I’ve been talking to lots of manufacturers lately. No one is talking about robots. Everyone is talking about the risks of employing a steady supply of reliable labor. The blue collar job is going to be taken over by temp agencies long before it’s taken over by robots.
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Replying to @JeffRudy1 @EdLatimore
I haven’t seen the data, but anecdotally, every smart employer I know is moving that way.
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Maybe I'm not a smart employer but temps are brutal. 1. They are temps (and not gainfully employed) for a reason. 2. High rates of felons 3. They don't show up 4. At least 20% more expensive than full time If you have full-time work, you hire a full-time person.
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You have to consider both the costs and benefits though. The benefits are: 1. Reduced mgmt costs through time savings 2. Specialization (labor laws becomes the agency’s problem) 3. Higher variable but lower fixed costs 4. Optionality to hire the best temps and fire the worst
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Of course but I disagree with your list of benefits: 1. Getting temp agencies to actually send people and then getting them to show up is very time consuming. Plus, as you cycle through temps, you must constantly retrain. And then you must have a backup in case they are stupid.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @TheCharlieton and
Training is brutal. I figure it takes 3-6 months on the job for a good software person to start being really useful in the context of a particular business, and it only goes up from there if they aren't quality.
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If they aren't quality... Next!
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