Showing posts with label plumbers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plumbers. Show all posts

Thursday, February 11, 2010

National News Magazine Declares Plumbing One of the Top Careers in 2010


U.S. News & World Report gives plumbing some love. The magazine considers plumbing a top career for this year and the next decade as demand increases 15% and plumbers retire.

"Few jobs are as necessary to everyday life as a plumber's," declares U.S. News. "Every sip of water from a school fountain, every pitcher of water poured from a faucet, each time a clean plate comes out of the dishwasher or a clean body climbs out of a shower—a plumber is, in large part, responsible."

The article notes that plumbers have plenty of upward mobility, with the potential to start their own companies. Plumbers, according to U.S. News have lots of activity and low stress.

I want the article writers to explain how is running a small business is low stress. Especially when, as the writer notes, there's a shortage of plumbers.

I think I also take issue with the story's claim that a key for advancement is learning Spanish. Hey, I'm all for learning Spanish. Since a growing segment of the labor pool may know English as a second language, I can see the advantages of becoming bilingual, but I don't know that it's "key" and noted that the writer didn't back up the claim.

Still, it's a pretty positive article. Thanks to Mike Enright for the heads up.

Read the article here. Better yet, forward the link to your town's high school guidance counselors.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Don't Keep It a Secret


Whenever I take shirts to my cleaners, the cleaners replaces any missing or broken buttons. Your cleaners probably does the same, but do you know about it?

The reason I'm aware is the cleaners sticks a small tag through the matching button hole and staples it. The tag declares, "Replaced Button."

The tag is a reminder of a small added value the cleaners provides. Without the tag, I might forget about there was a button missing or even be aware of it. The cleaners won't get extra credit if I don't know about it. Hence, the tag.

I bet there are little things that you do for your customers they are unaware of. A plumber might clean a faucet aerator. An HVAC technician might notice the time on a digital thermostat is off an hour due to a change in daylight savings time and set the time correctly. An electrician might casually test a GFCI outlet. A pool technician might cut out a small section of pool sweep hose where it's leaking.

Whatever the action, you won't get credit if you don't tell the customer what was done. Note it on the invoice and write, "No charge." And don't just note it. Tell the customer too. Think of the impact if the cleaners employee told me that three buttons were found missing and were replaced at the time I picked up my shirts.

When you do a good deed, even if it's part of the routine, don't keep it a secret.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Toilet Rebate Clearinghouse


Contractors should be aware of local government and utility rebate programs. They should be aware. In reality, many contractors are not aware of the programs. The reasons are numerous, including poor promotion on the part of the rebate authority, contractors who are so busy chasing work they fail to stay informed, and so on.

Plumbing contractors, at least, can stay up with the flow on low flow toilet rebates at ToiletRebate.com. The site lists toilet rebates in the U.S. and Canada by state and province. Rebate programs are also highlighted through a Google map. Low flow showerhead rebates and other water conservation rebates are often listed with the toilet rebates.

Some of the rebates are substantial. And some, according to a New York Times article, are flush out of cash.

Check it out at ToiletRebate.com.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

30 Things Every Technician Should Know


Field service personnel know a lot about making repairs. Yup. They can fix stuff. But service is more than turning a wrench and all of the technical knowledge in the world isn't enough. Here are 30 things every technician, plumber, electrician, and mechanic should know...

1. Payroll is the starting cost of a technician to a company. Other direct costs include everything from payroll taxes, uniforms, trucks, vehicle insurance, and worker’s comp to benefits. When all is said and done, the non-payroll costs of employing a technician range from as little as 30% to as much as 100% of payroll.

2. Education is a professional’s lifetime proposition. Only the ignorant think they know it all.

3. Technicians must fix more than the problem. On every service call, there is broken equipment and a broken customer. Both must be fixed for a complete repair.

4. The technician is an ambassador for the company when in uniform or behind the wheel. A technician’s driving habits on the road and personal courtesy everywhere reflect on the company. Since no one knows when someone is watching, a technician should act as though someone is always watching, unlike the technician who was caught on camera by Dateline when he relieved himself in the customer’s bushes.

5. Every technician is a supplier. Technicians are suppliers to some poor soul in the office who depends on the legibility and completeness of the paperwork to do their jobs.



Read more at Contracting Business.

Read Part 2 at Contracting Business.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

A Sticky Situation Could Be A Plumber's Opportunity


A 58 year old man got stuck in an Australian public bathroom. He got literally stuck. Someone applied a powerful adhesive to public toilet seats and this guy sat on it.

It's one of those things that's sorta funny unless you're the guy who had to go to the emergency room with a toilet seat glued to your posterior. The Australian police are not amused.

"I'm disgusted that a gentleman has had to go through that because someone thinks it's funny -- it's a sick joke," one official told the Australian Associated Press.

Probably not as disgusted as the hospital staff, who were tasked with deseating the victim. Fortunately industrial strength solvents solved the problem.

All of this raises the question, "Don't public bathrooms down under have the sanitary toilet seat covers?"

Guess not. Or, this particular shopping center in Cairns lacked them. But then, so do a lot of public restrooms, all over the world.

This seems to me to be the perfect opportunity for private labeling travel packs of toilet seat covers to use as a great ad premium. Leave them with customers after service calls or scheduled maintenance. Heck, sell them!

Branded travel toilet seat covers should be a perfect product for Mars or Shubee to offer plumbers. That's a hint guys.

And for the Australian plumbers reading this, take advantage of the Cairns incident to issue a press release to the local media announcing your offer of free disposable travel toilet seat covers with every service call.

Friday, August 21, 2009

24 Ways to Boost Your Average Ticket – Part III


12. Offer a No-Breakdown Guarantee

Steve Miles, at Jerry Kelly Air Conditioning in St Louis, MO raised service agreement prices $25 during a downturn. Worried about the potential for price resistance, Steve offered a “no-breakdown guarantee.” Once a Jerry Kelly technician has performed a tune-up, the company would pay the repair costs for any breakdowns through the end of air conditioning season.

The customer response was immediate and dramatic. By the thousands, people loved the idea of the breakdown guarantee and gladly paid more.

The guarantee is not as risky as it seems. If the technician finds deficiencies in the customer’s air conditioner, these are noted. The customer can either authorized the company to correct the deficiencies or exclude them from the guarantee. Most opt to correct the problems, which results in additional work for Jerry Kelly.

Next, Jerry Kelly’s technicians are among the best in their area. They are unlikely to miss much under normal circumstances. The presence of the guarantee caused them to slow down and be even more thorough in their maintenance. Few problems, if any, were missed that jumped up and bit the company as the summer progressed.

The company did have to make a number of repairs for free, but the number was insignificant financially. Think about it. With the average repair in the air conditioning industry costing consumers between $350 and $500, Jerry Kelly will make money if fewer than one system out of ten breaks down in the following season after a comprehensive tune-up is performed.

Another benefit of the no-breakdown guarantee is its timing. The guarantee doesn’t take effect until the tune-up is performed. Normally, scheduling spring tune-ups is a hassle for an air conditioning company. People are busy, hard to reach, and scheduling air conditioning maintenance, even if aware of the need, is hardly top-of-the-list. The guarantee put a sense of urgency to the tune-up. The sooner the work was performed, the sooner the homeowner was covered against unpleasant repair expenses. Suddenly, homeowners were going out of their way to be available for tune-ups.

The no-breakdown guarantee drops added revenue straight to the bottom line with little accompanying risk. Steve Miles is excited about the program and tells everyone who will listen how it works, including direct competitors. Yet, few contractors and no competitors offer a similar program. Their response to the risk is emotional, rather than rational.


13. Create “Leave Ahead” Brochures To Give To Customers During Diagnostics


Few service company owners would send people into the field to make repairs without the proper tools and training. Yet, owners think nothing of sending service personnel into the field without sales and marketing tools and the training to use them.

Create informational brochures for service personnel to hand to customers at the start of a diagnostic or service call. The brochures should inform people about products and services your company offers in a dispassionate manner. Because they are handed out at the start of a service call, they’re called “leave ahead” brochures, rather than leave behind brochures.

Most service company owners would agree that the best opportunities for boosting average tickets are for field service people to sell add-on products and services during a service or maintenance call. After all, the customer’s already paid to get the truck and mechanic to the door. It costs less (or should) to sell the add-on today than a week from now.

Unfortunately, most service personnel are not very good at selling add-ons. They could be, but they hesitate to tell customers about all of the wonder opportunities the company provides. The best way to keep a customer from buying a product or service is to keep the customer in the dark about its existence. This is where the leave aheads come into play.

The brochures give the homeowner something to look at while the repair is performed. This can be an uncomfortable time for both homeowner and serviceperson. The homeowner is worried about the repair and cost, even if given a price upfront, and is uncomfortable with a stranger in the home. The brochure relieves anxiety by briefly focusing the homeowner’s attention away from uncertainty.

The mechanic may be comfortable performing a repair, but is uncomfortable with the homeowner who follows him around. The brochure helps redirect the customer away from the mechanic so he can get his job done.

Few homeowners are open to the possibilities of additional work until the current problem is addressed to their satisfaction. Once the repair is complete, the cost is known, homeowners are relieved and ready to consider other products and services. If the leave ahead brochure highlighted a problem the homeowner feels or something the homeowner desires, it’s natural to ask the serviceperson about it.

The mechanic only needs to answer the homeowner’s questions honestly to sell with conviction (assuming the mechanic believes in the product or service, which is where shop training comes in). Service personnel are great answering questions and sharing expertise.

Spend 50 cents per call to provide your people with leave ahead collateral that they are motivated to hand to homeowners to keep the homeowner occupied during the repair and you will invariably boost add-on sales over time.

Your effectiveness will improve if you focus on one or two common issues a month, train your personnel on the products and services you offer to address the issues, train your team on the homeowner benefits from your offering, run a limited time special promotion for the month, and focus that month’s leave ahead collateral on the issue and/or your offering.


14. Create A DVDs For Customers To Play During Diagnostics

A more modern version of the leave ahead is the leave ahead DVD. This offers you the opportunity to fully address an issue, such as water conservation, indoor air quality, comfort problems, carbon monoxide, termite infestations, power quality, salt water pool systems, and so on. Homeowners can better see the process and visualize the outcome when video is used.

Of course, creating a DVD is more expensive than creating a 3-panel brochure. However, mass producing DVDs isn’t much more costly than printing today. And with desktop video, it’s possible to create your own videos in-house. Your risk with DIY video is the result might bore the audience to tears. For this reason, it’s often better to hire a professional. If the budget is tight, consider hiring students from the closest college.

Once the DVD is mastered, it can be repurposed. The video can be uploaded to YouTube and similar sites, with links and tags pointing back to your company website. You can embed the video at your side.

The DVDs can be mailed to mailed to existing customers, offered as free public relations bait pieces, played and distributed during home shows, and sent to customers in advance of a replacement or remodel sales appointment.


15. Create A Page Listing All Options, Their Features, And Benefits For Quotes

One of the biggest reasons people fail to buy upgrades is a lack of awareness about the upgrades. Create a single page listing upgrade options for common repairs, for replacements, and for remodels. Include the features of the upgrades, the concurrent benefits, and the buyer’s investment (total and additional cost via monthly payments).

Options sheets serve three purposes. One is to inform buyers what’s available.

The second is to lay out the options in an easy to understand manner. Thirty-eight percent of the population learns, at least partially, by visual means. Laying out the options so people can “look at them” improves sales.

The final reason is to remind your service and sales personnel about the options. There’s a lot to think about during a sale and even the most seasoned professional will skip things every once in awhile. An options sheet helps ensure no one skips the presentation of upgrades by accident or forgetfulness.


16. Hire Women Service Personnel


There are many arguments service company owners make to avoid hiring women for field positions…

Most women can’t lift a compressor.

I can’t send a woman into a bad neighborhood.

I can’t send dispatch a woman at night.

I can’t find women who want to work in the field.

Yada, yada, yada. The truth is there are times a woman service technician or plumber or electrician might need special accommodations. Those are obstacles, not barriers.

All of the reasons people give for NOT hiring a woman are trumped by the single most powerful reason FOR hiring a woman. Women sell more.

Women sell more because women are usually the decision makers for home service. Ask your call taker who phones in the most service requests, women or men. Ask your field service personnel who’s usually home on a service call, a woman or a man.

Women are service decision makers and women trust other women more than men. In focus groups, women and men both say they are less likely to believe a female mechanic will take advantage of them. While the empirical research is mixed about empathy differences between genders, women are more likely to relate well to other women. Relating better translates into selling more.

My personal experience from running a national franchise organization is women technicians generate higher customer satisfaction scores than men. This is consistent with Ron Smith’s experience at Modern Air Conditioning and Service America. It’s also been echoed dozens of times by contractors I’ve talked with in seminars and on the Service Roundtable.

An added advantage of hiring women for the field is distinction. Because field service is male dominated, women electricians, plumbers, and technicians stand out. Hire them and your company stands out.

Finally, if added sales, more satisfied customers, and more distinctive service are not reason enough to consider women for field service, hire them because there’s a shortage of skilled labor in the U.S., Canada, Australia, and the UK. We can’t whine about the shortage of skilled labor and continue to overlook slightly more than half the population.

(c) 2009 Matt Michel

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Increasing Status of the Service Trades


I read the following joke on Twitter the other day...

What's the difference between an investment banker and a pigeon?

A pigeon can still make a deposit on a BMW.

The recession certainly has knocked the pedestal out from under many financial and Wall Street types. Sure, they'll return to earning salaries and bonuses all out of proportion to their contribution to society soon enough, but for the time being the I-bankers' stars have dimmed.

Guess whose stars are getting brighter by the minute? People working in the trades. Frankly, this makes sense. Take two people of equal ability, send one to school and the other to work. The first earns a degree and takes an entry level job. Gradually, he advances up the corporate ladder, winning a wife, mortgage, and car payments along the way.

The second fellow learns his trade and eventually starts his own company. He stumbles a bit, but latches on to industry publications, conferences, and success groups. He figures out how to make money and does.

The corporatist may progress to the executive level, though most do not. Even so, he's constantly at risk of being right sized, down sized, outplaced, and left out through no fault of his own. Any wealth he accumulates comes from savings and possibly stock options.

The small business owner lacks the corporatist's 200 square feet of class A office space in a downtown high rise, located at the end of a 45 minute commute. Instead, he's got freedom. The small business owner largely controls his own destiny. He can build his business into anything he wants. And as he builds his business, he's building wealth.

Two men (or women) of equal ability. One builds a career. The other, a fortune.

And why does society hold the former in higher regard? Is it because he wears a uniform from Brooks Brothers instead of Dickies?

It seems that the pendulum is swinging. According to The Sun, British women no longer want stock traders, they want tradesmen...

YOU have probably looked for a plumber in the Yellow Pages before.

But now, if you're single and female, you're more likely to be looking for him in the dating pages.

Women in the UK are pulling the plug on romances with rich bankers in favour of picking up plumbers and brickies, according to a recent survey by dating site mysinglefriend.com.

Thanks to the recession, City boys in pinstripe suits are out. Girls want to hook handymen with a stable income as their Mr Right.

Now, if we can just win over the high school guidance counselors.

French Plumber Threatens to Cut Service Over Unpaid Bill

Monday, August 17, 2009

Would You Rather Call a Strange Plumber or Visit a Strange Mosque?



I saw this whine by Jenny Allen and found some truth in it...

Our house is an old farmhouse, and it has three bedrooms and two bathrooms, except the shower in the upstairs bathroom doesn't work. The shower per se works, but if you use it water streams from the ceiling down below into the living room, and then you have to stick a bucket underneath to catch the water. It's like living in a Frank Lloyd Wright house, only with much lower property values. So please limit yourselves to the downstairs
shower. Thanks!

Speaking of the downstairs bathroom, sometimes the toilet doesn't flush. That's because that piece of wire that connects the bulb thing inside the tank to the rod thing sometimes comes unhinged. The wire is actually a replacement for the real piece of hardware; in fact, it's a bit of coat hanger wire that our friend Augusta rigged up when the toilet broke years ago. She got tired of waiting for our plumber, who promised to come and fix it but never did. Just lift the tank and hook it up again.

Try not to call our plumber unless it's an emergency. I'm afraid of our plumber, who barks at me, but plumbers call all the shots here. You do not want to rankle your plumber, because the other plumbers are all tied up, and then you won't have any plumber. Our plumber has been coming to our house longer than I have, which is twenty-six years, and he seems to think I am some kind of interloper, a Janey-come-lately.

"Jeff," I said on the phone when I asked him to come and turn the water on this spring, "I've known you for twenty-six years, and I'd like to ask you a favor."

"Depends what it is."

"I always call you by your name, and you never call me by my name, and I wonder if you could call me by my name."

"I know yah name!"

"Well, thank you for turning the water on," I said.

"All right," he said, and hung up.

Jeff's phone number is on the attached list of other repair and service people, who will not bark at you but will probably not come. They are too busy in August to come. Whatever the problem, you'll have better luck just fixing it yourself.

"I'm afraid of our plumber, who barks at me," writes Allen.

"Whatever the problem, you'll have better luck just fixing it yourself," she adds.

Wow. Is there any more damning criticism of the state of service companies than that? I think a large segment of the DIY market exists not out of consumer cheapness, but that consumers perceive it's simply easier to fix it yourself.

Calling a contractor, for most people, is unsettling. It's filled with uncertainty and unknown.

  • Will you get a responsive company that will treat you well?

  • Will the serviceperson be pleasant or gruff, treating you like an idiot?

  • What kind of person will show up? Will he or she be honest?

  • How long will it take to get someone to show up?

  • Will someone arrive when promised or will you wait and wait and wait?

  • Will the work take days to complete?

  • Will it be done right the first time, or will you have to call the company back again and again?

  • Will the serviceperson make a mess and not clean up?

  • Will you get ripped off?

  • Will you know what the costs are before the work begins or will you get an unpleasant surprise?

  • Will there be an unpleasant conflict?

These are some of the questions that cross consumers' minds. Your marketing should address these issues. You should address them on your website, in your yellow pages ads, and in your direct marketing.

Finding a new service company is unpleasant and unsettling. To give you a sense of the discomfort, imagine walking into a church, temple, or mosque during services for the first time. That feeling of unease is similar to the consumer's feeling of unease when calling you.

Now, imagine a friend recommends his or her church/temple/mosque. The friend tells you what to expect, how to act, and what to wear. You might still approach the service with trepidation, but you would feel much better about. Your friend's attended and survived. You can too.

It's similar when a friend recommends a service company. This is why people turn to friends and neighbors first when looking for companies. This is why referral marketing, affinity marketing, and social media are so important for service companies.

Let's say you know the pastor/rabbi/imam from a civic club. You mention something about he pastor/rabbi/imam about attending a service and receive a warm welcome and personal invitation. You feel much better about attendance.

Similarly, people who know you personally, as the owner of a company, are going to feel far more at ease calling your company for service. This is why it's so important to get involved in civic clubs, networking groups, the chamber of commerce, and more. The more people you know, the more opportunities you will create. And to make sure everyone knows what you do, always wear logoed shirts.

And when you are fortunate enough to be invited into someone's home, act like a guest. Be polite. Be friendly. Be helpful.

It's hard to imagine a worse example of service than Jenny Allen's plumber, Jeff. The guy's been serving her home for more than a quarter century and the upstairs shower is unusable. The toilet downstairs doesn't flush and was jury-rigged years ago.

What do you bet Jeff is the type of tradesperson who sips coffee at the supply house, complaining about his customers, griping about DIY, moaning about how cheap people are, and lamenting his lack of business.

(c) 2009 Matt Michel

Sunday, August 16, 2009

The Impoverished Craftsman


This is an audio version of a Comanche Marketing article called, "The Impoverished Craftsman." It was written for the craftsman who cares about his work and customers, but who can never seem to get ahead.

The file was prepared as a Windows Media Audio (wma) file. Download it from the Service Roundtable's Free Stuff section.

HVAC, Plumbing, & Electrical Salary Data by Zip


MyOpenJobs is providing salary data based on the last 12 months of hiring by zip code, radius, experience level, and type of job. According to the website...

The MyOpenJobs network of sites gather salary data from over 100,000 job seekers each year in the HVAC, Plumbing and Electrical Industries. The survey results include Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Building Facilities & Maintenance, Wholesale Supply and Engineering sectors.

Check it out.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Steve Fouts On The Service Roundtable

As the owner of a small HVAC company for over twenty years, I can tell you that a lack of effective marketing has been the greatest obstacle to becoming a larger, more profitable company. We joined the Service Roundtable only a few months ago and love it. The material there is exactly what we needed to move forward.

The material we've used so far has proven to be worth more than the annual investment. I'm actually excited by the results. And after twenty years, my getting excited is rare! (I'm glad I started young.) Almost everyone here can see our new potential and wants to contribute. Joining the Service Roundtable was a great business decision.

But business is only a part of it. The rest is less tangible. Most of us small guys haven't found the time or even an opportunity to participate in groups made up of our peers. The choices available are few and usually not suitable. We have enough on our plate as it is.

So we do what we do alone. Sure, it's not necessarily a bad thing. After all, most of us are a little "different" anyway. We chose this gig partly because we like doing our own thing. But I think there's a penalty to be paid for our independence. It's not just lonely at the top, it's not profitable!

There's so much to be gained through sharing information and experiences with those in similar circumstances. A peer group, for lack of a better term, provides an opportunity to do so.

The Service Roundtable brings that peer group to my desktop. Wow. I mean it, this is huge! I now have the ability to plug into discussions with people who have similar histories, who do what I do, who struggle with very similar issues. Just knowing they're out there makes me feel warm and fuzzy all over.

Alright, I haven't felt warm and fuzzy since 1982, but you get my meaning. I'm not alone!!! So before I go all Oprah on you I'll just say Thank You.

Thank You for all the meaningful articles like The Impoverished Craftsman in today's Comanche Marketing piece. We can't be reminded too often of concepts like these. Your insights are right on.

Thank You for all the great marketing material. It's true that real success begins by embracing the right concepts - by shifting one's thought. But then we need resources, especially marketing resources. My opinion: The Service Roundtable has it. There is no more cost effective source of successful marketing strategies and materials for our industry - none. I've checked.

Thank You for all the thoughtful contributions to the Roundtable discussions. Lots of great stuff here. I was a little surprised to find a regular contributor who includes a Wayne Dyer quote in his tagline; I love it. I'm not alone!!! OK, I'll stop. But I hope you don't underestimate the value of the intangibles here. The sense of community built by this Roundtable is for some of us, just what the doctor ordered.

Keep up the great work!

Steve Fouts
United Home Comfort
Bowling Green, OH

The Service Roundtable provides plumbing, air conditioning, and heating contractors with new sales, marketing, and business management tools on a weekly basis, including direct marketing, email marketing, Internet marketing, consumer newsletters, newspaper ads, management tools, pricing calculators, technician flyers and handouts, training pieces, hiring guides, employment applications, recruiting ads and brochures, affinity marketing programs, sales tools, incoming call scripts, press releases, service agreements, and much, much, more. Members gain instant access to a library of more than $3 million of archived content, tap into the Roundtable discussion groups 24/7/365 where instant answers are found to virtually any question, and save on purchases.

The cost? It's only $50 a month. There's no long-term contract. It's not necessary. Try it for a month. If you don't like it, quit.

Take a tour of the Service Roundtable.

Join Now.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Rosenthal Plumbing Customer Service Rap

Rosenthal Plumbing put together a rap video to illustrate customer service principles...

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Airplane Toilet Seat Experiment

I have no idea why I find this video so fascinating. I find that I really want an airplane toilet for home. Yup, I've got toilet envy.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Bubba Does Contracting

These are just a few fun... well, amazingly stupid pictures from the There I Fixed It blog.

Bubba working on a mini-split...


Bubba making sure his truck starts...


Bubba can't figure out what's so important about licensing...


Bubba tries to solve a low flow toilet problem...


Bubba working on his truck...


Bubba's good with tools...


Bubba proves again that he can repair anything, so why replace, ever?


Bubba relaxes with a few unlicensed electricians...


Bubba installed the air conditioning in Bubbette's car...


Bubba's point-of-use water heater...


Bubba doesn't have the parts on the truck and doesn't have time to run to the supply house before the game starts. No problem...


Of course what these really illustrate is the reason people out of their depth on repairs should call a professional.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Free Marketing Ideas – Part VII


This is the final post of the free marketing ideas series. Next week, I’ll start a new series. In the interim, keep checking the Comanche Marketing blog. Also, you can follow my updates through the Service Roundtable, Twitter, Linked In, and Facebook.


21. Speak At HOA Meetings

Homeowners Association (HOA) meeting vary from rigidly formal to loose. Some are well attended. Others are not. However, all are attended.

Some HOAs feature regular speakers at their meetings. Those without speakers probably would include them if it was easy to find someone with something relevant for the audience. That someone could be you.

In the Internet age, almost any functioning HOA has a website. Simply search for homeowners associations by neighborhood name or by town. Some municipalities even list the HOAs with full officer contact information on their websites.

Offer the speak at each HOA meeting. Send a letter or email to the officers indicating your willingness to speak and propose topics. Here are a few…

HVAC: The upcoming refrigerant phase out
Plumbing: Water conservation
Electrical: Advances in lighting technology
Pool: Salt water pool systems
Pest Control: Natural pest control solutions

Propose a length. Generally, these organizations want to give speakers no more than 15 to 20 minutes.

In your letter, promise to follow up with a phone call (assuming you’ve got the phone number) and give the recipient your number if he or she wants to call sooner.

The same approach can be used with garden clubs and with other service and civic clubs. Don’t worry about rejections. Focus only those who welcome you. Give everyone who attends a gift certificate with your company (remember, a gift certificate is little more than a coupon people keep).

A template for HVAC and plumbing contractors will be released soon on the Service Roundtable.


22. Teach Home Improvement Seminars

Years ago, I attended a two hour home improvement class offered through the city’s parks & rec department. I don’t remember the subject of the class, but I do remember who taught it. The class was taught by a Home Depot employee.

It turned out that a number of classes offered by the city were taught by Home Depot employees. I wondered if Home Depot was encouraging employees to teach these classes. It wouldn’t surprise me.

So why would a big box retailer encourage, and maybe even pay its employees to teach home improvement seminars? It’s simple. Teach a home improvement seminar and you’re positioned as the expert by default. Home Depot benefits by driving people to the store to ask for more information and to buy stuff.

Obviously, contractors have different objectives. You don’t sell over the counter to homeowners, so you’re trying to stimulate future service calls, replacement leads, and project quotes.

You can be successful, but only if you avoid even the hint of solicitation when teaching. People attend these classes to learn, so teach. Offer reasonable DIY advice that any homeowner can manage.

For example, an air conditioning or electrical contractor might advise homeowners to install outlet insulators for the energy savings. Or the contractor might instruct homeowners to check the breaker box before calling for service. Don’t try to turn the homeowner into a technician or plumber, but don’t be afraid of offering helpful advice.

Here are a few topics that might be appropriate for a home improvement seminar…

• How to build a pool
• How to select an air conditioning contractor
• Strategies for cutting home energy
• Water conservation strategies in the home
• Your home’s electrical system
• All about ants and other pest protection
• Conduct you own home energy audit

To find opportunities, start with your own community parks and recreation departments. Next, see what opportunities are available at area home and garden shows. Many host free seminars to help attract homeowners. Some colleges and community colleges offer non-credit continuing education classes.


23. Write Home Improvement Articles

With the Internet, anyone can publish today. Add a blog to your website or create a free one using Blogger or Word Press.

Write about the homeowner problems you uncover in the course of your daily service work. Tell people how you solved the problems. If the problems are preventable, tell readers how.

If you are overly promotional in the body of your article, it will backfire. People won’t read it. However, it is okay to include a promotional paragraph at the very end.

Post your articles on the article sharing sites. When posting on another site, link back to your blog or website in your promotional paragraph.


24. Promote Your Writings

When you post new articles, let people know by email and by social media, such as Twitter, Linked In, Facebook, and so on.

© 2009 Matt Michel

Friday, July 31, 2009

Go Plumb Young Man


Job prospects are dim... except for the trades. The Manchester Union Leader reports that the New Hampshire Economic and Labor Market Information Bureau forecasts strong job growth for plumbers, pipefitters, roofers, cement masons, diesel mechanics, electricians, boilermakers, carpenters, and sheet metal workers for the next seven years. Accordingly, people who would have never considered the trades are attending trade school and signing up as apprentices.

"Plumbing probably wouldn't have crossed my mind if I had something lined up right out of college -- which five years ago was not uncommon," said 24 year old Nick Moreau.

Plumber Philip Cocchiaro delares, "You learn repair work, you'll always have food on the table."

"You've always got something you can fall back on," advises plumber, Bill Welcome. "You're always going to need a plumber, you're always going to need a mechanic for your car, and you're always going to need an electrician."

We've got a shortage of labor while college graduates have a shortage of jobs and an excess of debt. Maybe some should consider a trade before considering college. This a great time for contractors to approach high school guidance counselors to advise them about the prospects in our fields.

Download this FREE HVAC industry recruiting brochure from the Service Roundtable's Free Stuff page. Check out the other Free Stuff from the Service Roundtable.

Blogging Like a Pro


A lot of contractors are testing new approaches to attracting business, such as blogging. Southern California's Kevin Shaw does an excellent job.

Kevin puts thought into his posts. They're organized. They're informative. Moreover, in our searches at the Service Roundtable for content and plumbing ideas through Google and other means, Kevin's blog posts have popped up a couple of times. In fact, I was reading a terrific post on mold and thinking about potential content that could be developed around the issue when I noticed I was on Kevin's site. I'm not sure how I got to Kevin's site, indicating he's creating magnetic content that attracts.

If I lived in the San Gabriel Valley, Kevin's blog would impress me as a consumer. As he continues to build it, the blog will only become more magnetic and more impressive.


Cross Posting

Another company I've stumbled across repeatedly is the Irish InsuranceWorks. What this company does extremely well is cross post articles on a number of different sites. For example, you can find their article on water hammer...

On BizArticles.net

On ArticleCompilation.com

On Creative Content Publisher

On Free Article Directory

On Article Dashboard, where it was picked up by The Home Improvement Blog

On Article Pros, where it was picked up by the Home Improvement blog, which is different from the one cited above

On Articles Alley

By cross posting, the author has increased the odds that bloggers will stumble across his article and republish it, which happened. He expands the number of websites linking back to his site, raising his search engine ranking. He increases the odds that his target audience will see the article.

Writing well in a blog is only part of the battle. You've also got to take active steps to build an audience. Cross posting is one way to do that (note to self... start taking your own advise and cross post).

(c) 2009 Matt Michel

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Appealing to All of the Senses


Trendhunter Magazine reports that Nissan is developing a "Forest AC System" for the Nissan Fuga, which will be launched later this year. The aromatherapy is supposed to affect mental activity.

According to the magazine, "The Nissan ‘Forest AC’ system would automatically control the temperature, ventilation, humidity, and aroma inside the car to match a relaxing forest setting."

Before you write this off, consider the possibilities for the home. Is it possible for air conditioning contractors to inject some form of refillable "aromatherapy" as part of a service agreement that requires continual refilling? It could reinforce the need for semi-annual maintenance.

I've known plumbing contractors who used biodegradable, citrus cleaning spray to clean faucets and fixtures during service. The spray left a pleasant citrus scent. The plumbers left the remainder of the low cost cleaning spray, which was private labelled. At the very least, it was a differentiator that got the company name and contact information in the house in a unique way. Consumers liked the scent of the spray enough that some bought extras from the plumber on the spot, boosting the average ticket.

How can we use aromas to boost memorability, satisfaction, preference, and add value?

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Why Buy A Competitor When You Can Buy The Phone Number?


A lot of fiscally healthy contractors are taking advantage the current economy to buy weaker competitors. Sometimes companies can be purchased for little more than the provision of a job for the owner and a percent of future sales from his customer list. If the owner would make a good technician or fill a need for a service manager, an acquisition might be the best approach.

On the other hand, if the company is going under, why not let it and buy the phone number as soon as it becomes available. While it varies, the average cost of buying and forwarding a phone number runs around $30 a year.

What do you get with old phone numbers?

- Calls from old business cards
- Calls from old equipment stickers
- Calls from old invoices
- Calls from old refrigerator magnets
- Calls from old marketing material
- Calls from old yellow pages


Eric McChesney of Drain Masters Plumbing in St Louis vigorously tracks all leads. He says that 30% of his yellow pages calls come from books more than two years old. I don’t even keep new yellow pages directories, but clearly a lot of people keep their old yellow pages.

For $30 a line, buy old numbers and keep them active until they cease to get calls. At one call a year, the line pays for itself.

Whenever you discover an out-of-business competitor, call the phone number to find out when the number will be available. Enter the date in your organizer and buy the number. Why buy a competitor when you can buy a number?

© 2009 Matt Michel