Over the years I've hired many handymen (have yet to find a handywoman, but that's another thread). Why is it that every handyman has this seemingly-pathological need to cr@p the bed?
I've hired guys who are recommended but don't return phone calls. Or show up late, without explanation, for estimates. Or show up once and do good work and require the services of the CIA to find them again when you have more work for them.
Today I have a handyman at my mom's place. I've hired him several times in the past and he's done very good work. Our first conversation on-site was about an entry door that is out of square and drafty. I told him I didn't know if it needed shimming or weatherstripping or anything up to and including a new door (that's why I'm asking for his opinion). I know The Right Fix may not be cheap. But I got lots of chin rubbing and hemming and hawing about having to line up help and order doors and how this is a warm-weather project (it'll be 55-60 degrees today). And a bid for the job that has me calling window & door installers because it sure sounds like an "I don't want to do this job" price.
My mom also has one of those IKEA-style DIY medicine cabinets she wants built and attached to the wall. I get that this is not a fun project -- I could have done it but knew it would have taken me all day and likely would have included a few sharp words. The handyman is mumbling and fumbling about the "hundreds" of pieces in the box (hyperbole much?) and the large-ish bag of undifferentiated cam locks and screw covers which will require time to sort out (and hope were packed in sufficient quantity). Nobody was paying me to get it done; I'm paying him by the hour.
So what's the deal? Why not just swallow hard and let me know that it likely will take several hours to get this all sorted out and together and hooked onto the wall? Why leave me feeling like he's doing me a favor by getting paid for this task? Or is it that he lacks the guts (or the respect for me) to tell me flat out that he doesn't want some or all of these projects? From my business, I understand there are some jobs which you don't want to (or can't) take on. But he seems like one more handyman who does good work at a fair price who behaves in such a way that I'll think twice (or forget entirely) about calling him next time. Why is this so endemic?