Snyder Business and Technology Consulting

When to Hire Your First Real Office Manager

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At 14 employees, I was approving PTO requests from my phone on a Saturday and reordering printer toner on a Tuesday. That's the week I knew we needed an office manager. Not a receptionist with extra duties. A real one.

The signs are boring, and that's the point

You don't need an office manager when things feel chaotic. You need one when the same small tasks keep landing on the wrong desk. For us it was four things, repeating every week: PTO tracking living in three different spreadsheets, vendor invoices sitting in someone's inbox for nine days, new-hire equipment showing up late, and the office snack order being handled by whoever felt guilty that month. Each one is a five-minute task. Together they were eating six hours of senior time per week. At our blended rate that's roughly $1,200 a week, or $60K a year, of expensive people doing $25-an-hour work. The math made the hire obvious. I was just slow to do it because the role didn't feel urgent. Urgent isn't the right test. Recurring is.

What the role actually owns

I'm opinionated about this. An office manager at 15-20 people should own a specific list, in writing, on day one. Ours got:

  • PTO and timesheet tracking, with a clean monthly report to me
  • All vendor relationships under $500/month (coffee, cleaning, supplies, the plant lady)
  • AP intake — invoices in, coded, queued for approval within 48 hours
  • New-hire logistics from offer-accept through end of week one
  • Office lease point-of-contact, building issues, the COI binder

What they do not own: hiring decisions, performance conversations, anything client-facing beyond a friendly greeting. Those belong to managers and to me. The mistake I see other owners make is hiring an office manager and quietly turning them into a junior HR person, a junior bookkeeper, and a junior account manager inside six months. Then you wonder why they burn out at the nine-month mark. Write the job description for the role you actually need, and protect it.

Pay it correctly the first time

In most U.S. markets in 2026, a competent office manager for a 15-20 person company runs $58K to $72K base. I'd rather pay $68K for someone who's done it before than $52K for someone I have to train into the job while I'm also trying to grow the business. The whole point of the hire is to give senior people their hours back. A cheap hire who needs hand-holding defeats the purpose. Talk to your CPA about whether the role is exempt or non-exempt in your state — that's a real conversation, not a Google search.

If you're staring at a calendar full of toner orders and PTO approvals and wondering if it's time, it probably is. Send us a note if you want a second set of eyes on the job description before you post it.

— Amanda @ SBATC

Testimonial

What Customers are Saying?

  • We had been putting off updating our backup setup for way too long. The team came in, assessed what we had, and got everything configured properly within a couple of days. It runs on its own now and we actually have confidence that our files are protected.
    Marcus T. April 2026
    We had been putting off updating our HR policies for a while, and Amanda helped us finally get it done. She reviewed what we had, flagged a few gaps we weren't aware of, and put together a clean set of documents we could actually use. Took about two weeks start to finish.
    Renata O. April 2026
  • We needed to get our hiring paperwork in order before bringing on summer staff. Amanda walked us through the offer letters, I-9s, and file setup in a couple of sessions. Everything was ready before our first hire started, which took a lot of stress off our plate.
    Tomás R. May 2026
    We had been dealing with spotty coverage in the back half of our shop for a long time. The team came out, assessed the layout, and had everything sorted within a day. Customers and staff can actually stay connected now without hunting for a signal.
    Deja W. May 2026
  • We had been putting off updating our backup setup for way too long. The team came in, assessed what we had, and got everything configured properly within a couple of days. It runs on its own now and we actually have confidence that our files are protected.
    Marcus T. April 2026
  • We had been putting off updating our HR policies for a while, and Amanda helped us finally get it done. She reviewed what we had, flagged a few gaps we weren't aware of, and put together a clean set of documents we could actually use. Took about two weeks start to finish.
    Renata O. April 2026
  • We needed to get our hiring paperwork in order before bringing on summer staff. Amanda walked us through the offer letters, I-9s, and file setup in a couple of sessions. Everything was ready before our first hire started, which took a lot of stress off our plate.
    Tomás R. May 2026
  • We had been dealing with spotty coverage in the back half of our shop for a long time. The team came out, assessed the layout, and had everything sorted within a day. Customers and staff can actually stay connected now without hunting for a signal.
    Deja W. May 2026
About
At Snyder Business and Technology Consulting, we offer a comprehensive suite of services to empower small businesses to achieve their financial and operational goals. With over 15 years of experience in senior leadership roles and a doctorate in business management, our co-founder, Amanda Snyder, brings a wealth of knowledge and a track record of success to support your business needs.
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