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2000 Tech Compensation Survey THE PROCESS Early this year, at the request of Copier Careers,
Inc., I took on the daunting task of doing a wage and compensation survey of
service department employees. Scientific
survey methods and statistic gathering is not my expertise.
I received a “C” in statistics class during my sophomore year in
college. As a full time Director of Technical Service of a 40+
employee service department, I did not have the time or resources to
methodically contact hundreds of dealers and persuade them to disclose the
intimate details of their payroll. I
chose to gather the data by asking my service manager friends, readers of my
columns and attendees to my seminars. I openly admit the information I gathered was from the
cream of the crop of office equipment dealers.
My acquiesces are dealers who read my columns in the The Image Source, R
S & R News, ENX and BTA Solutions. They
take the time and invest the money to attend BTA, IBPI, ACCR and World Expo
sponsored seminars. Most tend to be
the traditional BTA type dealer. These
are the people who talk with me, attend my service management seminars, read my
articles and e-mail me. I hoped these dealers would trust me (and my promise for
complete confidentiality) enough to share their compensation information.
I asked for participation from over 250 people.
At first, I provided a simple questionnaire.
I quickly trashed the prepared question idea.
Everybody does their own thing. I
was able to get more people to respond by asking them to send me their
information in any manner they desired. One hundred and twenty-nine provided me with the
information I used in these statistics. Information
was e-mailed, faxed, voice-mailed, regular mail, handed in at the end of
seminars, and told to me in person. THE NUMBERS v
Salary ranges $7.25 to 32.00 per hour for working field techs. v
Entry level (trainee) with no formal training, $7.25 to $15.00 per
hour. v
Three-year analog tech, $9.00 to $21.00 per hour. v
The average pay for a 5-year senior tech is $31,500 per year,
($2,625 per month, $15.00 per hour.) v
Entry Level Network certified techs with no previous copier or
computer experience (working in tradition copier dealerships), average tenure
with in the copier dealership of 7 months $29,120 per year ($2,425 per month,
$14.00 per hour.) v
Network certified techs with 5+ years copier experience average
$46,280 per year, ($3,856 per month, $22.25 per hour.) v
Five + year experienced Certified CNE or MCSE network, usually
working as part of a sales department or independent IT department reporting to
a sales department, average $54,000 per year, ($4,500 per month, $26.00 per
hour.) v
Service Manager, $37,000 to $105,000 per year. v
Commission is paid 28% of the time.
Commission rates average 6% for billable calls and/or M. A.s sold. v
65% pay lead fee to service employee who turns in a lead that
results in the sale of hardware. v
Average lead fee is $35.00. v
In smaller companies (under 10 employees) 80% of techs have the
opportunity to sell hardware and receive a “standard sales person’s
commission”. ITEMS THAT WERE OFTEN MENTIONED WHEN PAY WAS ON THE LOW
END OF SCALE:
35% of
dealers provide company cars.
80% of
Mid-America and smaller dealer provide company vehicles. 40% of companies that
provide vehicles do not provide health insurance. 85% provide tools, vacuum,
digital true ROMS meter for their technical employees.
55%
provide SurTest for field supervisors and field service managers. 65% provide lap top
computers (or have a self purchase program) for some techs. v
The lowest paid tech in my survey was $7.25 per hour. Entry level, no experience, small rural area. v
The highest paid tech was a working field service manager (service
staff of 3) making $57,000 per year. v
Salary ranges $7.25 to 27.40 per hour for working (non-network
certified) field techs. v
CNE or MCSE, working within the service department, ranged from
$14.00 to $32.00 Bonuses and/or automatic salary
increases for completion of recognized network/application/computer
certifications were “usually
given” or had a structured promised increase for 45% of dealers. VACATION65%
offer at least 2 weeks vacation after one year. SICK TIMESick days range
from zero to 10 days. RETIREMENT PROGRAMS55% had 401K or structured
retirement plan. TRAINING PROGRAMS100% of authorized dealers
sent at least 40% or their techs to manufacturer's technical training school READING BETWEEN THE LINES OF STATISTICS
Owners and managers with a selling background have a
love-hate relationship with techs. They
are afraid the techs will leave. They
tend to pay higher wages with a negative attitude attached to the pay increase. “Blackmail
and extortion” were words that were used when a tech threatened to leave,
unless a raise was received. A tech that is hired away from a competitor for more money,
has an 85% probability of leaving the new company, in a similar manner, within
18 months. Traditional copier companies that buy or merge with a
traditional VAR or networking company lose 80% of the original
computer/networking company’s employees within 16 months. Items that were often mentioned with regard to pay, but
which were considered less significant. No state income tax, no sales tax, areas of high
unemployment (military base closings), rural areas, low cost of living areas,
housing cost, car registration fee, educational and recreational cost. Techs need to feel appreciated and respected for their
contribution to their company’s overall success. The more training a tech receives the easier their job is.
Techs value ongoing training as much as additional money. By the time a tech works up enough courage to ask for a raise, you have already alienated them. A smaller raise tied to appreciation or a specific pre-structured goal, is worth more to a tech’s moral and loyalty than a larger raise given under duress. v Commission is paid 28% of the time. v The small companies (under 5 techs) pay lower or higher than the norm. v
Hiring bonuses ($1,000 to $10,000) are becoming common. LESSONS LEARNEDLesson one: Average
means 99% of the answer is incorrect. v
A tech that is hired away from a competitor for more money will
probably leave the new company in a similar manner. v A company can earn a reputation as a “good or bad employer”. That which techs want most from current or potential
employer: v What do field techs like most about their job: Working on their own (with out direct supervision.) v The employer who pays too much or too little for a tech will not be able to keep the employee motivated. v Employers think they are paying too much. v Employees think they are worth more than they are being paid. v Vacation and paid sick time is important. v Providing tools is important. v Techs are security minded. v Spouses get the paycheck. Techs live off their expense money. During the interview process, potential tech hire asks, “What will my take home pay be?” Techs rarely know what their hourly wage rate is. v Non-taxable money for mileage, bonus etc. is standard fare for smaller dealers. v The cost, to the employee, of insurance for themselves and their family is extremely important. v Interviewees ask about insurance and training programs more than they ask about car allowance or vacation. v Retirement programs are important to those over 35 years old. v Retirement programs are meaningless to those under 25. v
The average tech thinks they should be home at 5:00 p.m. |
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