If I was younger, I would tech full time but I am not. My friend that helped me in my Build Thread, left the guy he was teching at because that guy had broken promises to him two different times that my friend has worked for him. My friend now opened another shop about 12 miles away in a smaller town, with another friend of his who's dad had the shop space and they have three very large bays to work out of and will be adding lifts soon. Because of his friend's dad's contacts, they started out with 3 used car lots using them for "get ready for sale" work and word of mouth. Within 2 months they are BUSY. They don't take on everything because of no lifts yet and some diagnostic equipment limitations. I gave my friend my Tech II to use, free of charge, and when they get lifts in I will have one to use if needed and even may wrench there part time on what I want to work on. Shall see.
I believe it... the work is there forsure. the I believe the trick to it is not being in it to get rich. you gotta like being a small business owner and the work that goes with it. do good work, take care of people and yes some times that means you take a lose on a job. but you can be picky and you will have a line of return customers.
don't lie to then about when the car will be ready because your counter guy for some reason just can't tell the truth about anything. they get into this mindset that if I don't tell people what they want to hear money walks out the door. well yeah, but lying to customers isn't going to get them back again.
I worked in a Ford performance shop for a while as a kid.. horrible pay, long hot Florida days. literally temp gun would say the walls where 120deg, even your tools in your tool box would be hot to the touch and some times we wouldn't go home till 8 at night up on a dyno sweating to death. lucky I was very young. it would kill me today and why? because the owners brother in law ran the front counter and was unable to tell the truth. if he just told people the truth, parts either aren't here. we made a mistake and it should be done tomorrow but nope, couldn't do that. lie to them, tell them it will be done in 20mins when it hadn't even been touched yet. customer takes a cab up expecting to drive home only to sit around all day pissed.
horrible run shop and still more business than they knew what to do with.
I learned very quickly it was not the life for me and moved on to well paying hourly maintenance work with benefits and a pension. screw getting worked to the bone for someone else trying to get rich.
honestly I don't even blame the younger generation for not wanting these jobs. 90% of them really are terrible jobs. flat rate by design screws the tech and the customer. no time to repair or t/s anything when the guy next to you is throwing parts at it and making 4h pay for an hours work and when it doesn't fix it, he's got the shady guy up front to lie to the customer that they need another part thrown at it. while the good tech is trying to diagnose stuff and customers can't believe they have to pay for that.