Pie I the sky, we'll you may all be right. I am planning to start when my own work can safely sustain another persons wage and enough to live on myself which at present is £25 per day and I live happily on that. I have put this in much more detail to my accountant and at first he thought I was mad but when he went through the idea and figures he admitted that it would work as long as I found the right person and as said we don't have six foot of snow for three months. I have a budget to build this and at the point where it threatens the business as a whole it will be stopped. I have faith in human nature and to Tosh, I've read Maslows theory on hierarchy of need and the updated version and also his idea of the qualities of a self-actualiser and believe it or not many of those qualities describe me but I'm nowhere near there yet.
It's an idea I've been thinking of since I started the business and it has evolved and probably evolve more. It may never happen or it could happen by April who knows.
Finally there is a theory that if you think of how it could succeed instead of how it could fail then you can see it differently. I sincerely hope I'm right and if I'm not then I'll be posting on here for a job.
Gerald, I wouldn't normally get involved this much but here are a few basic questions for you (no need to answer, just think about them): -
What level of experience with either employing directly, via sub-contractor or even just senior man management via a previous employment?
How will you recruit? Experienced window cleaners fall into any of a few of categories. Self employed with own round, business owner - employing, working for a cleaning firm or window cleaning firm. If you aren't established you will struggle to find good staff.
How will you manage your people. What targets and objectives will you set. How will you monitor performance, quality, attendance etc....
Do you work a two man team already?
How will you cover holidays? Minimum 28 days per full time employee?
What about sickness?
What level of capital do you have? Cashflow can finish you off.
What is your average revenue per year and month for the past five years.
Where are the new sources of revenue? If already covering why change?
How will you finance the purchase / lease of the vans?
How will you insure the vans (zero no claims, named driver, any driver over 25, clean licence, 6 points....)?
What level of equipment will each van have? WFP or Trad? Ladders, roof rack, signwriting?
You keep going on about Maslow. To be honest I think there are other more relative theories you could make use of. Maslow is used by larger companies as part of management training to highlight and identify motivations. Whilst his hierarchy of needs or whatever it is called makes complete sense it will be of zero use to you in this scenario.
Your accountant is having a laugh. I suspect he had just had enough of telling you "no chance" and you not listening, very much like on here.
I'm not saying don't give it a shot, I am saying if you do, and stick with your current plan, you WILL fail. I think you'll fail before you even get started.
Just so you understand I'm not this huge pessimist trying to ruin your dreams. I am speaking from experience. I have managed multi million pound contracts within the logistics industry, I have taken part in courses and even presented a few on various management systems and techniques. I have taken many workshops and team building events. Following on from redundancy a few years back I took a wrong turn and ended up running a cleaning firm. We have 12 direct employees and a number of sub-contractors. Even though we have a solid team, we have a strong customer base and decent revenue streams and profit, I could not suceed with your plan.
Now, if you are still sure you can succeed with your plan, then go for it, it's yours to lose......