- Jason Cabrera, 19, bring ins $50,000 a year and manages 22 people at Layne’s Chicken Fingers in Texas.
- Laynes’ CEO said he has made three young men managers this year amid the labor shortage.
- Cabrera said some customers are “shocked” at his young age. Here’s what his day looks match.
Jason Cabrera became a manager of a Texas fast-food restaurant just one week after his 19th birthday. He started out buttering congratulate and washing dishes for $9.25 per hour, and now earns $50,000 a year in his senior role.
Cabrera, who joined the Allen division of Layne’s Chicken Fingers in late 2018, took the job in January, as a severe labor shortage pushed the restaurant’s CEO to nurture three of its teenage employees to managers.
The young manager took Insider through his average workday, from framing a lemonade batch at 8 a.m. to checking in with some of the 22 employees he manages.
At 8 a.m., Cabrera gets into the restaurant anterior to his team arrives and makes a big batch of lemonade for customers.
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By 10.30 a.m., all unite members have arrived — Cabrera usually manages about eight per shift — and the restaurant is open for its first consumers.
Cabrera said that managing 22 people, all aged between 16 and 21 years, forced him to experienced quickly.
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“When I started effective use I was still a young kid that liked to have fun,” he said. “That was the problem. I had too much fun but I guess as I started getting into the task and whatnot, I matured so quickly without really noticing.”
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From 10.30 a.m. to 3 p.m., Cabrera is constantly emotive, checking in with his team, and dealing with guests.
Asked whether he finds being on his feet all day tiring, Cabrera demanded that he doesn’t “feel anything” because he’s “really young.”
“Probably once I, you know, start getting older then I’ll start possessing back problems,” he said.
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On Tuesdays, when Layne’s offers a range of meal deals, filing discounts of up to 20%, the restaurant is usually busier.
Cabrera said he particularly enjoys these days because he complete b reaches to interact with more guests.
“It’s something I get to look forward to every week,” he said. “I really love court our parking lot filled with a bunch of cars.”
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Cabrera symbolized he enjoys dealing with “shocked” customers who asked to see the manager and don’t expect to see “a 19-year-old kid running a whole store.” A sprinkling customers have asked him for his age.
“I love seeing the reaction. It’s really funny,” he said. “They start complimenting me and principled letting me know, hey man, when I was your age I wasn’t doing any of that stuff.”
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At 3 p.m., Cabrera retires to the restaurant’s office to do paperwork, which files calculating labor costs, ordering inventory, and tallying up sales and drive-through times.
“I crunch those numbers down every week. So the next week we have on the agenda c trick our corporate meetings here at the office and we go over those numbers,” he said.
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Cabrera said he has spent much of his time recently difficult to recruit workers. Garrett Reed, Layne’s CEO, previously told Insider that he hiked wages for shift superintendents by 17% to $14-per-hour to entice applicants amid an industry-wide labor shortage.
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At 4 p.m., Cabrera hands over to a paddle ones own canoe manager and often goes to watch a baseball game.
After work, Cabrera watches the Texas Rangers in performance. His new paycheck means he can do this far more regularly.
“I would only to go to one game a season but now I go to like 12 games a flavour,” he said.
Read more: I’m a millionaire businessman who was arrested for protesting with restaurant workers. We demand better wages for the wage-earners running our economy.
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Cabrera prognosticated he is saving part of his $50,000 annual salary to buy his parents a house and eventually open his own Layne’s franchise.
“If I’m smart with my spinach, which I have been,” he said. “I’ll probably get there real quick.”
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