Something in the world of floating have you stumped?
Show Highlights
What makes a good float center employee? What does Float On look for when trying to find someone to take care of their salt monster tanks and their blissed out customers at the same time? Ashkahn and Graham break down the qualities they look for when hiring, and what makes the people at Float On so special.
Show Resources
What’s your opinion on hiring friends or relatives? – DSP 61
FTS Product – Float Center Employee Handbook Template
Listen to Just the Audio
Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)
Ashkahn: Welcome, everybody.
Graham: Hello there.
Ashkahn: I’m Ashkahn.
Graham: This be Graham.
Ashkahn: Yeah, that be Graham.
Graham: Sometimes I just open my mouth, and things come out, you know? It’s good most of the time, I’d say.
Ashkahn: Pretty much this whole podcast.
Graham: Today’s question is, “what do you look for when hiring employees?” A question, which I’ve thought about so much, I actually feel like we’ve answered before.
Ashkahn: We may have. There may be little nuggets of this in various other episodes.
Graham: Scattered about, so let’s consolidate that.
Ashkahn: Let’s put the puzzle together.
Graham: What do we look for? I look for someone who’s willing to bring me nice whiskey, when they come in for the job interview, and probably every week from then on.
Ashkahn: Yeah, bribery is the main qualifying factor.
Graham: You can’t tell, but I’m touching my nose lightly right now, which is a symbol of agreement. It means on the nose.
Ashkahn: It means on the nose. I mean, I guess so, yeah.
Graham: What are we-
Ashkahn: It means on point.
Graham: What are we looking for? We like people who love cleaning, and we like people who love floating.
Ashkahn: Not in that order. The number one thing we look for in people is people who like floating. That-
Graham: Yeah, for sure.
Ashkahn: Everything else is easier if that is true, and everything else is more difficult if that is not true.
Graham: I mean, honestly, what are you doing in a float center if you don’t enjoy floating?
Ashkahn: Yeah.
Graham: People ask you, “How often do you float?” It’s like, “Oh, once when I first got hired here.”
Ashkahn: Yeah, yeah, it’s a bunch of nonsense.
Graham: It’s a weird thing. It’s such an industry of passion, and the customers who are coming in, especially your members, often are so passionate about it, and it’s changed their lives, and to not have that on the other side of the desk just feels strange.
Ashkahn: If someone is really passionate about floating, everything else fits into place so much easier, in terms of what else is required of them for their job. The next biggest thing we look for is cleaning. If they are good at/like cleaning, passionate.
Graham: Passionate.
Ashkahn: Passionate.
Graham: Passionate about cleaning.
Ashkahn: Passionate about cleaning, because it’s a cleaning job. It’s more cleaning than it is anything else. There’s a lot of cleaning, and cleaning’s a very important part of it, and it’s not easy. There’s salt. We have pretty strict sanitation guidelines, in terms of what we like to see for cleaning, and it’s frequent. You’re doing it every few hours, and in between floats, you’re cleaning the lobby and the bathroom and the dishes, and all that sort of stuff, so it’s just lots and lots and lots of cleaning.
Graham: Yeah, and there are many other parts of the job, interacting with customers and working behind the computers and sending off emails and stuff like that, but if you don’t enjoy the cleaning part, then it can really wear on you. Even the parts of the job that you do really enjoy can be less exciting, if every single day you’re doing this huge portion of it cleaning, which you enjoy less and less every time you do it.
Ashkahn: Yeah, and it can wear on the other people working the shop. If you’re just not pulling your weight cleaning, that gets annoying to everybody who works with you. I guess what we found is the more people like floating, the less the cleaning tends to feel like a burden.
Graham: True.
Ashkahn: When you really like floating, the cleaning feels like you’re taking care of some sort of shrine or something. You’re the gatekeepers of the float experience, and your duty is to provide people this great access to this thing. If you don’t have that, then you’re just like, “Man, there’s a lot of salt,” and like, “Oh, my God, this is salty again!” I think it just wears you down unless you feel like it’s towards a greater purpose.
Graham: I can’t remember now whether it-
Ashkahn: It really will burn you out.
Graham: Whether it was one of our own staff, who said this to me initially, but I always think of the ideal employee sort of views it as sweeping the stairs to a temple, or something like that, this repetitive motion that needs to get done in temples. Buddhist temples, I guess, is where I know of this happening, they’ll specifically plant trees that do drop leaves and that do create a mess, so that they have this task to do that is more meditative than cleanup, and-
Ashkahn: Yeah, I sprinkle salt around the float center sometimes, too.
Graham: It’s out of kindness. As long as your staff can know that, then they’re good for the job. That’s what I’m saying.
Ashkahn: I really feel like customer service falls into a very similar place.
Graham: Similar to what?
Ashkahn: Similar to the cleaning thing, where-
Graham: Okay, I thought you meant you sprinkle odd customer service interactions around the shop just to challenge the-
Ashkahn: Yeah, little testimonials here and there.
Graham: Yeah.
Ashkahn: It’s one of those things where I think it’s our instinct at first to want to hire people with really good people skills, who are good talkers and stuff like that, and I’ve just found that to not be as important in a float center. If someone’s really into floating, they have a very easy time relating to the other people coming out of the float tank, and it’s very easy for them to pick up on conversations and have discussions with people and provide that good customer service, whether or not they have amazing social skills in other contexts in their life.
Graham: Yeah, and same thing for even doing sales and stuff like that, having a qualified person behind the counter, who knows how to upsell a membership and has all this retail experience. There’s no better sales tactic or ability to get someone to float regularly just than being passionate about it yourself and being willing to share that with people and connect on whatever level that they floated at. Even for some of the more technical aspects of retail help, I’d still say that just being passionate about floating is the trump card above all of those.
Ashkahn: When we try to hire people, we try to pull, as much as possible, from places that have already pre-filtered people into that camp of liking floating, so Craigslist ads are generally our last resort. We like to pull from our internship, because those people are interning because they really care about floating and really enjoy it. We’ll ask our current employees to refer people, because they’ll often have that same sort of perspective in mind, and we’ll ask our customers. I mean, it’s almost the difference between posting a help wanted ad on your window, facing out of your business, versus on the desk, inside of your business, right?
Graham: Sure, yeah, that’s a good analogy.
Ashkahn: Where we don’t want the people who are just wandering by. We want the people who are coming in.
Graham: Yeah, and it’s worked out well. I’d say the more that someone not only knows about floating and knows that they like it and has floated maybe a dozen or a couple dozen times before even applying, but the more that they’ve done that at our business and the more they’ve interacted with our staff, and they really understand the Float On vibe, because our float center is going to be very different from your float center. Beyond that, every business has its own personality. Even more than floating, or in addition to floating, I should say, knowing they connect with what you’re trying to do and with the general business that you have, and even the other staff, and the way that you run things, I think, is really important, too, so same thing, like a sign on the front desk, or just appealing to the people who have already liked your Facebook page. I thought the front desk thing was a great analogy, so way to knock it out of the park with that one.
Ashkahn: Yeah, that’s why I got hired on, you know, is my analogy skills.
Graham: I thought you meant it was the sign on the front desk. Cool, and yeah, again, everything else is secondary to those.
Ashkahn: Yeah.
Graham: As far as the most important things that we look for in employees, that’s them: love of floating and love of taking care of the tanks and preparing a room for the next person coming in.
Ashkahn: Yeah, for sure.
Graham: If you have your own questions, or if you want to apply for our float center, you can go to dailysolutions.com/podcast.
Ashkahn: That’s not right. That’s not the right URL.
Graham: That’s true. That’s not even … You can go to dailysolutionspodcast.com, though, and see what happens.
Ashkahn: Yeah, go to dailysolutionspodcast.com. It’ll be fun.
Graham: Yeah, you’ll enjoy it.
Ashkahn: I’ve enjoyed it before, so-
Graham: All right, get out of here.
Ashkahn: Okay, yeah, it’s getting crazy now.
Recent Podcast Episodes
Monthly Budget for Float Centers – DSP 305
Graham and Ashkahn break down the real truth about how closely they watch their budget for Float On on a monthly basis.
The truth is… not much. As it turns out, monthly expenses for float centers don’t have huge variations unlike businesses that rely on retail, for example. Graham and Ashkahn explain they developed a sense for what’s within reason.
How to Sign on Float Ambassadors – DSP 304
Float Ambassadors have been with the industry since the beginning, but gained popularity sometime in the last few years. What are ambassadors and how to float centers find them? When they do find them, how do they get them to represent floating?
Graham and Ashkahn share their experiences with the practice of finding float mavens out in the world and the impact they’ve had on Float On.
How do you Talk about Psychedelics? – DSP 303
It’s no secret that the inventor of the float tank, John Lilly, was also an early psychonaut and used the tank for mental exploration in conjunction with LSD. Not everyone in the float community appreciates this shared history and some actively try to distance themselves from it given the taboo nature of psychedelics.
Graham and Ashkahn share their thoughts on psychedelics and floating and how, as a business, they can be completely separated while still being important, as well as explaining why some people might reasonably decide to disassociate from them.
What About 75 Minute Floats? – DSP 302
Most float centers divide on floats offered between 60 or 90 minute floats, but some split the difference right down the middle and offer 75 minutes. Graham and Ashkahn share their thoughts on this tactic, what they see as the pros, cons, and things to consider when implementing it.
Free Floats for Teachers – DSP 301
Graham and Ashkahn give their perspective on the pros and cons of giving free floats away for teachers. Giving out free floats is the Float On way and giving them to a specific group of people who could really use them sounds like a good idea.
The guys break it down and address some of the concerns any float center may have about running a program like this.
Latest Blog Posts
The Basics of Float Tank Sanitation
Some of the most common questions you’ll get as a float center operator involve the cleanliness of the tanks. This post will be an introduction to some of the most commonplace sanitation methods used in float tanks. These are generally either chemicals that go in the water or devices that attach to your filtration system. We’ll be discussing chlorine, bromine, ozone, UV, and hydrogen peroxide, which accounts for the sanitation methods used on nearly every float tank on the market.
Testing and Maintaining Float Tank Water Quality
Editors Note: This is a revision of a past blog post, updated to reflect the most current sanitation methods and standards
In a perfect world, you could just pour water and salt into a float tank and it would stay pure and clean and fresh and salty forever. In the real world, conditions in the water are constantly changing, so keeping your water safe and clean takes a fair amount of vigilance.
This post covers how we maintain basic water quality in the float tank, except for sanitization methods, which will be covered in their own beastly sanitation blog post. Stay tuned for that coming out next week!
Floating, mental health, and wellness
This post will explore the intersection of floating with the concepts, beliefs, and experiences related to mental health and wellness, with a focus on anxiety and depression. I’ll explore my own story as it relates to floating before diving into the current intersections of floating and mental health, with a look at past, current, and potential opportunities for research and personal growth.
Massage, Acupuncture, and Float Tanks… A Chat with Sandra Calm
We’ve seen lots of float centers that aren’t just float centers.
Many have massage, some offer counseling, some have yoga classes next door. Lots of people start out either by incorporating float tanks into a larger business, or with float tanks only being one of many modalities at their center. Being specialists in floating, Float On has not mastered anything else.
So, to help gain insight into this growing aspect of the industry, we contacted our old friend, Sandra Calm. She started up The Float Shoppe here in Portland with her husband and podcast sensation, Dylan Calm, back in 2011. When they first opened, they had just two float tanks, and slowly added acupuncture, massage, counseling, along with two more tanks. Talk about expansion!
She was more than happy to take some time for the industry to help us understand just what it’s like to run a center with multiple services by answering some questions.