Labor Day Reflection: Why Stone Shops Lose Their Best Employees (And How to Keep Them)

On Labor Day weekend, a story: a shop owner we work with lost his lead fabricator of 12 years to a competitor offering $4/hr more. The new shop will probably lose them too. Here's the pattern.
Pay isn't the problem
Survey your team. The answer is almost never "more money." It's "clear schedule," "working equipment," "respect from the boss," "a path to grow."
The clear-schedule fix
Publish the week's job board every Friday at 4pm. Standing standup Monday at 7. No surprises. People can plan their lives.
The working-equipment fix
If a tool is broken, fix it. Don't make the team work around it for six months. Nothing burns morale like a saw that's been "about to be serviced" since spring.
The growth-path fix
Even a small shop can have titles. Apprentice, fabricator, lead fabricator, shop foreman. Give people somewhere to climb.
The respect fix
Don't bid jobs your team thinks are stupid. When they say "this miter won't hold," listen. They're right more than you are.