Scaling a business from a "one-man band" to a team of five is the most exciting-and scariest-time for an owner. If you do it right, your profit soars. If you do it wrong, you end up with more stress and less money.
1. The "Safety Net" Rule
Before you hire your first employee, you need a buffer. We recommend having enough cash to cover three months of essential bills (rent, insurance, and existing loans).
Visualise this: You’re a sparky named Tom. You hire your first apprentice. Suddenly, your "fixed" costs go up. If you have a rainy week where you can't work, you still have to pay that apprentice and your tool loans. The safety net ensures you don't panic during those quiet weeks.
2. Don’t Use Your Own Cash for Gear
If you have $40,000 in the bank, don't spend it on a new work van. Once that cash is gone, it’s gone. If your main trailer breaks down the next week, you have nothing left to fix it.
The Better Move:
Finance the van for $800 a month. Keep your $40,000 in the bank as your "insurance policy" for the business. This approach improves your long-term return on investment (ROI) because you maintain liquidity. High ROI is only possible if you have the cash flow to sustain growth.
3. Bundling the "Whole Job"
When you hire a new person, you don't just need a vehicle. You need the "full kit":
- The Van: $45,000
- The Shelving & Ladder Racks: $5,000
- The Professional Wrap/Signage: $2,500
- The Tech (Laptop/Tablet): $2,000
We can often bundle all of these into one monthly payment. Instead of four different bills hitting your account, you have one simple number to track.
4. Know Your "Payback Period"
Before you buy a new machine, do the maths. If a new piece of gear costs you $1,000 a month, but it allows you to take on two extra jobs a week that pay $500 each-the machine is "free." It pays for itself in the first two days of the month. Everything after that is pure profit.






