Diversify across residential, commercial, and multi-unit to hedge against sector slowdowns — GT's mixed portfolio kept revenue flowing when commercial slowed during COVID.
“right now i feel like we have probably the best mix of all three and it's kind of helped us out through the pandemic”
Without a formal apprenticeship pathway for painting, hiring is a gamble — years on a resume mean nothing; the only reliable filter is a paid trial.
“you're forced at the end of the day to try to kind of give everybody a try and it's creating a lot of issues”
In a trade where good workers immediately go independent, retention requires demonstrating a credible career path inside the company — not just wages.
“nine times out of ten the minute you become good you go off on your own and start doing your own thing”
HRM's painting market is reportedly the most price-competitive in Canada — sub-trades entering this market should expect chronic below-average margins driven by low entry barriers.
“hrm overall in canada is probably the most competitive paint industry not just for price points but also for the cost of paint”
Building relationships with selective GCs and developers who respect your scheduling and pricing constraints is more sustainable than chasing public tenders — tender work almost always degrades to race-to-the-bottom.
“focus on the relationships that really matter during the day that when we're done they go thank you so much for that”
Scope creep onto finishing trades (caulking, patching, repairing other-trade damage) has increased over decades while prices have decreased — sub-trades must price a damage allowance into every bid or absorb the loss.
“the expectation that the painters will fix it the painters will fix it and it's the trickle-down effect”
Back-charge asymmetry — other trades bill painters for accidental damage but painters cannot bill back for damaged finishes — is a contractual gap that GCs can fix if they choose to enforce it.
“if we get a damaged wall it's like well that's you you should have that in your quote to fix that”
As the last trade on site, painters absorb compressed schedules created by others; sub-trade agreements should build in explicit relief clauses when upstream trades cause delays.
“we've been backed into the corner and say you have to — this is your fault because someone three months ago didn't meet their schedule”
Sub-trades are effectively the cash-flow banks of construction projects — they front labour and material and are paid last; adequate working capital or credit facilities are not optional.
“we are the banks of the construction the sub trades as a whole we put out the labor we put out the material and we sit and wait”
Waiting over a year for final payment on a single commercial project can threaten the solvency of a mid-size sub — diversifying client types reduces this existential risk.
“there's one project we waited over a year for to get our final payment to come through”
Expanding into certified specialty coatings (pool coatings, high-end decorative finishes) differentiates a painting sub-trade from commodity competitors and opens higher-margin residential work.
“there's a couple courses i'm going to take on a high-end product that i don't think is pretty common here”
Peer communication among competitors in a small market can raise industry standards collectively — silence perpetuates a race to the bottom that harms everyone.
“there's not enough action being taken and coming here today is kind of maybe a starting point for me”
A formal apprenticeship program for painting would simultaneously raise quality standards, improve industry image, and create a psychological barrier against casual entry that drives price erosion.
“that certification would prove that we're painters and we're certified and we're willing to do good work”