Rusty Rush
Analyst · Mike Baudendistel with Stifel. Your line is now open
The 300 is a net add. Unfortunately in our industry, the technician position tends to be the highest turnover position just like the truck driver position does for the over the road customers. It depends. I would tell you some of the ones we're getting them, that's a net add, right. So, that's going to be after what you've lost, right. So, after the folks who have left you during that period, so we feel really good about that. So, but the majority of them were having a lot of good stuff working with the OEMs and their tech schools and stuff like that. They're coming up - no, they're coming up pretty solid, but they do take training. They're not at their level. But they're not coming in at like ground rule, so, maybe there are level 2, and relative to that level 1 to level 5, but they’re may be closer to level 2. But taking technician up to a level 5, that can be about three to five years I'm guessing. We have five years probably and we’re going to guys around the table really five years to getting all the way up to a level 5 technician. This takes experience. So, like you’re going to school, you’re going to college, right, you’re going to school. It just takes more. You learn, you learn, you prosper and you grow, and you grow, and you build upon - it builds upon itself, right. Your knowledge base continues to build. So, they're going to continue to get better. And trust me, that's why I said earlier, it’s been a lot of money on training. I was looking at some of the expenses. And then you've got to make sure as there, they may not be able to produce a full 40 plus hours to begin with. So you have to supplement that. You've got to be refraining these folks, so they may only produce you X amount of hours, they may produce 25 hours to 30 hours. I can't pay them 25 hours or 30 hours, therefore sure going to leave, okay. But what I can do is supplement that along the way and as you go forward, that expense - that expense fee for your supplementing could decrease this, right. So, you get a higher production and then that increases. So, it's a process, it's a process. When you say by --sometimes, yeah we’ve hired technicians, great. I think this was our number right now, 2,600 or so, I’m guessing. Yeah, about 2,600, we started at around 2,300. So, in all those 300, 100 are mobile. So, we're not just hiring in our shops or seeing an increasing, increasing demand, not a broad based demand for mobile given the congestion in metro areas and things like that and the price of labor and everything across the board for people for up - folks who will pay for it because they learned how to totally understand the cost of taking a truck, taking into the shop, drop in it all, and all this, right. There's a cost involved there. So, again we’re seeing broad-based growth across our technician base and we're excited about it. We're excited about it, because we do believe that return is only going to continue to grow as we go forward and get these guys trained up and by the way we're not done adding. Let's give that straight right now. We're not through adding folks. There is demand.