Why Do We Despise The Jack Of All Trades?
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- Опубліковано 29 лис 2024
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Roger is tired of people telling him to stick to plumbing. It's rant time.
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A polymath is an individual who possesses expertise or knowledge in various subjects or fields, often across disciplines that include arts, sciences, mathematics, and humanities. Historically, polymaths like Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, and Hildegard of Bingen have made significant contributions in multiple domains due to their broad and deep understanding of various subjects.
Similarly, a "jack of all trades" refers to a person who is competent in many skills, albeit may not necessarily be an expert in any of them. However, this term is often followed by “master of none,” suggesting that while a person may have a wide range of skills, their knowledge in each area might not be deep or specialized.
Benefits of Being a 'Jack of All Trades':
Adaptability: Jacks of all trades can quickly adapt to different roles and responsibilities, which is particularly valuable in changing or uncertain environments.
Problem-solving: With a diverse skill set, these individuals can approach problems from various angles, often finding innovative solutions that specialists might overlook.
Lifelong Learning: A natural curiosity and willingness to learn new things can lead to personal and professional growth throughout life.
Versatility: Being skilled in various areas makes you a versatile asset in many settings, especially in smaller organizations and startups where wearing multiple hats is common.
Interdisciplinary Understanding: A broad knowledge base allows for better integration and understanding of how different fields and disciplines intersect and relate, fostering cross-disciplinary collaboration and innovation.
Networking: Engaging with professionals and experts from various fields can expand your network and open up opportunities for collaboration and career development.
Reduced Dependency: With skills in multiple areas, you’re less dependent on others to complete various tasks and projects.
Improved Communication: Understanding the language and basics of different fields can facilitate better communication with specialists, making collaboration more effective and efficient.
Drawbacks:
However, it's also worth noting that there are drawbacks to being a "jack of all trades." For instance, the lack of specialization might lead to difficulty securing positions requiring deep expertise in a particular field. In some cases, a broad but shallow knowledge base might also limit the depth and quality of contributions in specific domains. Hence, balancing generalisation and specialisation is crucial, considering the unique requirements and expectations of each role and industry.
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#polymath #jackofalltrades #diy
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Capitalism doesn't reward the renaissance man. It doesn't reward the polymath. It's threatened by them, so it in fact punishes them.
Capitalism wants you to know a narrow set of specific skills and follow orders. Jack of all Trades threaten the desired compartmentalization of labor, which acts as a divide and conquer strategy. No one person can threaten the hierarchy by breaking off and starting their own practice if they only know a very narrow and specific set of skills, and that's exactly how capitalists like things.
Jealousy....and that others can't be a Jack of all trades....GOD puts it all in certain people....that can actually handle all of them....😂
@@SLMissy-r9z
There is no god, only man. You get what you make.
"A jack of all trades is a master of none, but often times better than a master of one."
The fact that I've never heard the second part of that quote is telling.
Absolutely! We use it in the opposite sense to which it was intended
Same here
"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion"* is another that always gets cut short, and I've noticed the meaning change in recent years.
*"...., but not his own facts."
Perhaps you could learn to listen more effectively? A skill well worth mastering.
Firstly, I really enjoy your channel, secondly, I believe the term “competent person” has more value than “expert” in so many situations. Keep ranting brother! ❤️
Hi Roger, many years ago, as a developer I employed a young plasterer, who had had perhaps, 5 years experience on site, as a general building maintenance worker. I encourage him to try everything, and anything that occurred day to day, regardless, and without fear of failure, and after 40 years in my employ he had developed amazing skills, ranging from carpentry, tiling, bricklaying, headwork, plumbing, steel working, you name it, he could do it. Never be afraid to try and progress through mistakes. He's retired now but was irreplaceable, bless him!
I agree at 100% with you ! I am on my early 30s and doing exactly the same,trying on my property and if fail,wont cost anything to the customers.I am carpenter by trade,then continued to painting,then gardening,handyman,plumbing,plasterboarding,recently done tiling for a first time,and not afraid of trying and taking on new challenges.Thanks to Rodger,I am learning a lot for the damp too where this is helping me out to resolve damp issues too. The success is in"never give up and keep trying" I believe. 😊
The Americans do this , they call them "general contractors " but in the uk its stay in your lane. I started as a tiler. I now plaster. Started that because I was always being let down by plasterers coming in before me. Then went onto 2rd fix joinery hanging doors archs skirt. Then spent 7 years fitting bathrooms and fitting windows im currently fitting kitchens.
I am this man though in my case it was DIY. I’ve built my own car. Rebuilt engines that went on to go thousands of miles. Taught myself plumbing welding and wiring.
I can skim render and plaster but can’t lay bricks. I can do wood butchering but don’t have the kit to do a job that I would be proud of.
@@robertswaine6096TLDR
An American building contractor told me soooooo
Roger that Rog, if that was a rant, that was the finest I've ever heard since the days of Alexander the great
That "educated vs intelligent" bit was spot on. Ive met many who have gone to school, got degrees, but still couldnt think their way out of a paper bag.
🎯🎯🎯
Right on , as a maintenance worker, I met college kids that couldn't change a light bulb..lol
True. Those two are often conflated.
I use the term "smart" versus educated. As you said about people who have gone further with schooling are still not intelligent enough to have any "smart" in them to properly use it.
I generally use rednecks to refer to intelligent. They aren't too smart, but tell them you want a second motor in your truck, and they'll get it done. It's unlikely you will have any conversations about complex curvature of space time, but want to have a new add-on to your house? They got you.
I term these two words this way because we generally call a redneck stupid. As in, not smart. We generally consider someone who has a masters or even a ba degree, smart. For me, "smart" is what you know, and intelligent is how you apply what you know.
You can watch and study, then understand how to hunt to survive. But knowing doesn't work when you can't apply the knowledge you have. For my example, let's use tribesmen, being that it's about hunting and survival. You being smart can tell them different ways to hunt they never thought of. But unlike what you know, they can apply what they know to hunt and survive while you starve trying to learn how to apply all the hunting you learned about.
Sorry if it seems like I'm trying to be defensive while posting this, I feel like I'm not smart or rather educated enough to explain how I perceive the words educated(smart) to intelligence.
Imagine looking in a book to a simple and quick answer
I'm college educated engineer. This guy is so correct. One of the best things I did as an engineer was to learn the trade skills of the teams I work with. I spent several years doing the actual trade work of plumbing, electrical, carpentry, and welding and learning the associated skills, some to journeyman levels. It was a very humbling experience. It forced me to understand how to do their jobs, and therefore enabled me to take into account the building and maintainence processes into my projects.
Humbled an engineer one day almost cost him 50k but his initial wanna bet 10k turned to lunch real quick when my old man piped up backing me and said well let’s make it 50k so it’s worth our time if you want to bet 10k. Engineer did that knowing I wouldn’t have that much being a smart ass but my dad wanted to see how he liked it he also knew if he backed me for the 10k it was going to cause issues after I won business wise cause he wouldn’t want to pay then I’d of beat his ass 😂. Still wasn’t cheap we ate good that day.
I very much respect that. But if as a trades person one suggests that's a good idea one gets shouted down as an imbecile right quick.
@@hansmuller1625 Unfortunately, that happens a lot. It irritates me when engineers get so arrogant that they assume they are correct simply because they went to school. I always try to listen to my tradesmen because sometimes they are correct, and even if they aren't correct, it means they care about the job and doing it correctly.
Of course he is correct. I have no college education as an engineer, but I've been working as a delivery driver, IT tech, visual communication set up tech (window foils, neon signs, aluminium profiles, etc.), bulk material inspector, home appliances repair man and have now been working as a field service engineer for a big corporation that sells gauges and measurement systems for over 10 years. Yes, you read that right, I am signing my reports as an engineer, even though I never went to college. The higher ups call me a technician among themselves, but never called me that in direct communication, because their engineers call me for support when they can't solve a problem. My friends call me whenever they have a problem with their computers, cars, appliances, furniture, plumbing, electricity, etc. Do I get paid less because I never went to college? Of course not. An inquisitive mind, intelligence, problem solving skills and experience are much more important than a piece of paper that says you took a 4 year course in something. Don't get me wrong, education is very important, and we need specialists in every field, but I want to learn new skills as often as I can, and I believe that got me at where I am now.
Understanding, Is the best and top skill any one person can learn. once someone has an idea of the surrounding/adjacent trades makes working in a construction site much better... if anything the developed understanding also gives a gauge of how long something may or may not take. Even if you did focus on the one trade, makes the whole job easier by avoiding obvious problems...
Love the differentiation between “education” and “intelligence”. Wildly different, especially when you start adding experience into the mix. I’ve brewed coffee, been a cowboy, picked up dead bodies, done sales, and am now the sole handyman for a wildlife center. I’ve had people scoff at my resume (CV) because it’s “too varied” but I’ve always made that argument of “look how trainable/flexible I am if I can do so many unrelated things”
When I applied for IT positions I ran into the attitude that I was only good for the trades that I worked to pay for college. Being told you are only an auto mechanic, you are only a welder, you are only a contractor, or you are only a machinist, and we need a computer professional. No mention about my degrees...
Of course being a Halfbreed here in the US and you can't possibly be college educated as Natives can't possibly be intelligent or have a college education...
I often times put my game accomplishments on my resume
I have been scoffed at for doing it before as well, and one time I got asked how games related to job experience
I replied that it demonstrated my ability to learn a very advanced control interface and demonstrated my diligence and dedication to perform a substantial feat using said complicated interface, and highlighted how being able to do so, made me qualified to learn and operate the very basic machinery they had which was far less complex
They were very unhappy and looked down on me, but were so desperate for employees that they hired me anyway.
I came in, learned their entire system in less than a week, and while still in the on job training phase, redesigned their system and improved efficiency by nearly 30% overall.
When they asked how I did it, I told them to go play some video games and earn something about proper design. Because they had something super simple being over complicated, and video games take something super complex and radically simplify it.
The phrase you were looking for was "widely different", not "wildly different". Up until a few decades ago, no one ever said "wildly different"--and its original use was as word-play, only meant as humor.
Handyman for a wildlife center sounds like a dream job to me.
Sounds like me. Stay Safe But Curious☺️
At 76, I’ve been wearing multiple hats for over 62 years. Great way to go through life. Thanks for your program. 👍
Yup, you're a son, a husband, a father, a brother, a friend, an uncle, a neighbor, and maybe an as5 hol3!
Have you ever hired a person to do the job only to fix it after they left :)
my only wish at 76 is that ill still have the mental acuity you show ❤
When I was a kid I got interested in talking to older people. I learned so much from these people. I'm 60 and still listening to my elders
@@greenmoxyLost count of how many times I’ve experienced that! And I’m only 55, so I have 21 years to go before I reach OP’s age….
"Specialization is for insects" - Robert Heinlein. Always agreed with this. I remember a construction related reality show - I think it was called Monster House, in which an assembled team of tradespeople fulfilled the fantasy home renovation request of a lucky contestant. One episode stood out, because this one fellow was truly great at everything; he no only saw the big picture, he paid attention to detail. He conducted his work with quiet confidence, grace, and efficiency. He garnered tremendous praise from his peers, the show narrator, and the TV audience. Nothing but respect for the guy.
I'd watch that. What episode?
Oh crumbs... sorry man, that was years ago. I wish I remembered! :(@@bhartley1024
me too
@@bhartley1024
Great books
One of my favorite quotes.
My father, used to have several certifications . And in the United States you have to keep recertifying, so you have to keep paying for the privilege of working on whatever it is you have a license for. My dad was a certified welder. A certified plumber. Certified electrician, civilian and Industrial. He had a CDL for a while .. he also is extremely good at wood carving and carpentry. He's actually been published. He's been to school for electronics. My niece bought him a shirt that says if Oppa can't fix it we're all Screwed!!
your dad is korean ?:D
But of course he's Asian lol
@@raidoung4100 actually my Dad is white. And his family came to America in the 1613. So there are a couple of native Americans in the mix. And my mom was born in Germany, and is half German half Irish.
@@tuahsakato17 no, my Dad is not asian. His family is from England and Denmark. And came over in 1613. So there is a couple of Native Americans in the mix. Oppa is German for grandpa. My mom was born in Germany is half German and half Irish.
omg :D thanks for clarifying xD I thought the "Oppa" part referred to the korean Oppa xD@@ashleysanford8645
I'm a woman who was a self-taught auto mechanic, commercial painter, flooring installer, graphic/logo designer, vinyl wrap installer, sign printer/installer, programmer, and even a preschool teacher... no college. I'm 24. I love to take on new challenges I set up myself, and I am damn good at it! Congrats to all those out here making their success happen :)
lol I’m a teacher as well. Teacher, legal assistance, book keeper/financial planner, master level chef and baker, gardener, graphics designer, singer, learning carpentry, plumbing, and glasswork to customize my house. Learned of many languages, curriculum design and currently writing PD for other teachers on working with autistic children. I went to college and got my degree in philosophy. It taught me to never stop learning new shit to do because to experience life is all we get so make the most of it.
This is awesome. We follow in the footsteps of our ancestors
Way to go! The info is out there, and you are confident enough to use it, And young. I learned your attitude at 40, male, owning a bicycle store. Good on you!
Get it fam
Sure you are sweetheart
Years ago my Dad installed a central heating system into the house we had just moved into. He left the last two gas joints for the plumber to do, they were the only ones that failed the test before the system was certified. Dad was a naval ordinance electrical engineer.
So, a master of ....two
@@doodlegassum6959 not at all, that was merely an example of an ability to work out and achieve tasks outside his expertise, which I fortunately have inherited. I personally get bored very easily and probably have some form of undiagnosed ADHD, either that or I just enjoy novelty. Either way, every role I have worked in, from engineer to forester to data Comms and fibre optics, project management to gardening, I have been successful but moved on when the time was right. I even squeezed in a couple of degrees to see if I could do it. The only job I didn’t like, although it was pretty well paid, was sat in front of a computer all day amending technical drawings. I only lasted a month, when asked if I wanted t renew my contract I politely declined as I was bored shitless. I really couldn’t understand how people could do that sort of thing day in and day out without throwing themselves off the roof!
Not at all, his father was likely a master of a dozen trades...@@doodlegassum6959
I’m an electrical engineer on a ship. If anyone asks for help or fall I’ll get the job done unless it’s making breakfast always show up just in time to eat it myself. When the steward cut his hand last year I stepped in and saved Christmas with food and decorations. One of the navigators recently requested me to bake a cake because he missed the coffee sweets/desserts I made during last Christmas. Another time we almost didn’t get cleared to sail because we were lacking two AB’s and needed at least one person with that type of competence with cargo, crane and rescue boat to sail. Guess who saved the day. Also daily assist the mechanical engineer with his tasks but I don’t count that in as extra since we’re in the same department. I previously worked as a repair technician for insurance company, security and telecommunications systems, a short time as carpenter, military service.
Navy standards are very strict, Us Navy soldering standards are what NASA uses, it's the gold standard. Most consumer electronics fails the Navy standard for soldering. Basically anything done with lead free solder will fail because lead free solders cannot meet Navy quality standards for solder joints only SnPb solder can (and if you have ever soldered with SnPb and lead free you already know why this is)
I came from being a Commercial Pilot, IT Technician, English teacher, Event Rigger, Cinematography and editor, to being a polymath in the trade industry and sole preprietor. I can thank Skill Builder for helping me with a lot of what I know today. I'm a proud carpenter, plumber, electrician, cabinetmaker, painter, plasterer, tiler, businessman. Thanks again Roger for being one of my teachers in this stage of my life 👨🔧👍
@@adamd9166 he is commenting on this video that it is from the Skill Builder UA-cam channel.
Sounds like a handyman..
Ok, buy yourself a guitar now and become the next Jimmy Hendrix in 6 months.
@2ecko
you sound like the kinda guy I wanna talk to having been a producer, director, DOP, editor, chef, Web dev, designer and run an events company :)
It’s useful having various skills and interests but if your marketing yourself for business and having to carry around a ton of different tools and materials it’s not that great.
... i did a job interview and when asked why i had several hobbies listed at the end of my resume, i actually did answer that "growing up i really really wanted to be a polymath like da vinci and then i found out i'm not smart enough" and the interviewer laughed and i got the job. >_>
as an audhder, part of my "jack of all trades" is just... dopamine-searching brain mixed with tendency for monotropic thinking/hyperfocus. i've picked up many skills along the way, many hobbies, many topics that i just obsessed over... so when people try to use "jack of all trades" as an insult, at least for me, it seems incredibly short-sighted and ... kinda ableist mentality..
@bhante1345
This puzzles me so much... I think you're the right person to ask:
How do you think you can make it in a country where people expect you to:
- Be young (less than 25 years old).
- Have education (bachelor's degree from top university).
- Have experience (minimum 3 years of internship or higher).
- Have expertise in other areas (social media, office, admin, sales).
And that doesn't guarantee you from earning minimum wage, in a country where the requirement itself is already low.
@@nabieladrian welcome to india my frind
One overlooked Detail of having experience in multiple disciplines is it gives you a very flexible train of thought. It enables you to really pick something apart and do a task better, you can think outside of the box. The resourcefulness alone is invaluable
Ohhhh...that explains so much about my current train of thought, then. When I committed to writing a story, I wasn't satisfied with slapping it together haphazardly. I wanted to understand every aspect of the world I was building, and it made me diversify my knowledge quite a bit. And now I kinda just do that for everything else out of habit, and it's made me so much more well-rounded...in how I speak, in how I write, in how I think, and advocate for myself and others. It's awesome.
As I've been learning more and more skill sets, I'm finding that more and more of them cross giving me the ability to make anything that I want to out of anything that I want to. It's awesome!
Sound engineer, electrician, sales engineer, cad designer, builder, IT network technician, plumber, chef and Dj sitting here thanking you for sharing your awesome take on why it’s ok to do many things and be a polymath. I frequently have solves for problems completely alien to others due to my understanding of a completely different discipline.
ja man i just learned that i am a polymath and i am honored to have met another one :D
A real Renaissance man! Well done.
Same here brother. Accounting degree, HVAC school, military, musician, DJ, sailor, skier, etc and etc. LoL. I like growing things, tomatoes, roses, fungi, anything really.
I actually had my graphic design teachers confused by the fact that I wanted to know more about the print process than the design process. I was interested in everything from offset printings to pantones and they were just like you just have to bid the best offer at the best print shop and hope they get it right. It baffled me. That was just in that field though. I shoulda just went for fine art and rebuilt my love for creating. Instead I spent 5 years getting a 2 years degree to work for an art generating farm. Fuck that. I'm going back to building things, making art for me and trying to learn how to market it, sell it, and manage the earnings my self. Every single person between you and where your money comes from is taking their cut. It made me realize the only reason you should ever take a college course is if you don't know anything about the subject or you want to utilize the insight provide by the specific person professing the knowledge.
Haha so many DJ's in the comments. DJ Jive Wise here! And sound engineer, architect, graphic designer for posters and logos, map maker for off-road parks, welding, carpentry, remodeler (new support beams, stud walls, electric, masonry, gyp walls and cabinetry). Facebook marketplace and eBay flipper, Landscaper and gardener, drone pilot, cyclist, mountain biker, motocross rider, skier, kayaker, auto and small motor mechanic (lifted off-road vehicle). What I know I am NOT good at.... plumbing (but can fake it with shark bite), anything troubleshooting IT, sending it on extreme sports, motor teardowns, cleaning/keeping organized, finishing a project before jumping to the next.
Im one of those. Used to do home and apartment renovations (full spectrum), got my 608 EPA cert, worked on domestic refrigeration for a while, joined the pipefitters union and learned welding, soldering, brazing, mechanical room demolition and rebuild (chilled water, heating systems, boilers, steam systems, hot water heaters, industrial process controls, DDC controls, building automation systems, 24v through 480 v single/3 phase electrical, chillers, vav systems, you name it), turned into a government hvac manager and learned to work with engineers on mechanical system design and such, got into an industrial hvac company, am currently learning computer programming and game design/development, used to draw and paint a lot, won competitions, got into airbrushing, got into creative writing, etc.
Learning and implementing new skills is one of my favorite things to do.
In my mind, everything is a skill, there is no such thing as talent, and everything can be learned.
I was told growing up "if you want something done right, do it yourself" and its in my character to not ask for help. If I cant do something I learn and I asumed that was true for everyone but it's not.
I am 32 and have done all my own landscaping, patio laying, plumbing, electrical wiring (scares me, though I do know the principals). Before I got my motorbike I didn't know how to ride or one thing about mechanics, I now do all my own upkeep, tire change, sprocket, chain, oil changes, I've actually transformed the rear end of that bike myself. I taight myself how to use photoshop, 3ds max, maya and many other suits for graphic design professionally and I do that freelance. Jack of all trades? no, but If I need something done I will learn.
That's a really good username for you, considering the comment matter!
It looks like you’re doing it right. From my own experience I’ve found that I get the best workmanship from myself. I started learning from handyman books, and then from UA-cam tutorials when that became a thing. It’s good to read there are other useful people out in the world.
I don't think this always works: I think it's more efficient to employ someone more skilled who needs to know this stuff long term
This! because no one cares as much for your stuff as you
@@BarriosGroupienot always, but sometimes yes
Roger's one of the few people on UA-cam who can bang on for nearly 17 minutes and keep me 100% concentrated on what he's saying 😁
It's always a pleasure to listen to a down to earth person talking common sense 😁
Thanks Ken, I must confess I got bored half way through. (Roger)
@@SkillBuilderhahaha!
Are you kidding? I put something to fall asleep over, and 15 seconds passes, I got up and watched it, almost forgot to breathe till the end... 😂😂
He is master of that one! :D
What a cracking rant, so much is so true to life, it's frightening. I am of an age though where I can remember when all walks of life had pride in what they did.
The're very hard to find now.
Well said, sir, as a flight attendant and inventor with 3 engineering patents so far under my belt, I never let my label stop me from learning a new skill set. Product developments, industrial design, accounting, building a business, and so on and so forth. I can understand the difficulties for people with psychological difficulties that may cause fear in trying new things but for a healthy, vibrant human being to waste a full life without exploring beyond a comfort zone they have created quickly creates an echo chamber that in the end dulls their vibrant ambitions.
Spot on, it's scary to know how little people understand about literally everything that makes their modern world run.
I work for a jack of all trades, I've learned an absolute ton of stuff from him. I was an English major before and have been reading and writing my entire life, also taught myself video and audio editing, but that was about it as far as skills. Now on top of that I know how to operate construction equipment, how to do floors, how to fix roofs, how to mill wood, a bit of carpentry, electrical, plumbing, welding, gardening, and landscaping. In about an hour and a half I'm going to spend the day clearing scrub trees and blackberry bushes off the property my boss owns, that I live on, deep in the mountains. I'm also a pretty good cook.
I never would have dreamed that I'd end up with such a huge skill set. I've also become more confident as a result, in no small part due to me being in great shape due to the constant labor intensive work that I do. Who needs a gym when you're chopping down and hauling off trees by a river in the mountains. Trees that you can then mill down into useable pieces of wood that can be used for repairs or construction. Ever heard of a pop up cabin? I know how to make one now. Also taught myself a little bit of bushcraft. I'm essentially out here homesteading.
That sounds like an amazing life, how did you find such a good opportunity? I work for a handyman but I'm in the suburbs.
@@joshhickson7551I’d love to know too, been a city guy all my life and this just sounds like everything I would want, stay in shape, learning useful trades, live in a serene environment…but I barely have any of those skills at all and idk where I’d be able to look to start lol
The title caught my eye. Polymath here: former LPGA. Golf Teaching Pro, run my own golf school.
Piano teacher ...still run my own music school. Christian minister: counseling, Bible teaching, training other upcoming ministers. Self taught cook. Have cooked for local church and have done fundraising selling pies!!!
Just like you, Sir, I am trying to figure out UA-cam 😮.
Thank you, Roger!!!
Yes, it is tough to he a polymath....I tend to be very misunderstood.
May God bless you and your family 🙏.
Miss Monique 🙂🌷🙏🕊️
my golf game is hard,, but im still trying, and my new recoding studio is up and running,, but its very difficult... i must admit.
100%, spot on. I left school with nothing. I got an apprenticeship as a mechanic, then joined the army. When I was 38 I moved to Florida & bought an irrigation company. I knew nothing about it, but knew I had what it took to learn & succeed. I had staff that couldn’t do certain jobs, & didn’t want to learn either. I used to pay bonus on the revenue they brought in. Installing certain higher value products meant bigger bonuses, but they still didn’t want to learn, so I gave the high value work to other lads, or would do it myself. I sent them on courses, but I could never understand why they didn’t want to use the additional skills, & get paid extra to do it. They lacked confidence & were afraid to make mistakes. Who doesn’t want to earn extra money? I sold the business last year & moved back to England. My wife still works for the company & says the same guys are still the same.
The same guys will complain that they aren't paid fairly and their boss is a jerk
they go to work because they feel like they have to and don't view it as something that gives meaning or is worth expanding on. every second they spend working is time wasted in their mind. do as little work as possible then =
I don't want to earn extra money and would do my best to avoid overtime. It is true that I wanted to earn a certain amount of money and got the skills to earn that money. Extra money is nice but I could care less about it at a certain income level. I have also been self employed and can tell you when it is your business you are going to put in the time required to make it work compared to being compensated by an employer for particular skills. I have worked in many different technical fields and find many people incapable or reluctant to learn and even some who can learn it but can't seem to apply it.
Just because they don't want to do the work for you doesn't mean they're not learning different things.
More money doesn't equate to a better experience of life. Living life with a balance of work, passions, downtime, etc... is necessary for most humans. If you have a drive, and you want to make money, that's on you. If you don't, that doesn't make you any less of a person.
We are punished for making mistakes. Our school systems are designed to punish us when we make mistakes. Thus, you have employees who don't want to apply new skill(s) because they're afraid of making mistakes and getting punished for it.
I can't understand why so many tradesmen become set in their ways and are unprepared to learn about new ideas. I'm 64 and do a lot of jobs myself. Recent I repointed my old house using the old method with quicklime. It's so interesting to learn about new things. Not only is it extremely interesting to keep learning, but it saves you a fortune and keeps the brain in good nick.
The answer is simple, you always earn more money by specialising in something and becoming very fast at it. All trade work now is on pricework, multi skilled tradesmen cannot earn enough to compete.
I laugh at another plumber I follow on here
He won’t do anything at all other than plumbing
I recently watched him fit a new toilet and sink for a customer and he got a joiner in to cut 2 inches off a bit worktop that was only 38 cm wide 😂😂😂😂😂
A straight cut , took said joiner about 15 seconds 🙈
Couldn't get anyone to do my repointing. So I'm gonna do it myself
That's why i DIY almost anything nowadays. save money... learn something new... winner winner
It's simple: being a beginner is hard, especially if you're already an expert in an other field.
My grandfather had 2 college degrees in chemistry/physics (it was combined) and informatics (for fun) . He read many books and if you asked him about any subject he could entertain you for hours.
Somewhat of a " master of everything " , even put his hands into accounting despite not having any formal experience before .
Learned it within 3 weeks from reading books and made his own accounting program which he used for his firm.
A jack of all trades can become a master in anything really because they have something that a "specialist" might not have , and that is adaptability.
He told me the most important thing is being curious and reading, among all university professors , scientist i have met he is still the smartest person of them all
He reminds me of some of my patients.
I received a..."I would not tell you how to do your job" from a local plumber because I wanted to discuss how he was going to do the job lol. I asked him to leave and next day did it myself...and made a better job than other plumbers that I have seen. After a local inspector finished testing/inspecting my house wiring he looked me in the eye and asked me if I had done it myself. I confessed that I had and I asked him how he knew...he said it was all completed correctly and was too neat for an electrician to have done it. You talk a lot of sense Rodger, most refreshing.
If inspector said that then those electricians should be fired if that is how messy and incompetent they seem to be
@@LTDLetsPlaysAWW MESSY BOO HOO!!.. Admit it you would do it just the same probably even worse, unless the job was for your own personal requirement.
@@evm6177 It's easy fro someone that's never worked a job for 5, 10, 15 years to be unable to understand how easy it is to not give a damn after a decade of doing the same thing the same way, all while having your boss (or your boss's boss) constantly pushing for speed above all else, quality be damned. Especially if you are simultaneously underpaid for the privilege of being berated all day and working your hands to the bone.
@@LTDLetsPlays I do electrics and it's not about incompetency, it's nice if wires are bent neatly but there is no time and let's be honest no need either. It's basically, does one park a car in a quick trip to shop like in exam?
I have been a Handyman for 50 years, and a nurse, an industrial electrician mechanic welder carpenter a writer a speaker, you name it I've done it but I have never heard anyone explain this phenomenon. You are so very freakin correct sir, I get this feeling you and I were cut from the same cloth.
Every single tradesman should at the very least watch this UA-cam video by Roger. I am quite lucky in the fact that a few of my mates are tradesmen, running their own businesses. I have the ability to call on them should I need, but I will ALWAYS have a go at plumbing, small electrics, decorating, basic woodwork, windows, small landscaping etc. All for myself and my immediate family, it gives a sense of accomplishment when my mates tell me they would not have done it any differently. I may have been slower, but I got it done! It saves a fortune, over the years I have come across tradesmen who will not contemplate for a second changing the way they do something! You only live once, have a go!! Cheers Roger, another cracking video!
Once again Roger you hit the nail on the head, literally. I’m 57 years old and you’ve described my life experiences exactly. Finding a senior manager who rose up from the shop floor is almost unheard of.
The employers who give the most grief and are the most difficult ( or impossible) to work for are the ones with least experience .
That’s probably why I’ve ended up working for motorcaravan companies, I get woodworking, plumbing, LV and ELV electrical work, solar lithium, gas, and mechanical plus body work all on the same day. 👍👍😁
Can't agree more only thing im missing is gas even do carpert repairs and wash.
so true, in my day the site agent was always a crippled joiner. now its a twentysomething out of uni telling a 50 year old labourer how to shovel sand!
My late Dad was pretty much a DIY "Do everything yourself man".
He pretty much was a self-taught/ self-made man that managed to do everything from helping us with our college assignments (Accounting for my elder brother, Computer science for me, and Law for my younger sister etc), to doing the final works on the (back then) newly built house (plumbing, tiling, wood works etc).
Ever since he passed, I have noticed my mom (now in her 70's) slowly taking up those traits and even doing a far better job than I would..
Great advice, I worked as a house painter in high school. Started a painting business when I graduated. Got bored staring doing home repairs as part of my service, then remodeling, then additions, then started doing some tenant improvements for commercial spaces.
Now I am a General Contractor with 5 employees doing $3-5 million a year.
I also travel an average of 2 months every year and volunteer with my Rotary Club and Habitat for Humanity.
Life is good and can be very rewarding if you step out of your comfort zone.
I've rewired a house (got it passed by a proper sparky), installed a complete central heating system, done roofing work, bricklaying, tiling, fitted joists and floors in lofts, replaced double glazing units, fitted my own alarm, laid flags. I can't plaster though and obviously not allowed to touch gas! I am not a tradesman I worked as a civil engineer but am self taught and usually do a great job, but very slowly!
Tinker with motorbike mechanics too and the odd bit of baking! Being retired if you sit on your arse you will soon die of boredom and inactivity! So I don't!
Same here. I have learned a lot of skills over the last 11 years from renovating my last house with virtually no money. I just learned from videos here and reading a lot then trying my hand at it slowly. I ended up selling the last house in 2022 and bought the current house for cash without any mortgage purely from the profit on the last house. I took early retirement and got a job part time in a government department, they wanted to know if I would apply for a management job and go full time, I said no. I am only there for the regular pay in case I want another small mortgage to buy a house in France next year. I can make more money from finishing this house and selling it.
Well this is all lovely aggrandisement (or despicable).
I have always felt less than others because I never specialized. I've often been referred to as a jack of all trades and master of none. This has been quite encouraging 😊
Same... I have be blessed/cursed with insatiable curiosity. If I am not learning something new I grow restless.
@@id01_01 i am exactly the same. If im not learning, im quitting!
A jack of all trades is a master of none however often times better than a master at one.
Be proud of every skill and project! I’ve learned that all those “unrelated” skills do intersect at times in life and when it does you’ll be ready! Not to mention it just feels good to know about a lot of different things.
Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. For me the main objection to employing specialist tradesmen is how long it takes to get them on site. I waited and waited for a digger driver to arrive to dig the footings of my house build to the point where after two weeks of excuses and delays I told him to f*ck off and hired the digger myself. It was easy and I ended up building the whole house, saving tens of thousands and the inspector said it was better built than most houses he dealt with.
Now I have all the tools, a load of new skills and a healthy disregard for so many of the self-proclaimed skilled tradesmen. There are no trade secrets anymore with the internet. Get the tools, think out the process, read the material advice and take your time.
I have determined that a good long term job for a polymath is an industrial maintenance technician. You get electrical, computer/plc controls, plumbing, hydraulics, pneumatics, fabrication, welding, as well as wrenching and carpentry. Then you can stoke the polymath flames and get exceptionally good at your job and get paid to learn as much as you can soak in. Then you can hobby building race cars, learning to blacksmith, building remote control vehicles, art, playing various instruments, writing, competition level car audio, and the list goes on and on and on. Learn something new each day and the things that give that little spark can become the new thing to add to the skill set. Never stop learning, never be satisfied with your skill level at anything you have learned and youll never be bored again.
Much appreciated Roger. Multi trade, multi skilled, on smaller projects it makes for efficiency. Nothing depresses me more than tradespeople who think there's nothing left to learn. The know-it-all. Have an adventure, try a different way. Grow. But you'll need a lot of tools!
Trades like everything else worthwhile is an expensive sport. But man is it rewarding :)
"The wise man knows that he knows nothing at all" Chinese proverb
However if the other person is a f**king idiot who wants to me to do something that I know isn't right, like twisting mains wire together and wrapping them in PVC tape inside a piece of expensive medical equipment, then yes i'll come across as a "know it all" when I want to use butt splice crimps.
It works both ways, some people are too f**king stupid to listen to the voice of experience, and when that stupidity is combined with authority, it never ends well.
My dad and my husband are/were both polymaths. Their knowledge and capability has always astounded me. I pay attention to their work, hoping to learn as much as I can. One regret that I have is that my dad didn’t teach me what he knew. When I was young and would ask, he’d say, “You’re a girl, no need for you to learn this stuff. It’s hard work.”
It's such a privilege to have parents who know a lot of practical skills AND don't gatekeep their knowledge from their kids due to laziness, sexism, or fragile ego.
Polymaths don't exist anymore, the last time of being a polymath was in the Renaissance. Actual polymath means absolute mastery of all branches of science.
Back then it was possible because the sciences weren't that advanced.
Today it is impossible.
First you should thank your Dad I was a girl who said let me try and my back is wrecked because when I grew up they said hey hard work never killed anyone well it dose kill a lot of people and it wrecks there body. My back my husbands back and my Dads back are all wrecked. The pain never go's away only gets worse.
@@xantiom The definition of the word has nothing to do with mastery of all branches of science
"A polymath is someone who has a great deal of knowledge in many different areas of study and is known for their ability to apply that knowledge to solve problems. The word "polymath" comes from the Greek word polymathós, which means "one who knows many things". Polymaths are often characterized by curiosity, continuous learning, and involvement in different areas."
@@dragonflydreamer7658 I was picking okra at 3. I didn’t get out of all the work.
It's thus the true essence of the saying, "most people die at 26 and are not buried till 75". Yes. They learn the same skill that chokes the living hell out of them because they need the paycheck until death does them apart.
I personally living in a 3rd world + the fact that I'm not in a hurry to 'make wealth' has made me be a voracious fellow in acquiring multiple skills. Coupled with the fact that I'm an automatic minimalist rather than a contrived one, getting absorbed in any form of work has always made me forget that there is even something called 'social life'.
Currently I'm working on a project for making interlocking bricks, but, out of mad, but without machine, instead, using wooden moulds only, then heated through the kiln. Same to roofing tiles,- all made in my backyard: I want a house & the costs of acquiring one where I come from are quite immoral.
"AND THEN I BECAME A PLUBMER AGAIN" Sir, asides from being an inspiration at such age, you just made my day
As a person that started out as a brick layer with a company that had a great range of tradesmen employed, when the brickwork was slow we worked with the other trades, learning plastering carpentry and plumbing. Great grounding knowing what the other trades need from you as you were working as you could see problems before they became an issue. As an apprentice we were told always ask questions if you want to know something, always keep your ears and eyes open and you will always learn something new. After many years I went into night school and learnt electrical work and after several years doing that got a job in the heating industry. Got good at that. Every company I’ve ever worked for new my worth as they could send me to do a good job without hold ups as you pointed out waiting for other trades to turn up. Always had good rapport with the clients and retired with good name intact. Carry on ranting Roger. Sometimes it’s warranted. 😜
I have been an automotive mechanic all my life (shout out to Honda for years of continued training). I am old and retired now but I can do nearly anything, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, etc. It is good to be “useful”. A neighbor has a problem with their car or even house and I fix or diagnose it quickly I’m a hero. I tell the wife that was a cheap hero, I did little but boy are they happy and I’m a hero.
I moved in to a council house 45yrs ago, bought it cheap, ( £8000 ) ,gutted it, completely rebuilt it from the ground up , on my own, with a little help from her indoors when needed. In fact, I am still at it, just finished my third kitchen upgrade. There is literally nothing that I haven't done myself, I wont be specific as I don't want to incriminate myself, LOL. I reckon I have saved myself at least £70,000 on labour, and enjoyed nearly every bit of it. I'm in my mid 70s now, so I hope I will be finished soon. ( as if. ). Thanks for the vid.
Ever since I was a young chap I could never imagine doing 1 thing my whole life. A bit over half my statistical allotted years and I'm steady trying new things and developing new skills, making a good living with most of them.
It truly gives me massive appreciation for the people and the world around me.
We should start using "Renaissance Man" again. It sounds far more epic than polymath. Im a polymath. There arent many things i cant do. On the rare occasion i dont know, i just learn it.
The exact same phenomenon exists in programming. Maybe it works for you to be a specialist if you're in a huge corporation, but even then, you're going to stagnate while the generalist will shoot past you. And if you want something done, it's better to have one experienced generalist than one specialist in each subject at hand.
Once again telling it like it is. Great rant and full of great facts. I now consider myself a Polymath. Building, roads and civils, mining construction, carpentry, art, sculpture, poet, story writer, recycling and renovating items, electrics, structural steel erector, carsalesman, real estate agent, husband, father and grand father. Always challenging myself. Next project solar. I originally qualified as a Tool Maker. Now 72 and still going. Cheers (with my own home brewed beer) 😂😂
Thank you so much. This gave me a bit of new hope and courage. Once upon a time, being a polymath was highly revered. Let’s raise that banner again.
Inspiring. It's like a TED talk.
For the working man
As a polymath myself i find it really sad and a bit frustrating to constantly be put down just because "you're not a specialist" while knowing full well what i'm dealing with.
There's sure as hell no convincing these people but i let the results speak for themselves, at least if i can sneak in the work when they aren't looking.<
Cheers for a good video! It's nice to get some good words of representation for a change.
As an electrical engineering major right now, I’ve realized that schooling for engineering, no matter the specialization, is all the same just different flavors. It’s all centered around the ability to problem solve and learn. It’s the one type of degree that I can confidently say trains you to be able to do anything, not because it teaches everything, but because it prepares you to face any problem. I’ve never liked the idea of being a “master of one” so that’s probably why I gravitated towards engineering
Lol good luck, going to work in a refinery as a process engineer with your electrical engineering degree
@@igboman2860 why would I work there???
you will learn soon that your path has definite edges!
@igboman2860 I've done it. Generally ees are the best mathematical engineers. Other disciplines can't even do basic math. Anyone who doesn't have a basic EE understanding is useless in the current work climate.
I live in a rural fly over state in the US and most tradesman are jacks of all trades. It comes from necessity, not being in a big area. It’s not uncommon to find construction crews and handymen teams of just 1-4 people who know how to do everything on a house. I think it’s highly prized in the states or at least locally to be able to be a artistic generalist.
Yes, exactly!!! I think this is a "European thing" from what I see. I live in New England but worked overseas and lived in Germany for a few years, met my wife there, and long since have been living in NH. My European in-laws see me use a chainsaw in horror because "only professionals have chainsaws or allowed to cut a tree" - I do my own automotive work including changing tires, same thing. I am a DIY on just about everything (home furnace and hot water heater cleaning, electrical upgrades, welding, woodwork, etc) and my in-laws have office jobs and "farm out" absolutely everything to be done for them. They say many aspects they are not even allowed to do as regular citizens!
@@Sstantialwow really? That’s really interesting to think they’re “not allowed” to do stuff. I worked for a friend who owns a tree service company, and he isn’t a “licensed arborist” but has done free work for 20+ years, self employed, not even a hs diploma. No wonder everyone thinks America is wild lol 🇺🇸 😅
Yes - Exactly ... Artistry (caring)
@@Sstantialyeah well the Germans have been lied to by their overlords for too long now
@@Sstantial Well, the American Funniest Videos of people cutting trees did not help to make them feel secure -_-
OMG ,I’ve just landed on a planet that understands me, I thought that I wasn’t normal, wanting to do everything
myself. People telling me to get a tradesman to fix this and that. Why don’t you get the dealership to service your car.etc.etc.
I’m 60 years old and I’m still doing for myself, with the exception to plastering, which I suck at.
Thank you, Roger, this video is very important as a motivator to so many people. You probably don't realize the impact a simple video like this can have on a person, but your message can and literally has changed hundreds if not thousands of lives already. Even if you only give a single person the tools they need to improve their lives, you are a success at the very least. Thank you for showing people that they do not have to limit themselves.
Well said!
Great topic: Crucially what a polymath does is develop their ability to judge their own quality of work and keep improving/developing what they do, whilst applying those skills across all the trades they perform. Learning something new is often worth more than money, as that will come when you have greater breadth of expertise.
The "Don Logan Treatment", had me in stitches and yes....got that T-Shirt.
Yes it should have been Don Logan but nobody has picked up on that
Lol 🤣
I have an associate’s and bachelor’s degrees. I have a trade certification in arc welding. I have worked in the trade. I can fix, maintain, and upgrade homes and automobiles. I can hunt, fish, and manufacture my own ammunition. I currently work in national security. I have a lot of haters.
We're getting building work done on our house right now and our builder is a jack of all trades. When he was younger he worked with his dad who taught him everything. His main trade is as an electrician, but most of what he does is actually construction work and joinery. He is also a capable plumber. I've seen the quality of his work first hand and I know we have someone very special working for us. He really cares about what he does and is an extremely hard worker. He is also fantastic to consult about stuff he isn't able to do, such as working with the boiler, because he has such wide experience. He is a skilled craftsman and I have huge respect for his knowledge and expertise.
It is nice when you can find someone that you can trust 😊
And from the other side, it's nice when people feel that they can trust you!
Even nicer when you have a customer like @Vaelin404 who clearly respects and appreciates your skill. I take pride in the work that I do for people and will go above and beyond to help people with Vaelin404's attitude.
As someone who works in building maintenance, I was initially worried that working in this field would lead me to not mastering any of the one trades, but after 6 years, I've learned that I love the variety of work that gets thrown my way. It keeps things fresh and I get to learn new things every day. Half of my job tho is just going around correcting the work that other "specialists" did incorrectly.
I appreciate your perspective on this topic. There's nothing wrong with being a jack of all trades, as long as you have integrity and commit to doing things correctly. It's been very easy to get a reputation for being a reliable worker when everyone around you is cutting corners and doing things wrong because "that's the way I've always done it."
Great video sir!
I used to be on the dole, now I’m economically inactive. You truly can be whatever you want
I studied to become an electrician, but find a job as a helping hand for a plumber, did some small electrical jobs here and there, some small plumbing jobs here and there by myself, aducated as much as I could for both trades and after a year I left the job and work by myself. I get a lot of work because it's easier for my client since he doesn't have to worry with 2 tradesman, also I like carpentry and I do things around my house since I like woodworking and because I got the tools needed for carpentry and I'm decent at it if the job needs a bit of wood working I can do that. Because I can do all these things I get a lot of work and also very important, the job doesn't become monotone since you always do something different.
Excellent video as always Roger. I spent 25 fantastic years working behind the camera on movies and tv commercials, when I became disillusioned with that business (mainly due to endless arguments about salary) I decided to retrain as a Gas & Heating Engineer and Plumber. I then spent the next 12 years involved in numerous property renovations and repairs. I thoroughly enjoyed every day I was at work, generally due to being ‘valued’ as a quality tradesman. And I never had any problems with quotes or invoices, marvellous! Just goes to show that a change is as good as a rest.
When I was in University I ran into a fellow student who could not find a summer job. He started a few handyman jobs which morphed into bathroom and other remodels. He was not an expert but the local inspectors were a great help. The work was done safely. Because he was always at the job he was able to finish the job quickly. Yes, he was slower with each task. If you are not waiting for a skilled trade to arrive you save a great deal of time. He was able to finish each project much quicker. At the end of the summer he was torn between continuing the "handyman" gig or returning to his studies. This talk is 100% accurate.
This video reminds me of my dad, through and through. He started with landscaping and general labor moved on to carpentry and from always being willing to learn, he is now a superintendent for a construction company and I’m so proud of him/look up to him so much. Had to share
I have to say, Roger, that was absolutely fantastic. Well said. So many points to take on board there and everyone in the UK should watch this. They won't, of course, but they should. Keep going and all strength to you.
Well put Roger. I am a retired Builder and carpenter who also turned a hand to bricklaying, plastering and plasterboard, a little bit of tiling and plumbing and roofing. Those were mostly for small tasks that I could not afford to get done by others or because it took too long to find a reliable tradesperson to do them. I also spent many years as a Foreman and later a Safety officer and Manager.
As an IT specialist, I often dabble in the trades of electronics, electrical, furniture construction (from scratch, not kits), and outdoor construction. Also renovated my laundry at my previous house which looked way better than the bathrooms and kitchen that came with the house. We should all try to diversify our skills!
Glass collector, self employed parcel delivery, monumental stonemason, self employed rendering work, professional cleaner/carpet cleaner, HIAB (crane + truck) Driver, now i own a stained glass business that I started, between all of this I've taught myself to do any and all home & car repairs, I can build, have done flat roofs, tiled roofs, all the joinery underneath said tiles, patios, whatever...I can do anything I want to, I'm 30 next month! I get called an old head fairly often. Appreciate this video!
As a former sheetmetal worker then draughtsman I find your comments so true. Also a good practical hobby such as woodturning can help build skills that many don't have. Excellent video thank you
Spot on Roger. As a plumber, I found it extremely difficult to find a company I could work for who would let you do a proper job of thing and not using crap materials and cutting corners just for profiteering. Started my own company but far too many customers only interested in cheap job . Not a good job. I'm in a new industry now. Not nearly the same job satisfaction but I may be able to find something more fulfilling someday.
Bang on the button roger, worked for myself for 40yrs plus and do almost everything, that way i'm never let down or ripped off, and i'm never board with work, never been short of work either. nice to hear some old school sence being spoken.
The problem today with the carpenter waiting for the electrician and the plumber: even if he knew how to do all these things, he still needs to be licensed in all the different trades. If he was licensed in all the different trades, now he is worth too much money to be doing the work. Now he is going to start his own business and hire other people to do the work. He might supervise, or fill in when he's short-staffed, but you still have people working the job that only know 1 trade.
Thats a problem with the license system and how much we value them
Not everyone is business material
Roger you're a diamond! you've really confirmed what I suspected about myself for a long time. I'm a qualified mechanic, bricklayer and Scuba instructor. I have an Uni diploma in Politics and economics and I'm now studying BIM at level 7. all this and occasionally I've been scoffed at by immigration and lad on site as a "jack of all trades" as if it were a bad thing. In my younger days I was hurt and confused by their remarks but now I just pity them and their ignorance.
I only learned other trades through needing another tradesmen myself and they seemed so unreliable I had little choice but to sort jobs myself.
Even down to installing my own oil boiler 7 years ago, 2 heating engineers let me down in succession so I just got on with it. Been serviced annually by a qualified engineer who has not reported any issues. Same with plastering, some brickwork and carpentry. Would much prefer to pay somebody but unless the jobs are over a couple of grand in value and fairly simple I found trades were not interested.
Building up to retirement now, back is killing me, knees shot to bits so soon I will have no choice but to rely on these people, I'm not really looking forward to it.
I ended up doing the same in my last house. The trouble I had trying to get work done the way I wanted at a decent rate you would not believe. I ended up doing most of the work myself apart from the gas boiler and the electrical work at the meter and skimming walls. I installed firrings and levelled all the upstairs floors, did all door linings, hung doors, stud walls, insulation, pvc windows and doors, tiling, rendering, all flooring, architraves and skirting, plumbing, installed kitchen all myself. Probably saved a fortune, now in my next house I know I can do it again.
You didn't learn a trade, you copied something you have seen on youtube.
@@Brynoize Tube wasn't even around in the 80s mate 😂😂
@@tinytonymaloney7832You said 7 years ago but okay, let's pretend you meant 37 years ago, you still didn't learn a trade copying something you had seen.
As a child I never once saw a repair man at our house my dad fixed everything he did auto body work for a living . Thats how he made his living but saved so much money doing house repairs his self from ac to plumbing, remolding you name it.this was way before UA-cam.now at 58 i can say the thing about myself to be honest don't know how someone can pay someone to dodo somthing
That was hilarious, Roger! 😂 you should add stand up comedy to your skill set!
I've been a multiskilled tradesman for 40 years and yes, we are MASSIVELY undervalued until we actually put the bill in. We save clients thousands on jobs where they'd pay this much more per hour for an electrician' and that much more per hour for a plumber, or floor layer, or kitchen fitter etc. We may do each of those jobs more slowly but we take just as much pride in our work and ultimately provide the same finished product at less cost. Life is good and I am grateful to always have a full order book of both return customers, and new customers that they've recommended me to.
Take care Mate. You talk the talk but you most certainly back it up by walking the walk!
If you don't mind me asking, what are your limits, and what is your specified trade? For example, I can fit a kitchen (have done) and can do wiring, plumb in sinks and so on, but I'm not actually qualified to do any of them. Is there a point at which you can't do the above in terms of a customer's (or your own) insurance? Did you have to get a qualification in each trade in order to do the part required? Or as long as you avoid things like heating and the fusebox, are you okay to crack on? I'm just curious as to what's involved in becoming the jack of all trades. Cheers!
I think a tradesman knows all the tricks and quicker and better than handyman in my experience. For example a kitchen fitter is quicker and better than a joiner fitting a kitchen. A dry stone dyker is faster and better than builder .
A scaffolder is quicker and better than a general handyman.
@@ricos1497 any major electrical work I carry out is ok'd by a certified electrician that I also do a lot of work for. He completes a PCI for me and I repay him with work on his own property.
I am interested in this answer too!
@@richardmcdougall233quicker maybe but not better quality wise
Bravo Roger. I've said it for years, the domestic building trades in this country are abysmal. They treat the general public like imbeciles, granted some are, but the rest just want a good job done at a fair price. Guess what, wait until all these plumbers are installing heat pumps, we haven't seen the full effect of incompetence!
They don’t allow you to do multiple trades here in California unless you have your contractors license in all of them and there are trade protection laws that make that very difficult. You can buy out somebody who is retiring and keep them on the payroll long enough to do a transfer but as a worker that is not really possible.
Spot on. I have always encouraged the lost art of generalism. Todays hyper focussed world leaves people susceptible to being swindled. For example, if you don't know a little bit about economics, the politician can sell you a duffer economy. Etc
Love being a Jack of all trades. Too impatient to wait for others so have always learnt to give other things ago as I would get bored otherwise.
sometimes you have to, and if no one can do it as you want it, it's best to do it yourself
@@localgrassfieldboneshandleragreed. My problem isn’t the wait, it’s the idea of accepting an insultingly mediocre level of quality received while handing over hard earned money to some slacker that drives me to do everything myself
Happy to have knowledge in mechanic work, electronics, electrical, flooring, woodworking, plumbing, concrete, coding in a couple different languages, security, First Aid, CPR and AED, small engines, drywall, cooking, CDL trucking, siding and gutters, gardening, welding, and more. I dont say this to brag, because I know theres people out there than can do the things I do but better. I say this because you too can learn alot with dedication. I never even graduated highschool. Honestly it was people telling me id never know anything that gave me and still gives me the drive to learn more and refine ny skills. Since being a father its really gone off the rails with me wanting to learn and refine. If yoire reading this, I believe in you and you got this. Get out there and learn, pass on the knowledge. Live a damn good life. Much love to you all.
Being able to see something done once, understand what's happening and why, and replicating it perfectly is something else you gain from this way of learning.
Never cease trying to learn. Gathering knowledge and passing it on is the meaning of life ❤
As someone with GAD, OCD, ADHD, & ASD, I can relate. My OCD definitely makes me question if any of this is good for my mental health, BUT simultaneously, I feel immense pleasure in being the unique individual I am regardless of my ailments that give me both massive advantages, and massive disadvantages, which surely, if I just knew which part of the brain I could fix up to be rid of those massive disadvantages, I would have done so already, granted, I'd need surgical expertise and equipment, but lets "not" get hyper-fixated on "semantics".
lols Take Care Mate!
Now that you have all these 'labels', it's time to throw them off and create your very own 'ables'.
3:31 Finally someone said it "you could learn that in 5 minutes" plumbing really is that easy just need to know the codes after that
it was ironic
I used to live in France for about 15 years, I'm not a builder but I did quite a bit of labouring for various trades (sparks, plasterers, plumbers), and I can confirm what you say. Id also add that most of the people I worked for tended to look down on kitchen fitters as the least skilled 'trade' 😜
One thing that's related to all this is the Dunning Kruger effect, that's the tendency for people to think they know more than they do and conversely, the more experienced they are the more they underplay their skill set and are more likely to consult an expert if they're not sure. I'd rather employ someone who knows what they don't know than someone who thinks they know it all. Without being an expert yourself its hard to tell though...
This could apply to so many walks of life. I’m a graphic designer but have dabbled in many fields over the years (web/print/digital) and can apply many design elements across various areas. I prefer the term multi skilled. I also love to give new things a try with DIY and have tried carpentry and brickwork this year. I love it and the satisfaction you get from learning a new skill!
Hooray! You have nailed it, absolutly nailed it. I learnt to do basic plus plumbing including soldering joints. I learnt to do basic electrics and the rules for wiring in kitchens and bathrooms, I have a contact who can check my work and certify it if required. I have learned to tile, and I have attended a plasterimg course, 3 days 20 years ago, I have plastered many walls, and even a whole house. I created a downstairs bathroom for my gf 3 years ago , including ground works but I did employ a bricky and a roofer. I did that bathroom after getting some absured quotes, and after having got a plumber in to move a pipe for washing machine, the only reason I didn't do it myself is because it was her house, her rules until she got the bill. I have rescued bathrooms, even after 2 plumbers abandonded the jobs because they couldn't it. Everything I've done has been done properly and following guidlines. I qualified as PAT engineer. I am an IT engineer and coder. I repair cars, even rebuilding 2 engines. Repaired bodywork on cars. I have health and safety certification. I'm an excellent decorator. I also repair electronics. I have so many talents yet because I am not a professional in any one aspect I can't use that word. The only thing I don't like is dealing with customers, and their expectations, also the fact that many under value talent, skill and professionalism. Also, true, most guys I know in most trades are very bright guys, they know their subject and have the skill. But they become bored, refuse to learn anything else and just become lazy, but also tired. Most plasters are probably looking to quit by the time they are 45, they've had 25 years of dust and damp. A bricky can be a bit more selective and work long hourse in the summer as winters are wet, cold and short. Electrcians get fed up with working in lofts during the summer, and people trying to knock them on payment. Variety is the spice of life. And yes, I've realised that the French have got it right. It's where I should have gone 20 years ago. I can offer lots of advice on many things, I have learned a lot over the last 40 years, most of it now lays dormant until I have a reason to use that knowldge and skill. In this country people have being conditioned to only look for a builder or a plumber, I on the other hand can only call myself a handyman and work for half the cost of a trades person who calls themselves a professional. So, to that end, someone needs to be a professional in at least one skills. There is no such thing a professional handyman, so we use the term Builder I believe but then what makes a professional builder? And we've heard many stories about so called builders and cowboy builders that people worry about employing a builder. They should just ask me!
One of the things you mentioned toward the end of the video actually has a name to it. The Peter Principle: "Every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence". Basically, you may be good at one thing so they promote you, and keep doing so, until you're given a job you're no good at. As a result you stop being promoted, and instead - and to the disappointment of everyone else - you end up stuck as the idiot in a role you're no good at for ever more.
Interesting, i hadn't heard of that.
I'm a carpenter, I've noticed over the years that there seems to be an effort to reduce peoples' skillsets from developers, I think it's so that they can pay semi skilled people less whilst keeping them dependent on their employer as they can't adapt to something else... these things always come down to money.
I hate being called a handyman. I'm a carpenter that can do most trades, if I can't I learn and learn.
Nothing wrong with being a handyman, but if being a handyman bothers you, perhaps your could call yourself "an engineer," like boilermen do?
I find the handyman title is usually aimed at very basic stuff, like putting up shelves, curtain poles, window blinds, paint touch up, damaged wall filling, that sort of thing.
Anything that requires trade qualifications, such as electric, plumbing, HVAC, then you're more into multi skilled engineer, facilities engineer, building services engineer.
I guess carpentry has rather faded from where it used to be. With the introduction of dry wall systems, readymade kitchen pods etc, its diluted much of the skill and general building knowledge that joiners used to learn. Whereas electrics is now a huge part of construction, especially with renewables, EV's and the eventual end of gas boilers.
@@idi0tdetectioninprogress Back in my day and in my country of birth, an engineer was someone who had done six years of university, including lots of hard-core physics and maths courses. He (it would be a male in 95+ per cent of cases) would have the knowledge to build rockets that put people on the moon or to design a nuclear reactor, for example. In this day and age and in the UK, an engineer is a bloke who knows how to fix your boiler. If a boilerman can call himself a "heating engineer," I don't see why a handyman can't call himself a "general maintainance engineer" or why a Macdonalds worker can't call himself a "burger-flipping engineer."
@@chesshooligan1282 I guess if you're old school you'll only recognise engineers with a degree.
Personally, I don't have an issue with M&E trades calling themselves engineers, dependant on what their level and job role is.
I've never seen a "handyman" be expected to hold any trade qualification whatsoever. That's always been clearly defined as far as I see. The expectation of a handyman isnt to get involved with systems which are specifically controlled by regulation or Law.
If the OP is a qualified tradesman, and doesn't like his "handyman" title, then maybe he's in the wrong job.
@@idi0tdetectioninprogress What I recognise as an engineer is completely irrelevant, and even having a degree can be irrelevant. I've met a person with a degree in French who could barely speak French. I'm a mathematician with a four-year degree from a top American uni and I've met an amateur mathematician who probably knew more maths than me. I've seen about 10 orthodontists in my life and only one who knew what the fuck he was doing. He was Mexican and not qualified as an orthodontist. He told me orthodontics is a scam and he could sort me out in a couple of months for $175 using those plastic removable gadgets. I thought he was crazy, but I had a go out of curiosity and because I was broke. He sorted me out. He did what 9 others couldn't do, and for the amount some of them charge for one visit. What profit did he make after paying for materials? A tenner? So... whether someone calls himself an engineer or other people do is irrelevant, at least in my opinion. Still, it's kind of weird to use the same term as a qualifier for both a boilerman and a nuclear reactor designer.
I completely agree with you. If a handyman is ashamed of being a handyman, it sounds like he's in the wrong profession. Perhaps he should get off his ass and become an aerospace engineer?
My Father taught me never to be afraid of trying something new. He would say it took a team of experts to build the Titanic and one man to build the Ark.
Only difference being is that the ark is a childrens story
Your right, the experts built the Titanic and .....
...and the Ark never happened :)
This is the best thing that I have seen on UA-cam in a month! I have more degrees than a thermometer and now spend my time fixing properties and dealing with the kind of tradespeople described herein. This man is spot on!
There's so much legislation and regulation these days that no-one wants to take the risk of mucking something up and then being sued. It's a pity that colleges don't properly train up people to be certified Jacks and Jills of all trades.
A lot of us who know how to do and make stuff are self taught nowadays. Trouble is that in many countries getting certification is very difficult once you're an adult or when out of school. Even with Uni already done, but in the "wrong field" I'd for example have to do high school again just to be able to be an electrician. Ugh. I can already do most of it in electrical field, but there's no feasible way of getting certified, as it's a regulated trade. And sadly anything with building or renovating anything became a regulated restricted trade in my country (Slovenia) and likelihood of being able to do it legally is diminishing more and more. Not sure about elsewhere, but many countries in EU make it really hard for those of us with experience but no degree or certification in trades, to do them legally or even get employed. 😔
In my state, one used to be able to have two ways of becoming a mining engineer. They could either go to our oldest university or work several years for the mine co as an apprentice to the current engineer. That ended, before my time. I think in the 1960's@@maticjelovcan
@@maticjelovcan Dear Sir/Madam,
You have Napoleon to thank for ensuring that all professions are officially certified, homologated, licensed & possibly blessed by the Pope. He was hellbent on making every trade properly qualified via apprenticeships, etc. Most of Europe follows the Code Napoleon ( Napoleonic code). No wonder this tyrant couldn't stand the British as they had a far more pragmatic approach & less stiff approach to open a business. The world would never have benefited & enjoyed Robert Louis Stevenson first train had he been born in France. The irony is that the first railways in France were constructed by British engineers hence why all trains in France run on the left just as the UK. Kind regards.
I am in the opposite situation regarding employment in my former field. I did technical work as a qualified electronics technician in industry for 30 years. Because I do not have a trade certificate, for which you need to do a 4 year apprenticeship, I am legally barred from doing domestic or commercial electrical work and must have engineering sign off for industrial installation only. On the academic side of careers I do not have the necessary level 8 honours degree in Electrical Engineering to sign off on work so I had to give up a well paying job when made redundant in my last job. I had to go into a completely different sector but would have loved to pursue domestic or institutional electrical work if time and education systems allowed.
I was at an awkward age regarding either taking on an apprenticeship which is required legally for any work in electrical or a degree level electrical Engineering course which would allow me to inspect and sign off on work done. Either course of action would have taken at least 4 years with only 10 working years left. Modern technical and manual trades work, especially in industry, requires and emphasises multi skills people adept at doing many roles in order to avoid the waiting that having different trades not working with each other.
I have seen the botches that occur, even in new house builds, when trades do not work together or follow plans closely.
On the bright side I have hired specialists who had both the degree level education to supervise themselves adequately and also had the hand skills and had the team to do the work effectively.
I actually am starting an evening college course today called "women in construction" to introduce women to the trades to give us a taster of the trades to see which one we would like to specialise in. By tye end of the course I won't be qualified in anything, but will be able to do jobs around my own home. (I already do. My dad is a sparky and taught me growing up, along with all forms of DIY, just not plumbing, or plastering, but I have taught myself what I have needed too so far!) I only found the course as I was looking to do an electricians course, but was wondering I'd I would prefer carpentry, coz it excites me more. It sucks that they don't do multi trade courses though other than the taster. I would be so up for expanding my knowledge and becoming qualified in all the trades! I love nothing more than the satisfaction of being able to start and finish jobs myself. Whether that's replacing my broken shower, fixing the leak in the kitchen, or fixing the scary and dangerous electrical work that was done on my house prior to buying it. Currently building my kids chinchillas a castle as simple boxes with 1 opening cost an extortionate amount! Can't wait to be able to do things outside my own home and do a trade I enjoy!
Totally agree, at the very least, having skills in different trades means that you know what's involved in other trades and can work more effectively as part of a team. 2 hours lunch is a good idea though.
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
I’m 24 years old and worked at various jobs that developed my kaleidoscopic range of skillsets. Would absolutely consider myself a generalist.
Worked as a line cook in a restaurant, changed the engine oil of cars at a service shop, built wood fences with a handyman, wired up apartment buildings, replaced toilet gaskets, organized labor for the union, repaired thermostats, and installed fire alarm devices.
Still have several more decades ahead of my life, so who knows what more I’ll get to learn/experience? ;)
I have been accused of being a jack of all trades, many many times. 😃
"I wish I had become an electrician. I wouldn't have to clean up after myself, then." 😅🤣👍
The problem with trying to get work in other trades is the fact that 99% of hiring managers think you wouldn't be good at it because your experience/history lacks time in the job you're trying to get. Most of the world is incapable of trade hopping. 🤨
Great video, sir 🫡 👍 👏
We are currently residing in an era where generalists with strong internet skills can often outperform 'specialists' in their respective fields.
I am what you would call multi trade, alot of my customers like the fact that I am a “one stop shop” especially when it comes to kitchens and bathrooms. I learned a long time ago that when you rely on other trades you often get let down for one reason or another. I wouldn’t say I’m as quick as a specialist, but I take pride in what I do and the time saved is often considerable. The variation of work keeps me interested, keeps me learning and most of all keeps me busy. I also have an unhealthy addiction to tools so it’s a win win!
Handyman here.
Built my own house myself.
What I couldn't figure out, I googled several videos and used the best one in my opinion.
Passed inspection, saved 1/2 the cost of the house.
Frankly I think our modern , digital age is making the notion that it's best to only be good at one thing more and more outdated. For all the problems the Internet has exasperated in our society it is undeniable that it's also made being able to learn almost countless new skills much more easier than ever before. I'm a creative person with a deep love of literature, and I definitely want to write a few books, short stories and poetry before I die, but I find myself also deeply fascinated with filmmaking, video game design, painting/drawing, acting, and music. And I can learn so much about all these things now with just a few quick Google searches compared to having to go through an education to learn them. I'm more and more sure that the future is in Renaissance men and women more and more! :)
First off, I am a musician; I am absolutely useless with anything mechanical-nevertheless this video was quite inspiring to me. I am very much a specialist in a couple areas I take great pride in, but I’ve always felt paralyzing fear in relation to becoming more of a “jack of all” in other things that would probably make me more self sufficient. I want to begin changing that 🙂
Totally go for it! I started out with music aswell, later went over to theology too and now am an soon-to-be adept in both Latin and Greek. All with certificates of course. And I also know how to change a tire or plaster a wall, before any mockery occurs.
If you're a musician, look for the music in mechanics. I was terrible at music, but loved listening to certain types. Found I couldn't move to a beat on the dance floor, but damn could I make a car dance ;)
You'll find there's music in everything with a little bit of headbanging and swearing 😁
@@BrKnOblivion hahah I can see it 😄
I’m a musician. I’ve played piano for 20+ years. I’m not the best pianist on the planet but that’s because I’ve also spent time learning banjo, guitar, and accordion. I’d rather play multiple instruments professionally well than be a virtuoso on one.
I feel that @@thomascraig6814. I've long had an inner-battle between being a drummer and a singer. You do start to see, though, how the ways you improve on one instrument a very applicable to others and things that aren't music at all!
I think the collective mental shift toward the concept of negativity toward the polymath and the concept of positivity toward specialization likely occured because of the industrial revolution. They wanted people to become factory workers and only focus on one thing. They wanted these workers to keep doing that one thing. If you only learn one thing, then you are stuck doing that one thing. Round and around we go. There's also the history of compulsory education again supporting that same concept.
Same in academia, the PhD specialist is revered and the MSc "generalist" is considered lower-class. Same for the medical world, surgeons over GPs. I have found many PhDs to be arrogant and they didn't know their limits. They know a hell of a lot about the mating habits or a rare insect but still feel they can speak with authority on economics, literature, and engineering!
A good one this week Roger! I'd be what most would call a jack of all trades. I worked in finance, moving to software and am currently thinking of moving again. I'm very hands on, doing a lot of renovation work and am generally a fairly competent DIYer (handyman level, probably). The thing putting me off moving career presently is that the process to become a plumber or electrician seems to be geared towards school leavers, which I'm very much not! Having run my own succesful consultancy business, I don't really fancy being an apprentice. I appreciate that my knowledge is lacking in many areas, especially rules/regulations, but I wouldn't need the hand-holding and supervision that a kid fresh out of school would need and rightly expect.
The one thing missing your video is regulation too. I'm putting in a new wood burner for my in-laws, doing the labour of removing the old fireplace, pointing the old stone, cementing for the hearth, moving existing sockets, plastering, skirtings, templating for the register plate and cutting to size and cutting and fitting the granite hearth from an off-cut. The problem I have is that I'm not qualified to actually fit the stove itself. I know exactly how to (there's a skill builder video explaining it!), and I've done every other step in the process, but someone needs to get their £3K for fitting the liner and positioning the wood burner correctly and commissioning in order that the insurance man doesn't refuse to insure.
I suspect there is an element of this when your fabled plumber refuses to do the electrical parts, and vice versa. They don't fit the bureaucratic profile required and don't want the potential to be accused or sued at some point in the future for something that probably had nothing to do with their work. The system that we live in needs its silos, that's how it works. Can't have people running around doing everything.