When I say "Journeyman" that means someone who has a minimum of 10,000 hours combined experience in training and practice. In our trade we call bookkeepers who work for retail stores, bookkeepers. Construction bookkeepers are people with at least 10,000 hours training and practice in construction accounting and bookkeeping services.
Hiring journeymen vs. subcontractors depends on the type of construction company you own. General contractors, residential remodelers, commercial tenant improvement contractors and other contractors responsible for more than one part of a construction project are usually better off paying subcontractors than trying to hire journeymen for all phases of construction.
The exception is journeymen carpenters; because so much of any construction project involves carpentry having journeymen carpenters’ makes economic sense.
Before doing anything you need to understand the personality traits of construction workers and to give you a hint "all dogs are animals, but not all animals are dogs". To put it another way "all plumbers are construction workers but not all construction workers are plumbers."
Having been in the construction industry since the mid 1960's I have "Been There, Done That, Got The T-Shirt, The Tattoo And Sang A Song About It". The short answer it does not work unless you have a large enough company to keep all of the journeyman trade workers separated. Otherwise you will find out the hard way it is like putting feral cats in a burlap bag; it does not end well!
The fictional story below is one of the consulting tools I use to help contractors understand construction workers thinking patterns. I trust you enjoy it and learn something from it.
Long ago in the psychology department of a prestigious a study was done to understand the thinking patterns of three different construction professions. They chose a mechanical engineer, an architect and a plumber.
A room was constructed using concrete and steel it was exactly ten feet wide, ten feet long and ten feet high (10' x 10' x 10') with one door and no windows. In the center of the room a one piece solid steel table three feet wide, three feet long and three feet high (3' x 3' x3') was bolted to the floor.
On the table three solid titanium balls the size of tennis balls were placed in the center of the table similar to the ones shown below
The Mechanical Engineer was led into the room at told he had ten minutes to express himself using the titanium balls. When the door was opened he had placed together so they formed a triangle. Ah-ha! Mechanical engineers are primary left brain, highly organized and linear thinkers.
The Architect was led into the room at told he had ten minutes to express himself using the titanium balls. When the door was opened he balanced all three balls one on top of the other. The researchers were stunned! The architect could not only think outside the box but in fact could construct what seemed impossible. Definitely a right brain thinker with a creative mind.
The Plumber was led into the room at told he had ten minutes to express himself using the titanium balls. When the door was opened he had broken one of the balls in half, the second one was lost and never found even after an airport style pat down, the third one was found in his lunch pail and he swears he had no idea how it got there! Obviously plumbers are geniuses!
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