// the hire vs F*IT comparison

The salary is barely half the cost.

Most tradies budget for the wage and forget everything else — super, leave, WorkCover, recruitment, ramp time, the wrong-hire risk, the human-being cost. Here's what your first onshore admin really runs you.

// First-year cost of one admin hire
$0
$30/hr · 30 hrs/week · standard NSW employer rates
// the breakdown

What you're actually signing up for.

For a 30 hr/week admin at $30/hr base rate. The base wage is $46,800. That's just the line you advertise the job at — every line below it is mandatory, and you don't get to opt out.

Base wages
$30/hr × 30 hrs × 52 weeks
$46,800
Superannuation (12%)
Mandatory from July 2025, paid quarterly
+ $5,616
WorkCover insurance (~1.7%)
NSW icare average premium rate
+ $810
Annual leave accrual (4 weeks)
7.7% balance sheet liability
+ $3,604
Personal/sick leave (10 days)
Statutory minimum, accrues
+ $1,778
Public holidays (~10–11 days)
Paid at ordinary rates
+ $1,778
Recruitment (Year 1, amortised)
Ad spend, screening, interview time
+ $2,500
Equipment + setup
Laptop, phone, software seats, desk
+ $1,500
Training + ramp loss (4–6 weeks)
Weeks before they're net positive
+ $3,000
Your management time
~2 hrs/week supervising at $120/hr
+ Free... not free
First-year all-in cost
$67,400
// the unspoken cost

And then there's the wrong hire.

Every owner has heard the horror story. Some have lived it. Industry data puts the cost of a bad hire at 30–150% of their annual salary. Here's what that actually looks like.

Sunk wages while underperforming (4–6 mo)$10–18k
Super + on-costs already paid$1.5–2.5k
Recruitment round one$2–4k
Recruitment round two$2–4k
Productivity loss while they were "there"$5–15k
Cleaning up missed invoices, angry clients$3–10k
Your time managing exit + rehiring (40–80 hrs)$5–10k
Reputation damage if customer-facingVariable
Realistic cost of one bad hire
$25–55k

The numbers are bad. The trauma is worse.

After one bad hire, most owners don't hire again for years. The experience locks them into a permanent ceiling on the business. They stay solo, work 70-hour weeks, and tell themselves "good staff are impossible to find."

Which is partly true, and mostly a scar.

F*IT doesn't get this wrong because it doesn't have a personality that sours, can't quit out of spite, can't quietly underperform — every action is logged and reviewable.

If you don't like it, you cancel. There's no termination process, no awkward conversation, no Fair Work Commission risk, no payout to make it go away.
// the cost no one prices in

The cost of dealing with a human being.

The on-costs are the obvious bit. Here's what no one tells you when you're thinking about your first hire.

Performance management
Regular 1:1s, feedback conversations, probation reviews. Real time and real emotional load. 2–4 hrs/month if you're doing it properly.
Drama management
Their car broke down. They had a fight with their partner. They're stressed about money. You're not their counsellor but you're paying for the time it eats.
Sick days you didn't expect
Mondays after long weekends. Mysterious gastro on Fridays. Real illness too — it's their right and it's fair. You're still covering.
Annual leave at the wrong time
They want three weeks in December. You're flat out in December. You navigate it. Repeat next year.
Compliance creep
Fair Work changes. Award updates. Super clearing house issues. STP filings. Payday Super reform from July 2026. You're now a part-time HR person.
The quiet quitting phase
The 6–12 weeks before they actually leave, when they've mentally checked out but you're still paying full freight.
Termination risk
Get it wrong, Fair Work Commission. Even if you're 100% in the right, weeks of stress and possibly $5–15k payout to make it go away.
Your headspace
The cognitive load of being responsible for another person's livelihood. Constant low-grade worry. The reason a lot of solo tradies want to stay solo.

Employing someone means you're now running two businesses — your trade, and a tiny HR function. F*IT only adds to one of them.

— the case for F*IT
// the comparison

Four options, side by side.

No marketing fluff. The honest costs and capabilities of each path. Pick the one that fits.

Onshore hire$30/hr · 30 hrs/wk Onshore contractor$60/hr · 15 hrs/wk Offshore VA$25/hr · 15 hrs/wk F*IT Pro$1,997/mo · always-on
Monthly cost ~$5,600 ~$3,900 ~$1,625 $1,997
Annual cost ~$67,400 ~$46,800 ~$19,500 $23,964
// COVERAGE
Phone receptionLimited hoursMixed 24/7
Inbox / SMS / DMsLimited 24/7
QuotingDrafts onlyLimited AI drafted
Scheduling + dispatch Optimised
Website + SEOLimited Built + grown
Social contentLightMaybe Volume AU voice
Reviews automationManualManualManual Automated
Compliance / SWMSIf trained Templated
Bookkeeping / receipts Specialty OCR + sync
Google Ads management Managed
Authority / citations Full
// QUALITY
AU vernacular Native Native Off Trained
Phone work qualityLimitedRisky Native AU
Local context
Brand voice controlTrainableLimited Configured
Sick days / leaveYesNoNoNever
Quits without noticeRiskRiskRiskNever
Ramp time to productive4–6 weeks1–2 weeks2–4 weeks90 days fully dialled
Owner mgmt time/week~2 hrs~1 hr~3–4 hrs~30 min
// COST PER COVERED HOUR
Effective $/hr (advertised)~$43$60$25<$5
Hours actually delivered~26 net~15~15Continuous
Real $/hr after QA + babysitting~$50~$65~$30See note below
A note on that <$5/hr number
Be sceptical of it. Calculating a "cost per hour" for an always-on AI system is a marketing trick — it makes us look 10× cheaper than we honestly are. The real comparison is this: F*IT delivers roughly $5,000–8,000/month of equivalent labour value for $1,997/month. That's the figure we'd defend in a pub argument with another tradie. We've left the <$5/hr number above so you can see exactly the kind of bullshit our competitors will use against you — and so you know we're not playing that game.
// the better story

F*IT isn't anti-hire.

It's how you make your first hire actually work. The standard small-business hire fails because there's no system for them to slot into. F*IT is the system.

// Stage 1 — solo

F*IT carries the load

You're on the tools. F*IT runs the back office. No staff, no HR, no awkward conversations. You see your first $400k year as a one-person business.

// Stage 2 — first hire

Human slots into the system

Single login. Workflows already documented. AI Mechanic answers their questions in real time. They're productive in week 1, not week 8. When they leave, the institutional knowledge stays.

// Stage 3 — small crew

People amplify, not replicate

Your hires are doing high-value work — managing relationships, complex jobs, the 5–10% F*IT can't. Not chasing invoices and reformatting quotes. The system carries the floor for them.

F*IT first. Then staff that ride on top of it.

// when we're not your answer

Three scenarios where you should walk away.

Honest about it. Not every business needs F*IT. If any of these are you, save your money — we'd rather lose the lead than sign the wrong customer.

// 01

You need someone physically there

Walk-in customers, foot traffic, signing for deliveries, running errands across town. F*IT can't open your front door. Hire a part-time receptionist instead.

// 02

You want AI to run the whole business

If you're looking for "set and forget," look elsewhere. F*IT supercharges the repetitive work — quoting, scheduling, content, follow-ups, compliance. We don't make the business decisions for you, and we don't try to. Letting AI run pricing, hiring, or customer relationships is the road to failure. F*IT is your back office, not your replacement.

// 03

You're a sole subbie, no public-facing work

One head contractor, one number rings, no website needed, no SEO needed, no public reviews to chase. F*IT is overkill. Keep your costs lean and stay nimble.