Canadian marijuana companies search for workers ahead of legalization

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Positions offered in everything from growing and production to sales and marketing
By Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press Posted: Jan 14, 2018 5:02 PM PT Last Updated: Jan 14, 2018 5:02 PM PT


Is there a job for you in Canada's cannabis industry? Companies say they are hiring to be ready in time for legalization. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Canadian marijuana companies are on a hiring spree, looking to fill an array of roles as they gear up for the legalization of recreational cannabis later this year.

The workforce is booming, said Alison McMahon, who runs Cannabis At Work, a staffing agency focused on the burgeoning industry.

Right now, she's recruiting for positions in everything from growing and production to sales and marketing, all across the country.

Stigma may once have kept people from applying for work with a cannabis company, but those perceptions have shifted and people are now excited about the opportunities, McMahon said.

"I think that the people, at this point, who are looking at the industry and are excited really see the upside and the growth potential," she said. "More and more people are open to this topic, so it doesn't end up being that big of a deal."

'A-player' attraction
The buzz around Canadian pot is allowing companies to be picky and choose top talent, said Kerri-Lynn McAllister, chief marketing officer at Lift, a company that puts on cannabis events and runs a website sharing marijuana news and reviews.

"Because of all the excitement, it's really an opportunity for companies to pick up the A-players in business or whatever field they're operating in," said McAllister, speaking from first-hand experience.

She recently left a job in the financial tech sector to join Lift.


Attendees to the Lift Cannabis Expo in Vancouver on Jan. 13, 2018 explored job opportunities in the growing industry. Companies say they are scrambling to hire. (Doug Kerr/CBC)

The industry has come out from the shadows recently, McAllister said, and that's allowing companies to attract business executives, tech wizards and marketing masters who are at the top of their game.

Dozens of prospective employees came to meet McMahon and her staff at the Lift Cannabis Expo in Vancouver on Saturday, resumes in hand.

'I'd like to be on the ground floor'
Chad Grant said he's been working in construction, but wants to get a job growing marijuana.

"It's going to be a big industry, so I'd like to be on the ground floor type thing," he said.

Working with marijuana is nothing new for some of the applicants.

Grady Jay said he's been growing for the underground industry for years. Now he wants to transition to working for the legal market.

"I basically want to wake up and do what I love in the morning," Jay said.

Experience wanted
Experience is part of what marijuana companies are looking for, particularly when it comes to production, McMahon said, noting that experience could come from working in a commercial greenhouse or the black market.

Successful applicants can expect to make salaries comparable to what similar industries offer, McMahon said.

A general growing position would probably make about $50,000 per year, she said, while a director of production could expect around $100,000.

"Some people seem to think that because it's cannabis and because of all the growth, the salaries are going to be so high," McMahon said. "And that's not the case. It's a bit more mainstream around the salaries."

Anyone who wants to get into the industry should do their research, she added.

"We can have a really great candidate with a great skill set, but if they haven't looked into what's happening with the industry at all ... that can potentially be a bit of detriment," McMahon said.
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
The workforce is booming, said Alison McMahon, who runs Cannabis At Work, a staffing agency focused on the burgeoning industry.
A+++ for creativity here...lol...cannabis headhunter...who'd a thunk...hahahahaha....
A general growing position would probably make about $50,000 per year, she said, while a director of production could expect around $100,000.

"Some people seem to think that because it's cannabis and because of all the growth, the salaries are going to be so high," McMahon said. "And that's not the case. It's a bit more mainstream around the salaries."
...only the chucks of the world are allowed to make money off this...and what's a "general growing position"?
 

Gquebed

Well-Known Member
The theory around the bar is that the price is going to plummet with legalization and a lot of people here are concerned about that. There are 6 dispensaries here...in a town this size, that's a lot of sick people.
This will go through the same process as any new market does.

A new market is created.
There is a rush to meet the demand within that market.
Too many people Rush In to meet market demands.
Overproduction results.
So prices drop.
Those producers who were not prepared for this or operating on shoestring budget will collapse.
This creates a shortage of production that can't meet demand.
Price goes up.
More producers enter into the market very carefully, wary of price drops.
Market equilibrium is eventually achieved.

This won't be any different for weed.

It already happened in Washington and in Colorado. And it will happen here so long as there are no production catastrophes or crop failures or whatever
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
the shit is worth pennies per ton..
end of story!

(:
poor greedy fucks can't make millions off of shit :hump::idea::idea::lol::weed::weed:

when you can grow THE BEST meds in the back yard .....(:

when the price comes down to next to nothing and no one gives a rats ass about it..
the next pile wlil have already started..bongsmilie
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
I was thinking....this would be a great opportunity to sabotage the LP's. Get hired and then fuck up their crop or used banned pesticides, etc. It would take less than 100 of us to bring down the whole works. Hmmmm.....still looking for a job, Gquebed? lol
 

torontomeds

Well-Known Member
I was thinking....this would be a great opportunity to sabotage the LP's. Get hired and then fuck up their crop or used banned pesticides, etc. It would take less than 100 of us to bring down the whole works. Hmmmm.....still looking for a job, Gquebed? lol
Just don't let me catch you fucking around at my work, you will get slapped in more ways then one.
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
That's the beauty of the plan - it can't backfire. Every spoiled crop, every equipment breakdown, every fail at the lab could be a legitimate occurrence, or it could be deliberate. You will never know. Every time an LP loses money, I smile.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
funny to see the wanna be's squirm, LMAORTFF

so easily done..

.wants tomorrows answers yesterday! lol
 

GreenHighlander

Well-Known Member
I was thinking....this would be a great opportunity to sabotage the LP's. Get hired and then fuck up their crop or used banned pesticides, etc. It would take less than 100 of us to bring down the whole works. Hmmmm.....still looking for a job, Gquebed? lol
Honestly man it aint needed. That is actually the kinda shit the greedy capitalist fucks would do. Let themselves be their own undoing. Do what you can to help people get and/or stay off the forced lp tit. That is the biggest and perhaps only difference we can make. Can't say I have ever met too many legit medical patients, let alone intelligent stoners, who are ok with ingesting poison. Educating people about what they are in fact consuming and then sharing the knowledge for them to free themselves is the answer.
Cheers :)
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Honestly man it aint needed. That is actually the kinda shit the greedy capitalist fucks would do. Let themselves be their own undoing. Do what you can to help people get and/or stay off the forced lp tit. That is the biggest and perhaps only difference we can make. Can't say I have ever met too many legit medical patients, let alone intelligent stoners, who are ok with ingesting poison. Educating people about what they are in fact consuming and then sharing the knowledge for them to free themselves is the answer.
Cheers :)
I know it was a joke. :bigjoint: It hit a sore spot with someone though, too funny.
I agree educating people is important. I just hope they bring in craft growers asap to give competition to the 'weekend warrior' rec market. People know what is in cigarettes and they still buy them....
 

GreenHighlander

Well-Known Member
I know it was a joke. :bigjoint: It hit a sore spot with someone though, too funny.
I agree educating people is important. I just hope they bring in craft growers asap to give competition to the 'weekend warrior' rec market. People know what is in cigarettes and they still buy them....
You sure did. Since mass public education and making cancer sticks expensive as fuck the number of cig smokers is drastically down. It is actually a success story in a way. Myself being one of them. Craft growers will compete the same they always have. Licensed or not. There will always be high demand for organic none chem killer weed. Quality always sells. Period
I honestly wish I was allowed to grow as much as possible and just give it away to those who need it most. I can't legally so the next best idea I have is to actually teach people to grow their own.
Cheers :)
 
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