A week in the life of a TEMPORARY VEHICLE TECHNICIAN
Autotech Recruit enlists Chris Webb into action as part of its network of temporary vehicle techs.
Demand for vehicle technicians has reached a critical point. Difficulties surrounding the recruitment and retention of technicians have been well documented for some time. But the pandemic has expediated the crisis, with aftermarket businesses loosing potentially thousands of pounds a day as a result of labour gaps.
Autotech Recruit, who manages the UK’S largest network of temporary vehicle technicians and MOT testers, has reported a huge rise in demand from the industry for contractors to cover resource issues.
Here, we follow a temporary vehicle technician for a week to understand what it’s really like to be a contractor in the automotive aftermarket, and dispel concerns around the amount of work available, pay and training:
While on a break between permanent roles, Chris Webb responded to an advert from Autotech Recruit for temporary vehicle technicians. Originally, the move was meant to fill a gap before he secured another permanent role, but that was four years ago, and the 32-year-old hasn’t looked back.
“I sent my CV across to Autotech Recruit, and the very next day I was working.”
With past experience of working within dealer groups, Chris was put on Autotech Recruit’s Manufacturer Led Programme (MLP). Created to meet demand from car manufacturers to tap into contractors, MLP temporary vehicle technicians are trained to the specific brand standards
at a manufacturer’s dedicated training facility and equipped with uniform to ensure a manufacturer’s professional requirements are maintained.
To date, Chris, who lives in Somerset, has been trained with Volvo and takes positions within the dealer’s network
across the country: “I could choose to work closer to home, but while I have the flexibility in my home life to stay away if needed, I’m following the money and the demand. I generally find the cheapest, nicest Bed & Breakfast and I am compensated for the cost of this within my daily rate. I’m still around £300 better off each month with Autotech Recruit.”
Here, we follow Chris for a week to understand what being a temporary vehicle technician is like...
Monday-tuesday
I’ve been working with Land Rover in Bristol for the past few weeks. After two MOT testers left the site, they needed urgent cover to cope with demand.
I was purely working on the MOT ramp, testing up to nine vehicles a day to help them manage and clear the backlog.
As a temporary vehicle technician, you are largely working on routine vehicle maintenance – anything which isn’t engine or gearbox work. However, through MLP training the work becomes more involved.
Walking into a garage as a temporary technician is never an issue. I’ve always been welcomed and can hit the ground running. It’s clear that garages today are relying on the services of contractors to cover both labour and skills gaps. Cars are increasingly technical, and technicians need ongoing training. In my last permanent position, I was in a
small garage and training was seen as a necessity but sending technicians off for even one day’s training would have resulted in a financial loss. As a contractor, I am responsible for my own upskilling and Autotech Recruit, through its training division, provides me with plenty of opportunities and subsidised courses, and this is the most skilled I have ever been. Working across different vehicles also keeps me agile and in demand.
Wednesday-thursday
Autotech Recruit have called me and asked me to transfer from Land Rover to work within a Volvo dealership, as I am Volvo trained to Level 3 through MLP. Another temporary vehicle technician takes my place within Land Rover.
Being trained on a manufacturer’s specific vehicle components enables me to work on more in-depth issues. Within Volvo, I have been servicing
springs, shock absorbers and brakes.
In my first day at the Volvo dealership, I serviced around seven vehicles. However, on day two the vehicles required more complex work on brakes, tyres, and springs, so I carried out five services.
Friday
I am at Autotech Training today, a sister brand of Autotech Recruit, in their Milton Keynes headquarters, on an IMI Level 3 Hybrid and Electric Vehicle training course. The company have pledged to train its contractor network to a minimum Level 2 Hybrid and Electric Vehicle, IMI standard. Later I received a gift voucher for the full amount of the Level 3 course.
Prior to attending the course, I undertook the online training for Hybrid, PHEV & EV. While I was able to do this in my own time, this also gave me the essentials right through to the physics of EVS.
The EV training suite is the size of a classroom which easily fits a vehicle, tools, and diagnostic equipment, with space to work freely around the car. The teaching is split between classwork, and on the EV itself to apply the theoretical knowledge.
The Level 3 course focuses on in-depth diagnostic of the systems within an EV. For instance, most people won’t know that there are two different electric circuits inside an EV, a 12-volt and a high voltage circuit. So, understanding the volts and amps we are testing and how to diagnose them correctly and safely is key to moving from Level 2 to Level 3. The course showed me how to read the information from the vehicle sensors and ECU to confidently ensure that the vehicle has been repaired correctly first time. Level 3 also includes being able to safely isolate the high-voltage system from the rest of the vehicle, and correctly re-instate the high-voltage system and check its functioning using the diagnostic equipment. It also covers, in detail, how electrical circuits operate, and how the high-voltage and lowvoltage circuits interact with each other.
I will soon be one of the first contractors at Autotech Recruit to be trained to IMI Level 4 Hybrid and Electric standard.
“Without doubt, this is the best job I’ve ever had. I have a far better work life balance, and I am in control of my own career. Obviously, as I have a mortgage and bills to pay, the initial concern was whether I would be working frequently enough to cover these costs. However, I have been inundated with work, and I don’t worry about where the next contract is coming from, particularly as many can last for months at a time.