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power washing business
cleaning business
communication
roof cleaning
soft washing"
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power washing
Softwash
Powerwash
house wash
roof cleaning"
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In the last week or so, I've had the exact same conversation with four different property owners. It goes like this:
I'm finishing up an exterior cleaning job. The property owner is handing me a check and expressing their gratitude for a job well done. They ask what else I do other than clean. I tell them that other than repairing boats, cleaning is all I do. They express disappointment, because they need some other work done, and we're the only ones who called back and showed up as we said we would. Their tree guy didn't show up. The landscaped never called back. Etc.
"It's not like this in Florida!" they say. Or New Jersey. Or Maryland. Or New York. Etc.
"Why is it so hard to hire people here?" they ask.
Where to begin?...
I want to hold a mirror up to them and the once-affordable house they bought in 2019, gutted, remodeled, added to, and are now renting out weekly on Air B-N-B. That's an obvious part of the problem: every house turned into an investment property and the subsequent lack of "affordable" housing i.e. housing for people who provide local services. Housing for people who work with their hands.
Who but wealthy executives and Bitcoin bandits can afford to live here? Here's who: white-collar retirees, lawyers, Realtors, movie producers, CEOs, ... the clean-hands crowd. The folks who can work from Zoom (if they need to work at all). The business owners, not the business doers... NOT the guy mowing a lawn, the guy emptying a dumpster, or the guy painting a fence. Those folks are part of the churn.
I can hear it now: "But the natural economic forces of supply and demand will balance out!"
Uh... no. Not on this sandbar. It's been getting worse for decades. Worse; never better. If supply and demand were going to apply to housing and happily meet in a balanced middle, it would have showed signs of life long ago. Instead - despite noble attempts by all sorts of wine and cheese nonprofits - without colossal intervention by far more capable institutions, the situation we have today will almost certainly be worse next month, next year, and in the more distant future.
So... why is it so HARD to hire people or services here? Because:
It's all about being able to afford a home, and it ain't getting better.
So to the full-time consumer of services on Cape Cod: my best advice is to take very good care of the service providers who are currently doing good work for you. It's a seller's market; THEY'RE choosing to work for YOU as much as YOU'RE choosing to hire THEM.