been working this for a while now for a pretty decent company. jobs include antifouling, metal work, polishing, washdowns etc. realistically, could a yacht maintenance business be ran well solo? i am incapable of making friendships/partnerships but enjoy the work and would like to earn more money but dont know how well one person would do handling all the jobs mentioned by themself.
idk I'm a land mammal
>>2971000>gets a job>i am incapable of making friendships/partnerships>doesn't learn the most invaluable skill during the course of his employment ngmi
>>2971000sounds toxic AFI'd been good at training people as carpenter, and I was doing good as my own One Man biz, but as soon as I tried to hire underlings I became a psycho.Part if that was we were working inside fairly high end homes in middle of RE transactions and I didn't have any real "capital" or insurance so any fuck up would be a disaster.Hard to solo because you are wearing so many "hats" as marketing, bidding, shopping, etc besides the actual work.
>>2971000It's somewhat toxic work and usually when people hire solo practitioners it's more along the lines of giving some live aboard crack head $20 to dive in the marina and scrape oysters and shit off your hull.
>>2971252>>2971264there is PPE for the jobs but even still i dont give a shit. Antifouling is the only job that exposes you to carcinogenic shit, the rest is just shrapnel etc. But the antifouling makes good money
>>2971000>i am incapable of making friendships/partnershipswelcometotheclubpal.iso