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Bracing for hiring challenges in 2022? Of course you are, especially if you own a service company in the U.S., where there’s no end in sight to the skilled trade-tech shortage and the burden of finding new recruits continues to grow.
The solution, however, is within your organization—and control—whether you perform HVAC work, plumbing, electrical, or some other trade, says Eddie McFarlane, Vice President of Learning and Development at Haller Enterprises, a 400-employee, multi-trade service company in Pennsylvania.
What’s the solution? Simply unlock the essential leadership skills within yourself and your own company to inspire your techs, CSRs, sales staff, and managers to perform at a higher level. Like honey attracts bees, company success can invite even more success and give you a competitive advantage.
“Essential leadership—it's just the ability to transparently share and communicate your values, and then allowing others to join in that vision you've shared, and developing the muscle memory for these skills,” says McFarlane, a former service technician who’s driven by a passion to change the lives and careers of today’s technical workforce.
In a recent webinar hosted by ServiceTitan, McFarlane breaks down essential leadership skills into three simple chunks:
Leaders remove hurdles, then create runways.
Leaders inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more.
Authentic leadership gives you your own superpower for recruitment.
“Imagine if we had all the horses in our stable pointing and galloping at the same speed, in the same direction. What would the difference be to you, to your business, even to your family?” McFarlane asks. “Leadership can consume all of us. It’s not just a title, it’s a way of life.”
Leaders remove hurdles, then create runways
A critical function of a leader is to remove friction.
A service company makes money when frontline team members engage with customers, whether it’s CSRs, installers, service techs, or commercial techs. They fuel the company’s gas tank, and it’s a leader’s job to remove any friction or hurdles that stand in the way of driving more revenue.
“Everything we do that is friction to our frontline employees inhibits our productivity and our profitability,” McFarlane says. “Your job is to ruthlessly edit every process, procedure, and rule.”
That way, everyone knows the rules, future recruits don’t repeat the same mistakes, and you regain better time management.
Leaders create beautiful runways to help the team grow.
The more you empower your team to succeed, the more success they’re likely to achieve. Potential new recruits see your happy, successful employees almost like a magnet, pulling them in to find out more about your company.
“People are attracted to people like them. So, when we remove hurdles and create runways for incredible team members, we're in a hyper-connected world, and they're probably getting asked at least weekly, ‘Hey, what's it like over there?’” McFarlane says. “How incredible would it be to say, ‘It's awesome, man. They just keep out of our way and we just get to do our job.’
“The number of technicians I've talked to are like, ‘I just want more range time.’ And that's why technology can be super important in tools like ServiceTitan that decrease known range time,” he adds. “So, if you get nothing else, remove hurdles and create beautiful, beautiful runways.”
Who qualifies as a leader?
"If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, or do more and become more, you are a leader." — John Quincy Adams, sixth U.S. President
Not every leader in your organization comes with an official title, McFarlane says, but they’ll inspire you to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more. The idea of disappointing them or letting them down drives you to succeed.
“Your team is filled with these people, if we can create the bandwidth,” McFarlane says.
In Stephen Covey’s book, “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People,” he talks about two types of leaders: the ordained or defined leader, and one with the power of moral leadership, like Gandhi, who brought the British Empire to its knees.
“He was not an elected official, he didn't hold office, he didn't have a blog, he wasn't tweeting,” McFarlane says. “He was just somebody who lived his values so loudly that people were drawn.
“If we can get our leadership style and our values aligned, there's a hunger in the world for authentic leadership. And that's its own superpower for recruitment.”
In 2019, 4.5 million Americans quit their job each month.
“That’s bonkers! That’s absolutely bonkers,” McFarlane says. The year before, he says monthly job-quitters numbered 3 million per month. And that’s when his company double-downed on its efforts to grow more leaders.
High turnover rates from trained employees who quit come with a cost, McFarlane says. According to the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS):
Because of a poor onboarding experience, lack of clarity surrounding job duties and expectations, or a less-than-stellar boss, 31% left in the first 6 months.
Employees who are “engaged and thriving” are 59% less likely to leave.
The cost to replace a highly trained employee is 200% of annual salary.
People don’t leave bad jobs, they leave bad bosses.
“Gosh, man, that’s just a tough mirror to look at, isn’t it?” McFarlane asks. “But I can tell you, I haven't always been a great leader. I've had a lack of development, I had ego and immaturity. I can take responsibility for that.”
While becoming a stellar boss takes time, simple things like onboarding—and clearly explaining job duties and expectations—should be something you put some effort into now to retain new hires and current employees. Remember when they’re scheduled to start, set up an orientation process, and give them the necessary tools to do their job well.
As for creating a company culture of engaged and thriving employees, McFarlane says those are more than just trendy buzzwords.
“Up until a couple of years ago, I thought ‘culture’ was something that grew in a petri dish, right? But it's a buzzword, and we need to pay attention to it,” he says. “We need to understand our team, so we can understand how they engage.”
“We can be efficient with things, but we need to be effective with people.” —Stephen Covey
Leaders get busy, and it’s not uncommon to feel a little frustration when someone walks in the office to ask the same questions you’ve already answered four other times, especially when you’ve got a customer waiting on the phone, two job sites to visit, and another meeting to attend.
Be efficient with your tasks (schedule a ride-along or assign a mentor), but be effective with your people, and don’t just try to “handle” them. Take a pause, understand how they learn, and communicate more effectively.
“Leadership is hard. That’s why it’s lonely,” McFarlane says. “But so is managing turnover, right? So is placing another job ad, paying another $5,000 for a billboard, or paying some headhunter $10,000 for a tech who’s going to last six months.”