The Unpaid Operations Manager: Your Renovation’s Hidden Salary
The Accidental Coordinator
Jenna is staring at the blue-white glare of her laptop at 11:11 PM on a Sunday, her thumb rhythmically clicking the refresh button on a tracking page for a kitchen faucet that should have been delivered 31 hours ago. There are currently 11 tabs open on her browser: the contractor’s initial estimate (which feels like a work of historical fiction at this point), a PDF of appliance specifications, the family’s shared Google calendar, three different YouTube tutorials on how to measure a sink’s undermount clearance, and a group chat where her partner is asking if the plumber was confirmed for Tuesday morning. Jenna is a Senior Marketing Director by day, but by night, she has been drafted into an unpaid, high-stress operations role for which she never applied. She didn’t just buy a kitchen; she accidentally accepted a part-time job as a general coordinator, and she is failing because the system is designed to let her.
We are taught to believe that when we hire professionals, we are paying for the removal of friction. We write checks for $15,001 or $41,001 with the implicit assumption that this capital buys us a result. But the reality of the modern home service industry is that the homeowner is almost always the silent glue holding the disparate pieces together. You are the one ensuring