Marcus Delgado
sixteen years in warehouses, from the night dock to running two buildings
$28/hour , set by Marcus Delgado. Your first session with them is free.
I started on the night dock at a food distributor in Fresno in 2009, $11.40 an hour, and I stayed on nights for six years because I was scared to ask for more. When I finally made shift lead, I nearly blew it in the first month. I wrote up a guy who'd been there twenty years for something I'd done myself the week before. He never really spoke to me again. That taught me more than any management course.
Now I run operations for a 3PL, about 400 people across two buildings. Most of what I know is how to get promoted when nobody's grooming you for it, and how to lead people who used to be your friends.
A session with me is plain. You tell me the situation, I ask what you actually want, and we script out the conversation you've been avoiding. You leave with words you can say Monday morning.
More background
What I know cold: warehouse and distribution operations, getting promoted from hourly to salaried, leading former peers, writing people up without losing the floor, prepping for internal interviews, dealing with a plant manager who doesn't see you. I've hired maybe 300 people and promoted 40-some, so I also know what the person across the desk is thinking.
Good fit: hourly workers who want to move up, and new supervisors in warehouses, plants, retail, food service. Anybody in their first two years of leading people.
Not for you if you want resume keyword tricks for corporate office jobs, or if you want somebody to vent to every week without doing anything. I'll listen once. Then we make a plan.
Between sessions I'll text you a check-in if you asked me to hold you to something. I work 6am to 3pm Pacific, so evenings are best for me, and I don't book Sundays. That's family.