We're a point of sale company looking for a Field Service Tech. We service the Albuquerque and surrounding areas. You will basically travel from store to store (Grocery Stores) fixing their equipment. Scanner scales, touchscreens, payment devices, self-checkouts, servers etc. We supply the vehicle that you take home, fuel card, maintenance card, credit card and tools you will need to succeed.
This is an entry-level position but if you have experience, don't hesitate to apply. We prefer someone with tech experience who knows troubleshooting and basic networking, but if you are hobbyist or have applicable experience, we will consider you too. We're mainly looking for someone who can work on their own responsibly. There is a lot of driving with this job, so having said that we ask that you are able to pass background check, drug screening and have a clean driving record.
Sounds great right? A lot of driving and working mainly on your own?
Well let me share some challenges with you so I'm upfront. Job is basically 8 to 5 IF everything goes well. If it doesn't go well or if we get busy, you will get stuck at stores later than you would like. You will sometimes have to start earlier in the morning or start late for special projects, so you need to be adaptable. Once you get comfortable, you and the other techs will swap availability on weekends. When you're available for those weekends, you will get called out to run emergency service calls, sometimes far away. You won't get called out every weekend you're available, but it will happen. We also have each tech conduct Preventative Maintenance once a week at a store. That means cleaning out lane equipment, making sure inventory matches and catching any issues that may arise. Sounds like a lot, but once you apply yourself and learn your craft, you will be in and out of stores quiker, and most days should be challenge free.
So if you can handle that along with the growing pains of learning the job, please send me your resume and tell me a little about yourself so we can discuss the opening in more detail.
Thank you,
Steve