look lady, I'm a plumber. There is no competition". Told another person please decide whether they wanted their plumbing more than their money, or their money more than their plumbing because there's people in line behind them. Had another person call who said they had an easy job and it shouldn't cost much. I said then you do it and hung up. These were some of the rude customers When you're a plumber, more often it's not how much do you charge, but how quick can you get here. It's a profession like law or medicine. You can't have civilization w/o a code of conduct, prevention and control of diseases, or potable water with sanitary waste disposal.
@TheBalterok
@TheBalterok 2 жыл бұрын
100%. Plumber is your guy when it comes to epidemics, not the freaking doctor that is just happy to inject and medicate to death. Tell them next time that most diseases were put out by running hot water and toilets, vaccines came after. There are graphs that support that. And also tell them that India, the country with more infectious diseases than anywhere on the planet has one big problem - people don’t have toilets inside or outside and when they do occasionally shit - they don’t know to cover. Plumber should be new Indian god.
@MoonChildMedia
@MoonChildMedia 2 жыл бұрын
I have an 18 year old grandson thinking about the plumbing trade in upstate NY....any advice?
@KptKritical
@KptKritical 2 жыл бұрын
@@MoonChildMedia tell him to DO IT and take sanitation safety seriously....don't want him getting sick because he bites his fingernails. I'm a commercial plumber in Ohio and I never expected to earn what I do now. Just bought a nice house in a nice neighborhood a couple years ago and just squeak out enough to let my wife stay home and take care of the kids (her choice/suggestion btw). If he wants to mostly stay away from gross plumbing, get him into commercial/contract plumbing preferably one with a 4yr college accredited apprenticeship program like the company I joined. Don't go to residential companies.....those are the ones that require plungers. It's a thankless job but someone has to do it I guess
@MV-nt4bq
@MV-nt4bq 2 жыл бұрын
@@KptKritical how much do you make
@jasonrobertson7373
@jasonrobertson7373 3 жыл бұрын
I’m in my late 40’s, don’t work in the trades but I’m grateful to guys like you that take the time to speak candidly. I’m thankful I’m established, but I wish I had plan talk this when I was younger. Keep up the great work!
@TheMikeguy7776
@TheMikeguy7776 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the honest candid view of things. I would also like to say that as someone who once did skilled trades as a high school dropout I now am a graduated engineer. I’ve been blessed but big life choices and lots of hard work can pay off. Not saying schools always the answer but most of us can do better than where we are.
@davidkarban2595
@davidkarban2595 11 ай бұрын
Great video brotha, local 1 carpenter 10 year journeyman here trying to make the jump to residential self employed. You gave great advice. never turn down an opportunity, don’t think of it as sweeping/loading while your there soak up all you can and alway ask what’s next. One thing everyone can control is effort and focus. Phones don’t go in tool belts kids
@darrenbogenschutz5379
@darrenbogenschutz5379 3 жыл бұрын
Started out with my father in law with absolutely no experience. Learned to sell and install and now working on becoming a business owner just like you Handyman!
@radugabriel7987
@radugabriel7987 3 жыл бұрын
My god , you really are inspiring . seriously and you teach people more then 95% of actuall trainers ! Apreciate it!
@nathanaelrivera193
@nathanaelrivera193 Жыл бұрын
I’m 20 and got into plumbing because my father is in the trade. He’s licensed and has the experience which has served me really well for the past 5 months. I’m very much still new to the trade but it definitely feels like the best decision I could’ve made. I’d like to urge other young guys who’re unsure of what they want to do to try out the one of the big 3 (electrical, plumbing and hvac). Sure, you do a bunch of heavy lifting and of watching at first but around the third month you’ll actually start grasping the basic concepts and it’s all uphill from there.
@bullymaguire1999
@bullymaguire1999 Жыл бұрын
i'm 19 and im just worried I wont be accepted into the Union apprenticeship they only accept 2,000 people so I will feel so fucked if I dont get it in november
@xthesketcher610
@xthesketcher610 Жыл бұрын
thats awsome man. Im going into plumbing. at 21.
@dogeofamp6037
@dogeofamp6037 Жыл бұрын
@@bullymaguire1999 trying to apply for the ibew? I😅 tried but I didn’t rank high in their system. I now work for a non union company and it is everything I ever wanted they are respectful, wise, generous, and good teachers I’m so glad that I got this job. What I’m trying to say is if you don’t get into that union company don’t wait for another year to reapply you be waisting time there’s always another electric ⚡️ company hiring and heck if you still want to join the union you will have experience too. With that being said you got this dude go get that JOB we go GYM NOWWWW
@kinshiisgallery1420
@kinshiisgallery1420 Жыл бұрын
What would be better residential or commercial
@thethugbr0840
@thethugbr0840 8 ай бұрын
@@bullymaguire1999 how're you doing now?
@Vic777V
@Vic777V 2 жыл бұрын
Watched this video before I had to say you're right on point bro I've been doing what you said for over a year working for contractor learning the different trades on the job that's the way if you're not going to go to school you have to find an employer you can get the skills from become valuable and then go from there. Thank you brother.
@Lions4real
@Lions4real 3 жыл бұрын
This outlines my exact experience trying to find an electrical contractor to hire me, did exactly what you said and I landed a job not too long after that, tools are fun and work is easy going.... love it
@brikshoe6259
@brikshoe6259 3 жыл бұрын
I wish I had learned the trades young, not for the career (I have other skills that pay the bills), but because I've found late in life that I enjoy building.
@bradbaker4679
@bradbaker4679 10 ай бұрын
I’m 43 and have had a federal government job for 18 years. I’m bored and want to get into some blue collar trade stuff, but I’m scared to give up the government job. What did you get into and how did you do it?
@enriquecardenas9062
@enriquecardenas9062 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!! I’ve been trying to become a plumber apprentice for a while and now I’m taking courses for it to start my career.
@Nahbruhsheesh
@Nahbruhsheesh Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. 100% the hardest part of getting into ANY of this is the gatekeep ing. Guys will mistreat abuse and lie because that’s what happened to them. If someone treats you like that bounce because there are good ones out there but past the gate keeping you can learn anything.
@larrrevenga49
@larrrevenga49 3 жыл бұрын
I started as electrician helper in the construction trades at 19 Just retired . After 40 yrs on the job . Made my way from FL TO NYC . Got myself in local 3 . At 23 . Worked through all the booms & busts . Lots of OT . I have pension medical and a large 401 . We now all know that collage is clearly not for everyone ! . I made way more $ then all my collage friends and retired when I turned 60 . I’m not saying it was easy . But I loved it. 40 yrs flew by . So best of luck out there to all my trade brothers . Pick a trade you enjoy it . You can make as much as you want . If your a good journeyman mechanic. 🇺🇸
@phillipborbon2059
@phillipborbon2059 3 жыл бұрын
College* I'm in the trade and boy people do need to go to school still, math, reading, and writing skills are still needed.
@tallswede80
@tallswede80 2 жыл бұрын
@John Sm 'murican high school is complete waste of time. You have to learn that stuff somewhere else.
@tallswede80
@tallswede80 2 жыл бұрын
@John Sm you would be limited if all you had was an american public school education. Many schools don't teach a full course in trigonometry.
@tallswede80
@tallswede80 2 жыл бұрын
@John Sm most students these days have to take remedial classes if they want to go to college. In the past most people in college today would not have been admitted, but government guaranteed student loan means that colleges have incentive to admit everyone regardless if they are ready for college. College will admit you if you have a pulse, as long as you can get 150k of student loans. Likewise, high schools lose federal money if their failure rate is too high. That means that all the black/mexican students that don't even belong in high school are graduated and then go to college. Race to the bottom.
@Isaac-ci5wy
@Isaac-ci5wy 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for telling your experience. I’m 19 and now looking into trades. I am very hopeful after reading this!🙏🏿
@whizzo55
@whizzo55 3 жыл бұрын
My youngest son joined the service right out of high school. His home air base was Eglin AFB in Florida almost 6years and his crew did the plumbing maint. and repairs for the whole base. Detached to the Army for two tours in Iraq and learned new construction of all sorts traveling all around. After 6 years active he came home, got a job with a large plumbing company for a couple of years and then went on his own with his plumbing contractors license. Few years later has three employees and doing well.
@bluwolfoutdoors
@bluwolfoutdoors Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vid! Brother in law and I are in class right now getting our commercial gc license. My brother in law has worked in the construction and service industry so he knows industry. Definitely excited for this venture
@ryanveloz8174
@ryanveloz8174 Жыл бұрын
I'm halfway through my college's electrician vocational program and am already loving it.
@eagleeye5890
@eagleeye5890 3 жыл бұрын
Wish I had KZbin and you, in the 70"s to give me your insight, and education on the trades when I was a young man trying to get I to the Electricians Union...Ended landing an apprenticeship in the Carpenters Union, and had a great run as a Commercial Carpenter for 27 years!....Love watching your channel...keep them coming...
@AceEverett
@AceEverett 3 жыл бұрын
I started out working for my father for dirt cheap at 15 years old. Once I knew what I was doing on a lot of projects and got tired of the pay, I went out on my own.
@stevefromjersey6617
@stevefromjersey6617 2 жыл бұрын
Iv been electrician for 20 years. I started right after high school. Started non union residential then got into the IBEW learning commercial and industrial. It’s great job and pays very well. I think with many baby boomers retiring, now is a great time to get into the trades.
@bluewaves2539
@bluewaves2539 Жыл бұрын
Very good.Talking to the plumber's union and electrical I'm leaning more towards electrical. I'd be worried about being shocked mostly and also the advanced math.
@yousifyaqo83
@yousifyaqo83 Жыл бұрын
@@bluewaves2539 is it hard for math in electrician or is it easy
@DirtySony
@DirtySony Жыл бұрын
@@yousifyaqo83 find out yourself if you want something that bad do the work
@DirtySony
@DirtySony Жыл бұрын
@@yousifyaqo83 it’s common math tbh
@yousifyaqo83
@yousifyaqo83 Жыл бұрын
@@DirtySony just asking a question how do I find out lol
@damfriedchicken9159
@damfriedchicken9159 2 жыл бұрын
I’m 21 and currently working in the tile trade installing backsplashes. All I gotta say is it’s nice being able to charge about 500-700 dollars on a backsplash and being able to make it within 1-2 days!
@johnpatterson1807
@johnpatterson1807 3 жыл бұрын
You’re skills are Bourne out through experience. It takes time, patience and hard work. Aim to keep happy customers and the money will follow.
@matthall2860
@matthall2860 3 жыл бұрын
My outlet into the handyman field was when I started pushing a mower down the street when I was 16. Built it into a three fleet truck and trailer setup by the time I was in my 20s. That was my jumping off point with my clientele. As for the handyman aspect, I bought my first house when I was 24. For the past 7 years, I treated my house as the guinea pig. How do I fix this, how do I upgrade, etc. I was fortunate to have help from friends in the trades to guide me here or there. Within the last two years, I've gained the confidence to market myself to my clientele base that I offer handyman and trade repairs. I love it because I really invested about the last 15yrs into this type of work. My recommendation to anyone is patience and a willingness to learn, even if it takes years. All my knowledge was basically KZbin, books and trial and error. It's been successful for me.
@fadedprodigy8620
@fadedprodigy8620 2 жыл бұрын
This is such an important video! I knew about this for a while but you put it together perfectly! Thank you so much for this Information
@Cardinalfloors
@Cardinalfloors 2 жыл бұрын
I do hardwood floor refinishing, also installation of all flooring and some custom woodworking/refinishing. I love my job, and I love the trades!
@douglaswood3083
@douglaswood3083 3 жыл бұрын
I have worked in every residential construction trade but plumbing, heating and HVAC over a 40 year period on both coasts as well as 4 years in New Zealand. I'm 57 today and I'm still banging it out most days! The bad hip hurts at the end of most days but I love this gig and the freedom and the pay! I will always work, until I cannot.
@peepeepoopoo1399
@peepeepoopoo1399 3 жыл бұрын
Can’t believe I used to be one of those poor saps that thought college was necessary to make a decent living. After screwing around for a few years I finally decided to just go to trade school as a plan B to earn money for school but I ended up liking it more than I could ever have imagined. I not sure why but I thought that I wouldn’t get any sort of mental stimulation working the trades. Ended up an HVAC technician and I love it. I apply the practical laws of science: thermodynamics, hydronic, chemistry, psychrometrics, and electrical theory. It is far more challenging and humbling than I could have ever imagined. Now I upped my income from barely $30K/yr to $55K only three years later. But you can also specialize and earn even more. I am now back in a community college for a measly 4 classes to earn a Cisco certificate to become an HVAC controls technician. I hear those guys easily break $50 per hour and average in he $70s.
@beatrixbrennan1545
@beatrixbrennan1545 3 жыл бұрын
I dated a master hvac tech. He's management now and lives in Vegas making 80k + a year. Good luck to you!
@musclecar62
@musclecar62 3 жыл бұрын
$50/hr? Where do I sign up lol I am a controls technician. Here in NM. My controls is Alerton. I only make a measly $23/hr. That’s with two associates, instrumentation and controls and engineering degrees. I do a lot of re-wiring for our so called “journeyman electricians”. I show them common sense in wiring an AHU safety circuit. On prevailing wage, they make $39.50/hr with only 40 hours a week (this is a normal job site, not a government job site) Right when that 40 hours hit, they drop everything and have the attitude of I’ll deal with this next week even though the Job is under fire and behind. That’s something you have to work extra hours on to fix and deal with the stress and headaches. Also gotta deal with Test and Balance contractors and commissioners after to Satisfy them. My advice to you, become a Journeyman controls installer. Make that cash and not worry with anything.
@peepeepoopoo1399
@peepeepoopoo1399 3 жыл бұрын
@@musclecar62 you’re definitely under paid if you have those credentials man. For the time being, I’m a simple HVAC tech with only 6 months schooling and 3 1/2 years experience and earn $25/hr in California. Used to be 27$ but I got tired of commuting into downtown LA. You should really shop around for companies especially if you’re doing callbacks for Journeymen.
@timgleason2527
@timgleason2527 2 жыл бұрын
I have a degree in astrophysics and now I’m looking into going into the trades. Thought it was amusing how the same theories of energy transfer work in walls- there are layers where conduction, convection, and radiation dominate. Same physics, different application.
@amirfakouri
@amirfakouri 11 ай бұрын
@@timgleason2527 I am really interested to know why someone who has a degree in astrophysics want to enter trades. Please let me know how you came to this conclusion. You have explained to some degree in your comment but I am just asking out of curiosity.
@thebinford6100
@thebinford6100 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve worked various trades both residential and commercial for almost 20 years on and off. Finally decided to go full time as a “handyman” doing a little of everything. I charge $125 in Austin, Texas and I have more work than I could ever handle, putting in 40-60 hours each week.
@luke5637
@luke5637 Жыл бұрын
How do you get your leads
@joshuaquinn7858
@joshuaquinn7858 11 ай бұрын
$125 an hour?
@Restroyal_
@Restroyal_ 2 жыл бұрын
Started out in low voltage for an alarm and fire systems company got a year under my belt and became an electricians apprentice. Been a master electrician for 3 years now with the same company that trained me and it’s all paid off.
@josephhathaway5053
@josephhathaway5053 3 жыл бұрын
My advice is go to trade school to become a professional “something “. Being decent at a lot of things will never pay as well as being a pro at one thing.
@beatrixbrennan1545
@beatrixbrennan1545 3 жыл бұрын
There are some folks that are incredibly intelligent and can be proficient in more than one trade, and like the other commenter stated, it's always a good bet to diversify your skill set to always be in demand.
@zacharybob4336
@zacharybob4336 3 жыл бұрын
@@beatrixbrennan1545 @Cherokee Blood Sigma Soul That mindset might have benefited you in 1960, but now you're tremendously better off with one in demand trade skill. Ask any HVAC, Plumber or Electrical contractor how many times he's needed a back up skill and you'll quickly realize there's no point in wasting your time learning to cut a conventional roof stack if you know how to rope houses. This is the era of specialization.
@losferwords100
@losferwords100 3 жыл бұрын
​@Learn Something SIGMA AniyunWiya INFJ The saying is 'jack of all trades, master of none'. It's good to be versatile and have an understanding of all trades and the process of construction BUT it's more important to keen in on one particular trade and master it. Jack of all trades folks are a dime a dozen especially in this age of DIY'ers and people think that watching some KZbin videos makes them a tradesmen, a master with a specialized skillset and experience in a particular field is invaluable and will put you out ahead of everybody else. There's a reason it takes upwards of 5 years to be a licensed master of anything. Anybody can be a handyman and do easy, small little jobs. Handymen sure as hell aren't building houses though and that's where the real money is. Handymen don't make anything in comparison, having a little bit of knowledge in everything will only get you so far and your ceiling of earning is rather low.
@dogma7911
@dogma7911 3 жыл бұрын
@@zacharybob4336 Unless you're a business owner, handyman, contractor, construction manager, etc. They will easily double or triple a single trade employee.
@damion1121
@damion1121 2 жыл бұрын
I went to a trade school and got a degree to be an electrician. I now am in industrial maintenance and enjoy doing a little bit of everything. I weld, machine custom parts, work with pneumatic and hydraulic machines, and most of the work I do isn’t electrical related. But I am more concerned about gaining experience than I am about the money right now. I had nearly 10 job offers BEFORE graduating and took the least paying job out of all of them, but I’m not miserable everyday. I never had a mechanical background so this job is helping me gain a large variety of experience.
@dustyandsneezing
@dustyandsneezing 3 жыл бұрын
I’m proud to say I’ve done framing, roofing, painting, cabinets, concrete, and drywall. The most rewarding thing I’ve ever done was get into construction. Even when the money was low I was proud to do the work. I was thankful to have a good teacher and now I’m running my own thing. It’s something new every day. I see it in my head before I can put it on paper. I’ve branched out into all kinds of work and I can pay my bills. I just keep my head down most of the time and get to it.
@dust4546
@dust4546 2 жыл бұрын
What businesses have you moved into?
@1on_percent
@1on_percent 2 жыл бұрын
@JOSHWONDUDE did u get into it?
@Joe-oi6eh
@Joe-oi6eh Жыл бұрын
Having the picture is key to the building trades, can't build what you can't imagine - framer in NH
@markcavandish1295
@markcavandish1295 Жыл бұрын
Well done Thomas. You’re an inspiration.
@KM-cm1jp
@KM-cm1jp Жыл бұрын
@@1on_percent I did, and I absolutely love my career. I’m a young guy, but I have learned sooooo much in a year. Plumbing, electrical, masonry, drywall, and all sorts of handyman work because of my framing job. I absolutely love going into work everyday! :D my brother is the cut man, and I do pretty much everything else. I have gotten super strong, and am the strongest on the crew, despite being 155lbs (I also work out), but your body gets super toned, and super muscular, and the pay is great. I was blessed to have the best, most respectable, and understanding boss in my area, and my coworkers are like family to me. If I could give the young guys one solid piece of information, I would say work as hard as possible, and be willing to learn. There are not too many young guys who are resilient and willing to learn.
@SamxHardscoperx
@SamxHardscoperx 11 ай бұрын
Seems like some good information in this video and I appreciate it. I’ve been feeling more and more lately that a skilled trade is the direction I should go. I’m 25 and I’ve worked mostly in fast food jobs and I just yearn to find something I can become good at and work hard towards, and to have a future to show for it. Dying to move out on my own too.
@samchoate1719
@samchoate1719 5 ай бұрын
It’s rewarding too. Hard work, but def a sense of accomplishment involved, and tbh as a man I think it’s a very healthy and respectable direction to go.
@gabrielfoster7439
@gabrielfoster7439 Жыл бұрын
Not a guy but im an electrician in the ibew 5 year apprenticeship and i must honestly say i love my trade
@Constyyoma
@Constyyoma Жыл бұрын
Hi please I really need assistance , am electrician but I like to no more ,
@tylerross5613
@tylerross5613 3 жыл бұрын
Hey Handyman, I am settling into my career nicely, not going hungry this winter. My suggestion for young men wanting to join the trades is to be humble and absorb knowledge feverishly. Gotta, gotta, gotta have the humility to be teachable!
@caa211
@caa211 3 жыл бұрын
Great advice in this video! Most importantly, you keep it entertaining! I have found that if you are willing to travel and follow the open positions/money it makes gaining experience in any trade easier.
@emudan1
@emudan1 2 жыл бұрын
I started down this journey in high school just working summers building decks. That turned into working construction every summer through high school and then I went to college started with junior college then went to four year college also still kept working summers and free time. Then started my own general construction woodworking business. This didn't all happen overnight. But I'm self-employed and most of the time enjoy what I'm doing. It is hard to find good help. It's the simple things I guess show up and want to work.
@CaliforniaLloydUK
@CaliforniaLloydUK 2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou so much! I want to be a overhead lineman electrician “telephone poles” and I’ve been trying to get a trade school or anything to start but I need to keep the lights on and food on the table. So now I’m trying to transition from a bartender to a electrician to hopefully a overhead linesman
@matthewerwin4677
@matthewerwin4677 3 жыл бұрын
15 year non union pipefitter here. My welder friend brought me in as a helper. I learned everything I could. Moved up to top pay in 1 year. Now I'm in quality control. Certified Welding Inspector. I've been on the road the entire time. Been a lot of places and seen lots of things. Made lots of money.
@seeszm
@seeszm 3 жыл бұрын
I got a job as a maintenance tech a year in a half ago with “no experience” in that field, but worked in residential irrigation for 10 years. Found the job through a high school friend. I recently was promoted to senior tech. Handyman is right, use relationships to further your career.
@thanosthemadtitan5518
@thanosthemadtitan5518 2 жыл бұрын
How much do you get per year?
@yarsamohtrt
@yarsamohtrt 2 жыл бұрын
After working in an office for 10 years as a drafter, I needed a change and settled on HVAC. Got in to trade school half way through my first semester started as a install helper. Worked my way up to a service tech over the next year while finishing my AAS and made more money in the first year then I did as a designer after ten years of experience.
@kylebuxton7677
@kylebuxton7677 2 жыл бұрын
How much money is that? I'm looking to get into the hvac trade but I currently make $25/hr and most entry level jobs here in Columbus are starting between $15 and $17/hr. That's as much as a h.s. kid working at White Castle...just not sure I can justify that low a wage. Curious how much you're making now
@antonioii8894
@antonioii8894 2 жыл бұрын
Where was this located?
@keizerwoodworks
@keizerwoodworks 11 ай бұрын
Im 30 yrs old and for the past year i have been busy building up my skills by doing woodworking as a hobby, i have no previous experience except industrial work wich maybe gives me some understanding of woodworking tools and some mental fortitude wich will be needed because i am finally making a step towards beginning a woodworking career.
@jacobmack300
@jacobmack300 3 жыл бұрын
Great information. I myself am an electrician and tried for months to find a local shop to get hired on with. After being turned down repeatedly, I went a different route and applied at my local union. I received great schooling (working through my union is paying off my schooling), good benefits, and make 40 an hour on the check. That is another route the young greenhorns can take. Some trades and local will actually cut apprentices a check to go to school. Mine didn't, but I know some electrical locals do
@chrishenry5644
@chrishenry5644 3 жыл бұрын
I started as a pitman for a excavating company in 2017, holding the laser for the operator digging basements. Within 6 months of being a professional labourer, was given opportunity to try the machines. I already had mini excavator experience from basement waterproofing work. Once they saw what I could do, pretty much been operating since. Now I’ve switched companies, joined local 793 with new company, making 37n change, 10% vac pay and great benefits/pension too.
@Tomdragon91
@Tomdragon91 Жыл бұрын
i love this. I spent working 7 years in the Emergency department as a tech and always thought I was going to be a doctor. Then I recently decided after some soul-seraching, that due to the time, debt, and burnout of this career path, I decided to do a career change and go blue collar. I'm looking into various trades, (electrician, diesel mechanic, etc.) and found this video informative. I may not be a young spring chicken like 18 or 20 and may be starting a career change at age 30 but I'm still very excited to start a new path. thanks for this video
@steve6rocks11
@steve6rocks11 Жыл бұрын
Good luck brotha. I can relate. I’m 30 and come from insurance sales. Hated my job. Money was not worth 6 days a week, 10-11 hour days in a soul sucking office. I feel you on burning out and re-evaluating things. Made me think back to my freshman year in high school taking construction tech as an elective, and how interesting it was learning to frame houses and do woodworking. I guarantee we’ve both learned lessons and picked up professional qualities along the way that’ll help be successful at whatever trade we get into. Time is precious, so best of luck man
@banjotramp1
@banjotramp1 Жыл бұрын
I went back and forth between teaching (shop) and working as a carpenter/cabinetmaker in my younger years. Back then, I was paid shite, but I worked with/under some VERY skilled folks and learned a lot (on other folks houses ; ) I spent most of my career in teaching, but by now I have made up for my low wages by all the things I have done on my house (roofing, 2 bathrooms, kitchen, water heater install, radon, all sorts of repairs and improvements, not to mention building a house from ground up that I ended up selling for (happily) more than it cost me. Also been able to help my son with his new (old, needed lot of work) house, and occasional outside jobs. Between my training in the old Industrial arts and ~6 years a carpenter and having acquired a proper set of real tools, there is almost nothing I cannot do and besides being a good use of retirement time, I'm sure I have saved hundreds of thousands on labor over the years.
@walterlane8890
@walterlane8890 3 жыл бұрын
I'm 44 and been installing cabinets for 17 years. Its possible to support your family with cabinet work.
@gcheyyyy6296
@gcheyyyy6296 2 жыл бұрын
But you're not making as much as an electrician
@evbbjones7
@evbbjones7 2 жыл бұрын
@@gcheyyyy6296 Man I don't know if it really matters, lol. My professional background is in siding, it's one of the 'low pay' careers he described. and I work with a neighbor who owns the company. If we work 50 hour weeks, he can afford to pay me pretty well and still bring home 6 figures. We don't do that though, we typically do 30-35 hour weeks and take our time on the homes. A house can typically take anywhere from a week to a month depending on size, and don't really take a lot of time off. He even bids pretty low to keep the work consistent. I've moved on to stone work since then, and I'm finding it pays about twice as much as the siding did, but was also listed as one of the 'low pay' careers. While working on a residential job recently, saw a siding crew come in and finish what was probably a 2500 sqf home next door in something like 11 hours, lmao. Big 5-6 man crew, worked like they had done this exact layout a thousand times. I had to wonder what kind of money those guys were bringing home, especially if they were doing that 2-3 times a week, on top of the high demand for skilled pay due to covid. With all this in mind, does it really matter if you make as much as an electrician? If this is what 'low pay' looks like, I'm fine bringing home 60-90k a year. :D
@Alex-ln9on
@Alex-ln9on Жыл бұрын
That's cool.
@Alex-ln9on
@Alex-ln9on Жыл бұрын
@@gcheyyyy6296 Yeah but someone has to do what he does. Not everyone can be an electrician.
@bcsmedconsults29
@bcsmedconsults29 3 жыл бұрын
Such a great video Handyman. My family is in the demolition and excavating business. I went into medicine and became a hospital physician, but often regret not going into a trade. There are very few independent docs out there who can work for themselves now. Will be sure to show my 15 year old son this video. Merry Christmas.
@timmiller8210
@timmiller8210 Жыл бұрын
Same boat. In psychiatry. Going to show my kids these videos. Don’t want them considering medicine at all.
@gary0044187
@gary0044187 2 жыл бұрын
worked several years in commercial iron erection. only quit when the work dried up in 2007. sometimes regret it, but I do tell people that as long as the economy's doing fine, that's a great paying line of work, especially if you transition into other iron/steel working fields with welding skills. when I got hired I was told to buy a spud wrench and a tape measure. I was going to be paid the bare minimum they would pay a laborer until I showed that I was willing to learn and take on more important roles and the tools I acquired as I went were partially an indicator of that. Who's going to teach you to weld if you don't at least purchase a welding hood for yourself? but also if you don't actively learn things they are teaching you and you buy that welding hood because you want them to teach you to weld, then don't expect them to be willing to teach it then either. if you don't actively learn what I already tried to teach you, why would I waste my time teaching the most technical skill in our trade? one thing I would point out is that you're not going to learn a damned thing if you spend all day thinking about what you are going to do after work. you have to be focused on what is going on and actively learning it for yourself. and never treat the work you are told to do as beneath you. work is work, it doesn't demean or dignify you in itself. sometimes the boss gives you make work just so he can have an excuse to pay you for a few more hours today. what would you prefer? having to pick up trash on the site for what you get paid or not getting paid because you got sent home?
@alexsmith-ob3lu
@alexsmith-ob3lu 10 ай бұрын
Finished high school at age 18, and got my GED. Applied to community college afterwards where I earned an associate degree of applied science and a trade certificate in electrical work. Worked full time as an engineering technician before starting my electrician apprenticeship at age 22. Got my full electrician license by age 27. Making over 6 figures doing controls and automation for commercial-industrial sector.
@mikev.1034
@mikev.1034 3 жыл бұрын
You’re absolutely right!! I was going to electric school before I got a job paying for it on my own and I had no experience but I was able to land a job no problem!
@troywaguespack748
@troywaguespack748 3 жыл бұрын
Good vid. My trade skill is a mechanic/maintenance technician. I in my fifties and still learning. Being a mechanic means investing in thousands of dollars worth of tools. Like tens of thousands from basic hand tools to specialty tools that only get used every now and then. The best reward is seeing the positive results from your hard works.
@jimenez9313
@jimenez9313 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, I understand the wage topic because I’m Mexican born in L.A. concrete finisher *, and a lot of foreign born except less money for the trade and that does affect everyone else working in that trade as well. Awareness is always nice and having the statistics helps . Nice video.
@HammerHed13
@HammerHed13 Жыл бұрын
Just retired as a commercial plumber after 45 yrs. Started out in my uncles business doing residential, as the years went by transitioned into prevailing wage commercial plumbing, topping out at $88hr, here in Southern California. The unions are usually hiring and the non union shops have apprenticeship programs, where the starting wage is $35 hr!
@rvrnt196
@rvrnt196 3 жыл бұрын
Started as a painter. I do a little of everything now. I became a master painter before I branched off to other things. I think it’s handy to have the skills because it’s the last thing people see. So if you have to tear into a wall to fix some electrical or some plumbing, it’s really nice to be able to leave it looking like you Weren’t even there… There’s my two cents
@DavidHernandez-xp7wp
@DavidHernandez-xp7wp 10 ай бұрын
Don't u waste more money buying the paint ? Explain plz
@johnswanson2280
@johnswanson2280 3 жыл бұрын
You nailed both pathways. Time in any trade school will always be a good base for field experience. I had my dad the master carpenter and later as a construction superintendent as a mentor throughout my childhood. Priceless. My interests during my teen years diverted to highway construction so his golden advice was to go get my engineering degree then I would have choices in careers as I was already skilled at carpentry to sail through apprenticeship. Best advice ever. Post college I worked highway construction, framed houses and had 30 year career as a professional engineer. My 22 ounce Plumb hammer was always nearby on weekends. I am the proud son of a skilled tradesmen and still miss my mentor 40 years after his passing. God Bless America.
@Dr-wheel-barrow-opperator
@Dr-wheel-barrow-opperator 3 жыл бұрын
You are a lucky guy to have had a Father like that. However, he was lucky to have you as a son because, you were eager and willing to learn and you absorbed his life long hard earned knowledge. Imagine how far along on planet earth we would all be iif fathers and sons, mothers and daughters absorbed the do's and don't in life.
@johnswanson2280
@johnswanson2280 3 жыл бұрын
@@Dr-wheel-barrow-opperator Thanks Paul
@vincent8823
@vincent8823 3 жыл бұрын
I’m currently in a similar situation as yours once. I just finished my carpenters apprenticeship and became a journeyman. Im currently taking pre calculus and want to pursue a construction engineering degree but I find this higher end math somewhat difficult. I hated the trade when I first started but it slowly grew on me. Any life and career advice you can give me sir ? Also I sorta have a plan b if things don’t work out with the engineering degree I will most likely major in Information technology.
@brianperry4815
@brianperry4815 3 жыл бұрын
With construction and engineering especially if also electrical you likely have it made. If you get sick doing construction and/ engineering then apply both to design and over see if not build solar/wind power systems for home owners. That is becoming a hugh business. Especially since it will be cost effective like going from electric heat to gas or from rural water to a well. Also if you get into drafting then become an architect and design off grid homes. There are a few options
@alexsmith-ob3lu
@alexsmith-ob3lu 10 ай бұрын
Excellent video! Well done! What many people do not understand are the differences between minimum wage installer and skilled tradesmen. Minimum wage installer (as you stated) do basic, repetitive work over and over again while having to constantly be told what to do. A skilled tradesmen has the critical thinking, creativity, understanding of code book, and situational awareness to properly execute their difficult work effectively. That right there, is the main reason why there is such a big pay gap in the trades.
@TheElectrican
@TheElectrican 2 жыл бұрын
+1 for electrical. I was fortunate enough to be born into the trades. Started my own company have always loved the field
@Straight_White_Fatherly_Figure
@Straight_White_Fatherly_Figure 3 жыл бұрын
In HVAC, our greenies start out doing maintenance. When i started, i went to tech school for a year while also working at burger king. Got a federal grant to pay for it and tools to start with. Learned a ton. Knew more than some of the older techs who didnt go to school, but i had no experience which is where they ate me up.
@greenmanalishi6963
@greenmanalishi6963 Жыл бұрын
How’s it goin 2 yrs layer?
@Straight_White_Fatherly_Figure
@Straight_White_Fatherly_Figure Жыл бұрын
@Green Manalishi well im technically about 6.5 years into service. I make close to 30 an hour at this point with lots of vacation so i really cant complain
@simion33
@simion33 3 жыл бұрын
Started working for someone else. Slowly bought my own tools (power + hand tools). Spent a.lot of time after work watching KZbin, IG, reading forums to keep learning new things I could try on the job while someone else paid me (even if I fucked up lol). Eventually started looking and getting my own jobs. Most important tho, showed up everyday and didn't act like I knew everything. My advice would be no matter what you do, at least finish high school. it's the easiest thing in the world to do and is like the bare minimum everyone should have. Honestly having business/financial skills + knowledge would be beneficial too. Especially if you want to keep progressing in your career or even if you want to be self-employed.
@benshell8662
@benshell8662 3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely man, that's exactly what I did. Every paycheck I was buying tools. now I've got everything I need to build a house from the ground up if I want and then some. The only people who want for work right now are morons and lazy mfs
@dallasdrew88
@dallasdrew88 8 ай бұрын
YES EVERYONE NEEDS TO GET BACK INTO TRADE!!!
@willsteig6075
@willsteig6075 Жыл бұрын
Been in HVAC for almost a year. I joined the National Guard and picked the job of HVAC. They sent me to a technical school, got my EPA Universal and got a job right when I got back. Looks great on a resume and plus they offer free college aswell.
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