The Home Service Expert Podcast - Marketing, Sales, Capacity Planning, and Scaling Home Services with Ismael Valdez
Episode Date: February 23, 2026Tommy Mello hosts a Super Bowl day episode of The Home Service Expert with Ismael Valdez, founder of VE and NextGen (Anaheim), discussing how to scale home service businesses through disciplined marke...ting, sales process mastery, and operational execution. Ishmael explains how he would evaluate investing in a $20M company by first assessing the energy and leadership of the C-suite/upper management, then reviewing data systems like CRM/ServiceTitan and financials, contrasting this with smaller $4 - $5M owner-driven businesses. They discuss the importance of competitiveness, infrastructure, and recruiting, and Tommy's focus on lead generation and funnel math (booking rate, cancellations, conversion rate), including capacity planning, overstaffing with outbound to fill boards, and lowering cancellations driven by response time. Ishmael emphasizes three core departments: marketing, sales, and operations/customer fulfillment, and argues many operators underperform in marketing and sales. 00:00 The Importance of Client Empowerment 06:03 Marketing as the Foundation of Success 11:53 Managing Seasonality in Business 14:59 Investment Strategies Post-Exit 22:28 Creative Financing and Collaboration 31:14 Market Entry Strategies and Performance Metrics 36:27 Marketing and Brand Recognition 39:06 Sales Techniques and Customer Engagement 49:19 The Power of Personal Branding 55:16 Sales Strategies and Growth Goals
Transcript
Discussion (0)
One of the biggest mistakes that I see contractors do taught me and their technicians do and their
project managers do is that they do the shopping for the client. You guys cannot ever, ever do
the shopping for your client. That's not what you're there for. Welcome to the home service expert
where each week Tommy chats with world class entrepreneurs and experts in various fields like marketing,
sales, hiring and leadership to find out what's really behind their success in business. Now, your host,
Home Service Millionaire, Tommy Mello.
Before we get started, I wanted to share two important things with you.
First, I want you to implement what you learned today.
To do that, you'll have to take a lot of notes, but I also want you to fully concentrate on the interview.
So I ask the team to take notes for you.
Just text notes, N-O-T-E-S, to 888-526-1299.
That's 888-5-26-1299, and you'll receive a link to download the note.
from today's episode. Also, if you haven't got your copy of my newest book, Elevate,
please go check it out. I'll share with you how I attracted and developed a winning team that
helped me build a $200 million company in 22 states. Just go to elevate and win.com
for slash podcast to get your copy. Now let's go back into the interview. All right, guys,
it's a special day. It is Super Bowl, and I got my good buddy Ishmael here.
Ishmael Valdez. He's an expert in business. Air conditioning, heating, and plumbing. He's based out
of Anaheim. Founder of Nuvei and founder of next gen air conditioning, heating and plumbing.
Ishmael is the founder of CEO. He was at NextGen. And now he's 100% in on Nuvei.
Yes, sir. Been in the trades for almost 20 years.
That shit sounds old, man. Honestly, time. 20 years? Bro, so I started 17. Yeah, so I'm going on
21 years now. I feel like, dude. That's crazy. The overnight success everybody talks about.
How long you've been on it, Tom? 20?
Yeah, no, I was painting garage doors for I guess 2005, yeah, so 21 years.
Damn.
So if you were to go in a company, let's call it a $20 million company, what's the first thing you'd do?
If you were, let's just say, call it you're an investor.
You're buying 20%.
Yep.
Where do you start?
The top five people in the company, the CMO, hopefully they have one, the CEO, the general manager for sure.
So probably if they have a C-suite or just a managed system in there, that's the first people I want to talk to.
Without the owner being there, though.
My first move is I would walk in, you know, I would say hi to people and, you know, just see how the operation flows.
To me, like energy inside the operation is super important.
Like, I've been to operations like even yours, you walk in and everybody's just like.
Awesome.
Yeah, everybody has their roles in their operations.
So and then I would grab the C-suite or the upper management and I would probably take them out to dinner and I would want to like dig into them because they're the ones that they're the ones running the business. You know this, right? And I'll probably spend a really, really good amount of time before making the investment. And then after I talk to them and figure out that, you know, we're on the same page, then I would I would go in there. But I would start with those, those people. Then I would walk into the, you know, show me your financials and all that. That's the thing is I think the data. I want to know how well do they have, whether it.
it's service tight or house call.
That would be my second thing.
Dial in the CRM, I need to see the numbers.
We're going to make impact.
Do you think that, would you want to talk to the people first?
Or would you want to, would you make your decision all based on data?
Meaning the PNLs, the balance sheet, the service tight and set up, all that.
I want to meet the people, but at 20 million of revenue, you're talking about probably
$3 million dollars of EBIT up $4 million.
At $20 million of revenue, there's something there.
It's not like they're trying to figure it out, right?
No, I would just say like if I didn't feel good about the data,
in which they were managing, there's no point in to talk to the people.
But then I say, could I make a ton of impact this business?
Because these people are capable of course.
And they've got the data to know.
Well, they got it up to $20 million, right?
So there's something there.
There's something to work there.
Now, you tell me to walk into a $4, $5 million company.
That's one man driving that whole business.
It's not fun.
It's not fun.
And there's more opportunities.
You know, I'll say this about Ken Goodrich's because he'll say this to your face.
Yeah.
He buys broken businesses and fixes it all the time.
But I don't want those.
I don't have time.
It's a lot of headache.
There's a lot of money there.
Just like in real estate.
You can go section 8 housing.
Exactly.
And you're.
It's exactly how I look at it.
It's a lot of work.
I'd rather go and look at a $10 million house that needs a little bit of work and, you know,
put a little bit of investment behind it and make it be worth $15, $20 million
overnight.
Then get a million dollar house and dump another million and still be $2,3 million.
It's like how much is your time worth?
Exactly.
You know, but Ken's done some cool stuff.
I think we all got our little, I think we all got our little thing that makes us special, Tommy.
I think what, like, what I love being around you and AG and all these guys,
that everybody has their own little thing that we're all learning from.
You know what I'm saying?
I think you're good at your number one thing is recruiting.
Yeah, bro, I'm relentless.
I'm relentless.
And really, when you thought about it, you built it, and you said this, based on what Leland did,
is you just take his top guys.
You plucked them one by one.
That's it.
And then you built a good business off of that.
But one thing you did do is well with Andrew is you spent money on leads.
And so you were good at recruiting, but you had enough leads for them.
You can't get great people.
Victor Rancourt talks about this.
He goes, I left service champions.
I was promised equity.
They gave me equity.
They gave me way more money, better commission.
But I didn't even know my stats.
There was no team there.
I was the guy.
There was like three other.
dudes, but like there was no infrastructure, like there was no meetings. There was no rah-rah.
There was no dealers coming and feeding you, getting you excited. I can't, well, I can't,
I don't care how profitable and how dope the operation is, Tommy. To me, there has to be some
kind of like competitiveness inside the operation. There has to be some, you know, hey, you know,
bonuses. And just if you, if you would see the way I drive these businesses from home comfort
next to now new day, I drive them exactly.
the same way, bro. We are a sales driven organization. I don't care if it's an air conditioning,
a garage store, a thermostat, or a toilet. You know what I'm saying? We are a sales driven organization.
Obviously, I've said it before. You cannot move from the most important thing, which is marketing.
After you master marketing, marketing is the first step in the operation. After you master marketing,
and you could lead generate on a snap of a finger and you, you know, you got your message out there
of who you are. After you do that, then you move on to the second step, which is the sales process.
And you don't move on from the sales process to the operation process until you master the sales.
And this is where all the $5 million operations get it wrong.
They think that they're working on something all the time.
They're always working on something else.
But they're not doing anything, though.
They're busy, but they're not productive.
They're busy, but they're not intentional.
They're busy, but they're not moving the needle forward.
And that's where I think they get it wrong.
To me, it's, hey, there's three different operations to growing.
Any freaking business, I don't care what it is.
There's three different departments.
There's a marketing department.
There's a sales department, and there's the operation department.
The operation department is the customer fulfillment.
What happens when the sale goes through to when we collect a check?
That's what I call the operation, right?
Anybody could, dude, you know what I found out?
And all these four, five, ten, fifteen, twenty million dollar guys are exceptional operators.
They freaking suck at marketing and sales, bro.
They suck at marketing and sales.
That's all I live for.
Marketing sales.
Make the phones ring.
Do you know what your superpower is?
What?
I think you're probably one of the dopest marketers in the world.
It's marketing.
Get the phone to ring off the hook.
We generate 34,000 amount calls a month.
That is insane, bro.
Yeah, and I think I'm just getting started.
And 34,000 leads in a month.
Let me put this into you guys into perspective.
You guys are probably going to generate 34,000 leads in your whole lifetime.
Tommy's doing that shit in a month.
Just to give you guys the perspective of how, like, his superpower, and correct me if I'm
I know you're super operational, you're super methodical with numbers, you know, you're very data
driven.
But I think your superpower and what most people underrate you is, you're a marketing genius,
bro.
That's what you are.
You're a marketing genius from the way you carry A1, from the way you lead generate A1,
from the way you present A1, right?
I think you do okay in sales and operation
and that's why you know, you have amazing people like Luke
and all these guys behind you.
Yeah.
But I think your superpower is that you can-
I understand the funnel.
Here's what I want people to think about.
And this is where me and Luke,
we got a healthy relationship
that I could kind of combat with him a lot.
Yep.
And I said, Luke, let's just do some quick math here.
We've worked really hard to get to 90% booking.
90%.
Now we're in 40 markets.
True 90% by the way.
Like you're fucking.
Yeah, no, it's 90%.
But here's the problem.
14% cancellations.
And that's just because, you know, we have 62 guys training.
Capacity planning.
I think we can get that down to seven.
But so, so I'm losing 10% out of the gate, right?
Because I'm at 90.
Yeah.
Then I'm losing 14.
So I got 10.
And those cancellations on the 14% is it because you can't get there fast enough?
Yeah.
So I've analyzed the hell out of it.
And how booked out do you stay before you answer?
How booked out do you stay?
All year around.
Oh, yeah.
We don't have any seasons.
And the colder climate's installs goes down quite a bit.
But I don't have a month that's ever going to be less than the last month unless it's all we do is say how many Monday through Fridays do we have.
The month that we kill it, we've got 23.
The months that we don't, we got 19.
Even though we're open Saturdays and Sundays.
You know what I would like to see you operate?
Yeah.
An air conditioning business.
I'm telling you right now, dude.
I would love to see because look at the one thing you mastered is marketing operations sales, all that, right?
You're phenomenal.
The seasonality, Tommy, let me give you the influx of seasonality.
I don't know.
I had to sell service agreements.
$15 million.
This is at peak at next year.
We did $15.1 million in our top month.
In our low month, we were like at 6.2.
So that $9 million fluctuation is what drives people nuts.
why nobody can and look service agreements do do help a lot it's tough it is tough but the seasonality
so i asked kegan i said you're the only guy i know that's run lots of millions of ebita through
garage doors and lots of millions through an air conditioning company i said honest to god i'm in his
office we're doing an interview you were there and i said hvac or garage doors eight track all day long
he goes meaning tough what's tougher no he goes if if i'm going to do something
My non-competees over.
He goes, I'd rather do A-Jack all day because it's such a big ticket.
He goes, I could get 20, 25 grand from a home.
Grouch doors, I could get six or seven, and that's of a new sale.
But look, you're not used to seasonality, and you're not, you look, you want me to tell you
what you're not used to, though?
One thing that you're not used to that you probably never thought about?
What?
Turnover.
Your turnover rate on employees fucking skyrocketed in seasonality.
I'm at 35% turnover in your first year.
No, I'm saying overall.
You're way lower than that.
But check this out.
So you're losing 10%.
So Luke, you're losing 10% in the call center.
14% cancellation rate.
Study the cancellation rate.
And all these cancellations are due to one thing.
Customer resolve themselves.
Customer found somebody quicker.
Nobody resolved it themselves.
They just called somebody quicker.
Of course.
So it's all about getting out there to these demand driven.
So I go, wait a minute.
10% plus 14% and then conversion rate, that's when you're face to face.
We're at blended 74%.
So that means we're losing 26%.
Let me ask you a question on that.
Blended 74% do you include the $88 complimentary tuneups or whatever you guys charge?
We don't consider a conversion unless it's 125 bucks.
I would consider an HVAC guys, in HVAC plumbing and electrical.
I would consider a true conversion, 500 bucks and up.
$500 and up is a true conversion to me.
Why?
Because it already cost you $200 bucks in there.
It already cost you another $200,000 to get the lead, like the labor behind all that.
So if you are not producing 500 bucks inside that house, I believe you're losing money on every single one of them.
You do as we look at my scorecards are really, really good.
But, you know, a good guy will do about $1,500 average ticket that's blended.
I got guys that are doing $4,000.
But if I'm losing 10% plus 14% plus 26%, that's 50%.
That's half of my leads.
I'm not earning their business.
I know.
So don't ever say it's a marketing problem.
operations wants to go and say it's a marketing problem.
Of course.
And they're like, we need more leads.
I'm like, well, let's get rid of these cancellations.
Let's get rid of these people not booking because the worst one on lace that I see pop up is the service times didn't work.
Like we didn't, you know, found somebody.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's like.
So you look at that.
So I believe we could get to 94% booking rate.
No, no, no, no, no, 94% booking on the context center.
Okay.
I believe we could get the cancellation rate down from 14 to 7.
Okay.
And I believe we could get our conversion rate from 73% to 80%.
Do you think you're always going to be at 14% because of, hey, I'm going to add more,
I'm going to add more staff, but I'm going to increase marketing and then it's going to keep going to.
You're going to keep chasing your tail on that.
Do you think you're going to?
So here's what I'm trying to do.
Okay.
I'm trying to spend as much possible money as I possibly could and still have a staff to where I've got to do outbound that day.
So 20% of my volume in that market will be on my.
my list so i can pick up the 20 percent but here's the deal same day call out that's what i was i'm
okay i didn't now i'm down i only need to fill 10 percent of the board i got a guy that his daughter
just got sick she she he needs to go pick her up yeah the shit happens yep so it seems like something
always happens guy got a fender bend or something so i want to have all my inbound to where it's
80 percent 70 percent certain markets 90 percent certain markets depending we're building out a whole tool okay i've got a
company building the most advanced capacity planning tool.
Then you staff up and you overstaff and then you got to do outbound.
Okay. And that's the way you do outbound right now.
We use a third party. We use Jack from Elite.
For my for the A track guy for A track electrical plumbing that time, we live on ABA.
That's an important. And this is where this is one of some of these air conditioning guys
missing plumbing and the electric guys missing. You guys, when it's shoulder season and there's
not enough leads on the board, you're freaking hammering.
your customer base all day long.
You're hitting them with direct mail.
You're hitting them with email blast, ringless, voicemail, text messages.
You're hitting them without.
This is one thing that Leland said that really stuck out.
He goes, I start over today.
The only thing I'm doing, focusing on service agreements.
Yep.
He goes, service agreements is the lifeblood when there's no weather.
Yep.
That's his, like, no one's really, I don't know a lot of companies.
So you pulled it off.
Yeah.
And Leland's just every single year, 22%.
I think I pulled it off because of,
my growth. If I would have had a slower growth, I would have lost more people and I wouldn't have
done what we did. We were just growing so freaking fast, right? But you invested in things that very
few companies will invest in. Like you guys did the baseball stadium. The billboards. And you did a lot of
billboards. And you kept it clean. Yep. And I remember showing up at your shop and you were laughing.
You're like, you got like 18 guys doing the lettering on your trucks everywhere in your parking lot.
You're like, I just added 20 trucks. And then you got two rats. And then you got two.
Raptors sitting over there because I think you won some from Service Titan.
Yeah, yeah.
I gave them to my general manager and my ops manager.
So what did you get?
Because what was the contest, whoever could get service time the most clients?
I just kept giving them referrals.
People kept coming up to me touring my shop and I would show them how service time would benefit the business.
And they just gave me a Corvette.
They gave me a Corvette. They gave me money.
Like they just went above and beyond for me.
But honestly, I grabbed all that and I gave it away.
I never really stayed with any of that.
Let me go.
Let me ask you another question.
This is something I've been studying a lot of them.
So you just sell next gen.
Today's the day the wire hits.
Yep.
I think this is important because a lot of people are probably going to exit in the next few years.
Which I hope you guys do, by the way.
What's the best advice?
I'll give you just a few things.
Number one, buy a nice car.
Buy your dream home.
Go on a dream vacation.
Yep.
But keep a lot.
I didn't do the dream vacation.
I did the car.
Keep the money, though, for a while.
Yes.
There's a lot of opportunities day one.
But if you wait for a year,
deals fine you.
Like so many good opportunities.
So what else would you say?
Because nobody's there for you when the money comes.
Look, when I had the wire come into me,
I did something that most people wouldn't have done.
I think I have like seven commercial buildings anywhere from 10,000 and 50,
4,000 square feet that I leased that back to wrench.
So I had seven buildings.
I had like, I have like nine houses that I had.
So like when that money came in to me,
I went and bought a watch and a car and like all the nonsense that I wanted to get off my chest.
But then I paid down all my debt on my real estate, which looking back was pretty dumb because I could have grabbed that money and I put it, you know, stocks, bonds and it would have created some some pretty good return.
Yeah.
But I've sold, I've sold, I think, two of my commercial real estate buildings and I made between just the two or a little bit over 3.1 mill on them.
And, you know, and I only kept them a couple years.
So I've done good in that and I and I shouldn't have paid down because now that I had if I would have had that access to all that cash right now
Yeah.
Then I could have bought a business here.
I could have bought a business.
I could have I could have done the Tommy Mello.
That's the thing.
Well, the thing is for me is like you own.
You own half of the industry now, Tommy.
I burn a lot of I.
I've got all mine sitting in the market and it's killing it.
It's doing very, very well.
And you know Joe.
Of course.
Joe does good for me.
He just got me the AMX.
Thank you for him.
By the way.
He gave me the AMX black.
He just got it.
He figured it out.
Yeah.
And I'm like, do I want to pay for this?
It's only $5,000 a year.
You should.
All this access.
What else was going to tell you?
What else would you?
Okay, now that I answer that, I think I would have kept a little bit more cash to have
a little bit more liquidity to be able to step on these huge opportunities because I
bought into some dope-ass businesses.
There's some deals.
And that's the one thing is on this next deal.
You're on my list of just people I want to do business with because you're a hustler.
Thank you.
And I probably got a list of like 25 people that like I've got an I, I've got a plan to like really, really, really.
Who, what business gets you excited besides AI?
I know you're going to say that.
But what business?
I like software a lot because it's revenue.
It's annual reoccurring revenue.
And I like home service.
And I'm starting to like home improvement, but the multiples aren't there because it's not demand driven.
So the multiples are half of what they are in home service.
So there's 20.
So I like roofing a lot.
I like water restoration, a lot, because I think Edward did.
Edward did amazing stuff, dude.
I mean, those guys did well in California.
Are you guys going to...
They got the $10 million.
Damn.
Are you guys going to turn this year?
They're working on it.
It's not my place, but they've done it.
Edgar and Edward did it exceptionally well.
But here's one thing that I am working on.
On the next deal, the PE company doesn't care at all about the real estate.
In fact, the bigger P.E. companies
I'm going to go tell them
I'm going to buy a building in every market
that has substantial EBITA.
And it's got to be 20, 20 plus buildings.
And I'm going to put 10-year leases minimum on them.
That's good.
And then you sell this portfolio,
it's worth 50% with the 10-year lease.
Yeah.
And it's on a triple net.
And so let's say my average building
I go out and buy $20.
It's $5 million.
It's worth $150 million the day I put them all together.
Then there's a P.E company,
not the P.E. companies we work with,
their real estate. All they're shooting for is 10, 12% return on investment, IRR, internal rate of
return. So they're happy. It's slow money, but, you know, the rent goes up every year, and we're
happy because they're really good properties, and we do tenant improvements and everything.
But you make 50%, so just by doing that, just by stacking them up?
50 million bucks. And I'm doing a favor for A1, because I'm getting the best locations.
True. And it's not like you're going to take advantage on the lease, you're going to give it to
whatever marketing it is.
Great cost. They got to sign off on this, but that's day one. And here's the cool thing. You might say, hey, he made 50% on $100 million. No, because there's hundreds of millions in the bank. I'm getting loan 90 to 10. So I've literally spent $10 million, paid a little bit of interest along the way the first year. So on the $10 million, on the $10 million, I made $50. And you could grab that money back?
Oh, yeah.
Because the banks, they look at this and they go, well, you've got hundreds and hundreds and hundreds over here.
We're good.
You're not going to default.
So they'll give me all the money I freaking want for that.
So that's like-
Where did you learn this from Cardone or the other Pace guy?
Who?
Yeah, I like Pace Morby a lot.
He's cool, man.
But I don't know who told me.
And they're like, but it needs to be a portfolio.
So CBRE.
And then I started using Chat, CBT, and they're like,
if you can get 20-year leases.
I got 10 years.
10 years are great.
Yeah, I got 10 years on all.
I mean, it's very, very, very safe.
That's what's so cool about real estate.
Now, Pace is a genius.
Cardone's really good, too.
You know, I will say, like,
you've got to respect all these people.
I do.
You know what I've seen the video
when him and Cardone are talking about what,
you've seen that video?
Yeah, yeah, he goes.
And Cardone's just like, what the fuck?
Like, I said that to Matt and Jacob and Eric.
Yeah.
And then I text Pace.
Yeah.
in the text.
Yeah.
And I said,
I need you to give us
just a one day class.
Yeah. He's like,
dude,
that was probably one
of the dopest videos
I've seen them do.
Cardone's just like,
what,
I feel like I've been doing
this shit wrong
my whole life.
Well,
Hannah told me that...
That's a smart girl too,
bro.
She's like,
there's some laws passing
that make it harder
to do creative financing.
Mm-hmm.
So,
but he's a very creative guy.
I know he is.
And me,
I'm like,
wait a minute.
Like,
what if we went to,
like,
the Brian Collins of the world?
Like,
all those
bankers. We know Eric and Rob.
I say, bring us deal flow.
Like, there's a lot of deals that they're like, they're not even big enough yet.
You're about to open up the floodgates for you, huh?
Well, look, you've got to have a system.
It's got to be, here's one thing that you should think about.
Like, is it Linux? Is it Goodman?
And I know you might change, depending on who it is.
Who's the finance company, service tight, the exact same playbook, the data, the exact same
APIs.
Are you going to use Trip?
You're going to use lace.
You're going to use a vocate.
Like, whatever you're using, bam, because all the,
companies you negotiate that that's the thing is you pay less yeah and that's what
then can can't can't can't you know I know the needs help with I mean these guys
said no we're gonna start buying together so Parker's gonna buy what they buy in
out of Atlanta with and by buying together they're gonna say like 40 million
dollars of eBay trust me I've been I was I was the number one person knocking
on Ken Haynes door telling him bro we're not taking advantage of our size you can go
to Dykin you could go to Lenox you could go to all these finance companies
and leverage our size and put so much money on the bottom line just by leveraging it.
So much.
And then the way you buy insurance, the way you buy your trucks.
I know that's the way you do it, right?
Yeah, I buy the same trucks in every market, the same exact tool set.
That's what I'm saying.
Everything is the same throughout the whole company.
I only need one CFO too.
That's one thing.
Like I think Wrench is a genius company and they've done extremely, extremely well.
And their answer was, well, we buy great companies and leave them like they are.
And I'm like, but then you've got a CFO in every market.
Yeah.
I got one CFO.
And then all those CFOs, there's friction between them and...
Like, you get one CFO, one CFO.
Yep.
And one CFO could run 100 markets.
So I think Frank's doing a killer job.
Bro, I think they're about to...
I've heard some rumblings.
Hopefully, hopefully.
Hopefully there's a press release any day now.
By the time this comes out, it might have already been announced.
Hopefully, because we need these portfolios to start churning.
You know what I do want to talk to you about, though?
tell me that I don't think a lot of people notice this and because, you know, their EQ's a little
lower. They're just, you know, living. Look, what happened at next year, bro, was the perfect
timing to what's happening right now. So in 2018, 16, 17, 18, when we were barely starting
next year, um, the blue dots and all those guys and the ARSs were coming into our industry and
they were trying to, you know, do what they're doing right now. And they pissed off a lot of managers,
bro. They pissed off a lot of C suites and high level managers, high level sales guys and everything.
So I came in as a fresh face into the industry with this, you know, next gen 4,9, 4,995 does it all.
And everybody was talking shit on me. How could you be selling systems for 5,000?
You're crazy. You're going to go out of business. All I was doing was stacking labor, bro,
because labor, you can't do nothing without labor, right? So that happened in 2016, 17, around there.
Dude, I had access to people because I was the fresh face and I was advertising.
and I was being aggressive with my recruitment,
I had access to people that I would never have access to,
ever in my life,
some of the, you know,
$5 million guys and $3 million technicians
and all these guys,
because PE was pissing them up.
Well, the same thing's going on right now.
And this is why I tell all my,
my $5 million companies,
you guys are in the best place of your life right now.
You guys are in the best,
you guys are going to have access to next-gen people,
which, look, you know,
unfortunately next-chin went backwards, right?
And they let go of like six or seven
of the highest drive.
drivers in there. Now they're starting.
So there.
Who? Daniel?
No. So now they're starting their own little companies and they're starting like they're
doing their own little. Look. So what I'm what I'm getting to you,
if you're a five million dollar company or you're a 10 million dollar company,
you want to get to 25, 30, 40, 50 people. The people that are going to take you to
those milestones, you have access to them right now. I promise you guys. If I was at
next year right now, you guys would have zero access to my people. They would laugh at
you guys when you guys would try to give them more money or equity in your company or whatever it is.
So take advantage of what it is. This is the greatest opportunity in home service industry.
Not just because look at and I call this the perfect timing. Private equity making mistakes.
You have the industry being discombobulated. Like this is the perfect freaking time to grab those
people, put them in a team and let that and cruise into 25. There's a lot of other things going on.
People don't know this, a lot of people, but P.E. borrows money.
And it is the coolest thing in the world, Ishmael, when I really learned.
That is what I need to learn from you, by the way.
So I hope to have a good conversation with you later on.
This is crazy.
Listen, the P.E. company borrows money against my EBITA.
Yep.
Yes, they put in some hard money, too.
But they borrow the money.
Then I'm responsible for the payments.
Every time they fly out, who do you think is paying for their flights?
What about their hotels?
What about dinner?
So although they're amazing and I made all the right moves
I remember when Ken Goodrich called me about
He goes Tommy you're probably one of the better guys I've ever seen at this trade
It's just home service
He goes but you don't know what they know
He goes you learn how they raise capital you learn about their LPs
You start going to their meetings
You understand exactly how the formula is working now I understand all this stuff and I'm going
Wait a minute there's a great big company that's
out of business. It was Renovo. And Renovo had all these home improvement, kitchen,
remodel, bathroom models. They were making a ton of money, but guess what? Their debt payments
were too high because they took six times leverage. So let's say you're a $30 million
company. I could take on that $30 million. The bank will give me $6x. So I could borrow $180.
Okay. But now that company that I bought into is responsible for the payments on $180 million
And the interest, too.
Well, the interest is what kills you, right?
So, dude, I'm like, that's what happened is Black Rock was their lender, and they're like,
they just shut down.
So when you sell your business, be careful.
Of course.
Now, debt is a great thing because debt, because I wrote 50%.
So the debt actually makes the numbers way better if it's done right.
But you've got to be able to grow, too.
Those first couple years are critical to get the massive growth.
So this is the hardest thing about private equity, is they're going to put debt on your
business. So me and you went to go buy businesses. I'll give you an example. We were at the
suite yesterday and it was on, uh, might have been Friday. Yeah, Friday. And I look over and my buddy
Tony's at the booth next to us. And he goes, yeah, I'm the president of this bank now. And Eric
walks up and he goes, dude, you know that guy? I'm like, yeah, I've known him for 15 years.
He goes, he'll loan us all day long at 2x. So you go into a business.
is doing $5 million of EBDA.
You give you $10 out of the gate.
But now this company, called ABC HVAC company,
is responsible for that debt.
So that's how these multiples come up
because they take on more debt.
Is it always good to take on that much debt?
I don't think so.
I think...
What's a healthy debt that you want to be
when you're acquiring these businesses?
Let's say they're doing $5 million of EBDA?
Well, the more EBTA they're doing...
The more debt you want to take, because at a certain point, it's more expected.
Like, if you looked at our financials, you'd understand that we've never had a down month or a down quarter.
And what that tells you is we don't really have a lot of, we don't have Home Depot.
Because if we lost Home Depot, let's say that was 20%.
Yeah.
That's a big area of concern.
Let's say we had a huge contract with Costco.
Now, those are great contracts to have.
But let's say Costco says, hey, we're taking you out.
We got a better.
All of a sudden.
I know.
So that's why having a lot of different clients and a massive database and a lot of different
markets, let's say there's right now in Florida there's a massive crisis going on.
Real estate's going backwards.
And one of the biggest reasons, too, is that the houses are uninsurable.
Hurricane comes.
Like, the insurance companies are charging so much freaking money.
And Keegan lives there.
He's like, dude, this market's upside down right now.
Well, I'm in Florida.
But that's only one market.
And we don't really feel it.
you know, we're also in Detroit.
We're also in Reno.
We're in all over.
Is there a number that you look at?
Tommy, when you open up like a Florida location, right?
And let's say you're going to be that you have a three-year plan and you want to be at X amount on top and bottom.
And this is good for your listeners because this is one big, huge mistakes that I believe a lot of contractors do is that they start their business.
They, you know, they get a four or five employees.
They grow it.
But they're not making money.
And they keep holding on for dear life.
Is there a certain amount of threshold time that you go like, okay, cool.
If in three years we're not at X on top and bottom, how long do you hold it before you go like,
okay, we got to shut that market down?
Well, my biggest thing is finding the right leader, but now we're a lot more and a little cool
to go into a market, but it takes bigger companies with bigger average tickets could turn a
company could turn a greenfield around six months to where it's profitable.
It takes us 18 months.
Okay.
But I don't want to have a popsicle stand.
So I'm putting in a lot of money to TV radio billboards, which you don't see a return on
that.
I know.
For over a year.
I mean, Aaron's going through the same thing when he went into, like, Cleveland.
He's like, or Cincinnati, I'm going to spend a fortune, and I'm not going to see an ROI for a long time.
But then all of a sudden, it seems like you were there for 10 years.
You're buying credibility.
What's the threshold that you're looking for?
Is it like a year?
If you're not turning, if you didn't hit your goal, you're not sure.
I need to be able to hit a $3 to $4 million even a company within three years.
And if you don't, how long do you hold it for?
Well, I guess the question is, did you go into the right moment?
markets because well let me give you a good example I'm never going to be able to get that much
money out of a Tucson but it's so close to Phoenix it's just like northern Arizona so if I go into
Atlanta it's a lot different than me going into Savannah Georgia okay like Atlanta Georgia is way
bigger opportunity than Savannah but Savannah's not that far away so I go to Savannah if I could
get so you got to look at the demographic and Valpac believe it or not has some of the
That's data.
No, ValPak's still doing good.
Okay.
The head guy there of all the data was just in my office last week.
The shit that they are able to do.
Got it.
I got to show you because you can take your whole database and upload it into their thing.
It'll tell you exactly who your ideal client is and how often it hit them.
Do you prefer Valpac over Drag Amel?
Or do you think both of them?
Both of them do well.
But my ValPak, so every single month I have a meeting with all of our VALPAC.
So every single month I have a meeting with all of our VALC.
vendors for marketing.
Yep.
And it's the same deck.
And I give them all the data.
And it's green, red, green, yellow, red, or purple's really bad.
But how's our mailers doing?
If they're in the green, I go, what other, can we put a double insert in?
Is there more people we could hit here?
Or just keep it right.
And since I started doing these meetings, I mean, we've gone from 17% of revenue to 15% to 10.
Like, ValPAC's killing it for us.
Okay.
But in certain markets, I'm not even hitting half the homes because guess what?
I don't have the technicians writing the tickets there.
Our conversion rate's not good yet.
So I tell the guys, listen, I'm not going to be able to get you a lot of leads until,
I tell the managers all the time.
I can't get you leads until you get the average ticket to this and the conversion rate
through this.
And it's true.
And I tell these guys, don't ever complain to me until you get the performance better.
You've got to have stronger one-on-ones, do more training.
You've got to recruit better because your market, I can get more leads.
But it's a return on ads, bet.
Let me do another question back to, back to that.
Before you go do ValPAC magazines, Dragmail, what else is there?
I call that the tree.
There's PVC, LSA.
No, no, no, no.
I'm saying hard print.
So magazines of Alpac and Dragmell are like the trio of print, right?
So before you do that, and this is for your listeners, too, do you, is there a certain
amount of reviews, they're GMB?
They're Yelp.
Yeah, so what we do is we do friends and family for free for the first two weeks.
Like, we just opened up St. Louis.
Okay.
Day one before we got there because we did friends and family, we already got 65 reviews.
Okay. When do you start dumping into Google?
I should you start Google right away.
Okay.
And even though they don't have that many reviews.
So here's what I did.
I did exactly what you would think, what I thought to do is going super light, just focused on reviews.
spend the first year and then hit all the other stuff.
Okay.
Then I found out from like a company like Groundworks, Matt Malone,
they're doing like 280 million of EBITA.
He goes in four months before they're even in that market
and starts doing Juan ads.
So people are hearing your name every day.
A1 is hiring great people and you just make it...
Just recruitment.
But people are hearing your name, A1, A1, A1, A1, A1, A1.
And that's a lot of money to think about.
You're spending four months worth of endorsements
and radio and TV.
Yep.
And you're not making a dime.
You can't even run a call.
But that's what it's going to cost
because people will remember you.
I'll be like,
who's that company all the time?
It's hiring those awesome technicians.
But this is the biggest thing.
The next company that's looking at us
is going to say,
how good are they at greenfields?
How quick can they go take market share?
And if you build that playbook,
that's worth more than gold.
Because an acquisition is like,
I might be able to get a good acquisition.
True.
But I can't plan it.
You're gambling?
Maybe what I found that when you go into a market like St. Louis and you're spending 300 grand a month,
now everybody's calling you saying I want to sell because you're going to freaking, it's already expensive to market here.
And now you're spending this much.
I see you on the bus stops.
I hear your name every morning.
Like we don't want to go.
So now they're like, how do we do a deal?
Yep.
And your competitor see you as like, hey, my employees are going to want to go work for you because you have.
Oh, yeah.
Well, hopefully they understand that I'm willing to lose money for the first 18 months.
Not only willing, you can.
two.
Well, think about this.
You know, just like A-CHAC, the multiples are going up.
Yep.
So my question is you get a million-dollar EBITA company.
What are you going to pick up?
What's a fair price for a million dollars of EBIT?
I know what they're getting an A-THAG.
Six to eight, maybe.
Some people are paying $10.
Yeah.
So the question is, on $8 million for that million dollars of EBITA, you're paying eight.
Yep.
Could I go into there and spend $8 million?
If I could spend five and get the same reaction.
You're right.
I'm way better off.
Yep.
Because now I'm building it with my same culture.
And then here's the other trick.
Pay your top guys $150,000 to move.
Get them to move.
You got to get your top guys to move to a market.
And that's an ad back.
All the things you've been through right now, right?
The green filling, the acquisitions, because you're doing both.
What do you enjoy the most and which one's giving you the best return?
Yeah, greenfield's been difficult, but it gets better and better and better.
To enjoy the greenfield?
I would enjoy, dude, I would.
I love to start from nothing and go on.
You know, I bought some really cool companies like Cody Johnson.
You know Cody.
Like, dude, that guy's the hardest worker.
Him and his brother, Ryan.
You're never, like, I've never seen that because they're just great.
And then Don's, the guy had been marketing there for 32 years on the radio.
Like, but they had an average ticket of like $400.
So we go in there.
And this is what's so cool about knowing your numbers.
Yeah.
As I'm like, well, their booking rate is 78% were 90.
So you just picked up 12% there.
The conversion rate, they're not working nights or weekends.
They're running four calls.
They're running like seven calls a day.
I'm running three a day.
So I cut their jobs in half so now they can take the time.
So my conversion rates up, my average ticket goes up.
So let's say you paid eight X for them.
The effective multiples is two by the time you fix these things.
And people don't realize that.
I'm like, all that I care about is these numbers.
Did you get, okay, slow it down for them
because I want them to really get that substance
that you just said, look it, you're running six to seven calls.
a day and then you're wondering why your ticket is three to four hundred dollars okay yes bam bam
thank you ma'am they're waiting for that easy customer they're waiting for the easy one
the best guys i know they go to those hard clients and they take the time and i say this if your
average jobs an hour and a half i'd like you to get to three and a half hours yes it's just the time i don't
the people feel better about spending the money when you're there for four hours with them yes
look at people ask us how we how we were carrying a twenty one thousand dollar average ticket at wrench
we go in there for three hours with a certified technician, good looking, knows how to communicate,
knows how to work on those units.
He's in there for three hours, okay?
When the customers ask the right question, a project manager, a comfort advisor will go in there
for another three to four hours.
Another three to four hours to educate the client on different options of why they should
replace their systems and, you know, make all these headaches.
They get to know the clients, they see who's sleeping in the rooms, they look for inhalers,
they look for air quality, they're looking at everything.
You got to get to know the people, diagnose the person before the problem.
Five, six hours, we're inside that home, and we come out with $20, $25,000 tickets.
You guys, I've mentored hundreds and hundreds of you guys.
And the first thing I ask you, tell me what the technicians do every day.
Oh, you know, we got calls.
When it gets busy, you're running 7, 8, 9, 10 calls, they're running Saturdays and Sundays.
And I'm like, so how do you expect to build any kind of trust, any kind of value when you present a 20,000?
$30,000 average ticket when you've been there for 45 minutes.
The other thing is that I look at is how long did it take you to start that first estimate?
So I do garage doors are a lot different because a lot of my revenue comes from straight repair.
Okay.
I don't need, it would be great to get a million turnovers.
But our gross profit on services way higher, the dollar amounts are not enough.
But just because the material.
And I had all these technicians a couple weeks ago, they're like, all we do is talk about
turnovers now.
And I'm like, they're like, we used to be a service.
company. Now you just want us to sell the doors. And I said, well, I was a technician for a long
time. I run a lot of calls personally in the client's home. Do you think it's not right to mention
it when it's a 20-year-old door and it's falling apart and the styles are coming undone? It's not
insulated. The paints oxidized. The trim's messed up. You're going to make a lot of money on a
service call, but it's the right. If it were your mother, would you at least say, have you ever
thought about a new door? One of the biggest mistakes that
that I see contractors do taught me and their technicians do and their project managers do is that
they do the shopping for the client.
They do the shopping for the client.
They get in there and they're like, oh, but the capacitor is $390 for us to and I'll get
Tracy.
It's like, okay, did you guys give them options on replacing a hard start kit, a capacitor
circuits, a coil cleaning something?
Like, you guys cannot, listen to me, you guys cannot ever, ever do the shopping for your
client.
That's not what you're there for.
Your job as a technician or a project manager is to present three to four different options to make sure that you educate them and let them.
Mantle.
We just started with Mantle.
And it's this thing that basically it's software that allows the client to kind of do their own shopping.
They scroll through that and this guy called me one of my product specialists.
He's like, dude, he's like, there was no way.
I was selling a three star.
They saw the difference of the price.
Because with the four side.
They went with the five star and then they added windows.
There you go.
And the crazy thing is with Mantle, just starting out with it a couple months.
Is that what it is?
The sales presentation tool.
So the first page, it shows you all the work we've done in that neighborhood.
And it shows you little Tommy characters.
So you see like this, we've done a work for all your neighbors.
Then the next page is a video from me.
And the next page, it shows you what you need.
And then you could add, subtract.
But here's the cool thing.
Mantle adds in my dealer fees.
Do you own Mantle, by the way?
No.
Okay, guys, we're going to draw a bit because you should see how many freaking links we get on our group of like, what sales presentation?
Service signs stocks and da-da-da-da-da-da.
Well, let's just say I think Mantle is great for $10 million plus companies.
That's true.
And what I got to tell you guys is my conversion rate went from 55% on turnovers to 68.5%.
And the average tickets up $1,500.
But no, Zach's a beast.
And Aaron brought them to me
And they were like, we didn't make this for garage doors
And he, for 90 days, made it think about it
I'm not a person on my group because that's a one thing.
You'll dig this, dude.
And Zach's a really smart guy.
I mean, these guys, like, it made a large impact
in my company.
And now we're rolling it out to Don's a garage door doctor
And the company's underneath.
And I'm like, man, this alone will increase.
That alone could bring in an extra $20 million of EBITA
because here's the deal.
It's eating my dealer fees.
So now I can start marketing, pay nothing till 2029.
But the client's paying the fee for the dealer fee.
Of course.
It's built into it.
And it's legal.
You got to show them and say if you want this one,
but it's just a small monthly number.
So now, like, the cool thing about a garage garage is I could do it for 20 years.
20 years.
Is that one thing that you wish your team and your, and just your industry in general,
did better, the financing?
I know, dude, we're not good as a company.
I mean, look, right now last year, we're 17% of our revenue came from,
Financing. I like this year Luke's goal is 30 to 35%.
I think we're 64%.
Yeah, that's about, that's probably the right number.
Yeah, 64% was that next year.
These bigger tickets people want to use the financing.
Yeah. So could you imagine what it would do if you finance half of your, and this is for your garage or people because garage or people and electricians, Tommy, suck at financing.
They don't, they don't even.
Sok at finance.
And the thing is, if you just show them the price.
That's what you need to do.
They're like, yeah, just do that.
It's like, stop talking 20, stop talking to 5, 10, 15,000 and start talking.
For as low as 80, for as low as $90, for as low as $100, we could replace your garage door.
And guess what?
It brings this warranty and peace of mind, and you never have to worry about it.
So, yeah.
I like the idea.
So my buddy, Rob, that was just how out, he goes, you're going to spend the money anyway.
They're anyway dollars.
Right now, do you know how much air conditioning you're losing in the summer just out of this garage?
I believe you.
And if you add in the insulation?
20%.
Let's just say it's 30%.
Your bill's 300 bucks.
That's 100 bucks a month.
It's the same monthly payment of what we're going to save.
By the way, the garage door, seven years in a row, remodel magazine, the number one.
So you'd never say the cost.
You say this is the investment.
And then I show them right now we're building this health monitor.
It basically is like, it's not new.
It's, we go through all these questions and it says you've got two more years left on this door, the lifetime.
So it's like your tires on your car.
We've learned it from discount tire.
That's dope.
So we could band-aid this and make it work for the next couple years.
And then it shows you your Zillow price of your home today.
And then after the door.
Let me ask you a question.
And I don't want to miss this one.
Do you, you said something about repairs right now.
I don't want to miss it.
Oh, do you credit, this is what we did.
Yeah, no.
So I'll give you.
So here's the deal.
You get it up to $1,000.
Most of the time we'll say,
We give six months.
No, what I'll do is I'll say, because I want to build an urgency, I want to say today and today only, either we're going to brace it or replace it.
I'm working on your door, Mr. Ishmael.
Okay.
You want me to fix this thing 100%?
Or what if I took the money we just spent and I'm able to work with my product specialist and apply some of this towards a new door?
Well, what we do, and I agree with how you're doing it to build an urgency, what we do in the election.
And this is for the listeners too, because most of you guys aren't doing this.
And then you guys are wondering why there's no urgency behind your calls.
So I think we give a three month or a six month.
We used to give it.
But I'm sure they still do.
So, hey, as long as, you know, in the next six months, you call us back.
And I know you're about to invest $1,500 into this air conditioning.
And, you know, we, we.
Smart.
We always tell them, hey, if in the six, in the next six months, you change your mind and you say, hey, you know what, I'm going to, I've been thinking about it.
You know, those $1,500.
It's a seven-year-old unit.
I know I could still go on with this for three, four, five more years.
I thought about it.
Yeah.
Let's go ahead and do it.
Come back.
I want a new air conditioning so I could get those $1,500.
Always offer and don't go a year, don't go four years, don't go five years.
Don't do that shit.
It should be three to six months.
You can always call back and get your money back applied to a purchase of a replacement
system or in plumbing to a replacement of a re-pipe, a tankless water heater, water filtration,
electricians to your panels and all that.
You're replacing breakers inside those panels and you're charging the customer $400.
Hey, by the way, what really needs to happen here is this.
This electrical panel needs to be upgraded and you really need to, you know, get a permit and all that.
Yeah, I think if you had a great mailer that went out, let's call it.
Amen.
There you go.
The three and six months is a final offer.
Yep.
And we just got this new program through our finance company.
And you offer the best one.
If you could do a handwritten letter that they open up with the hand because that, well, you know, it gets open.
Yeah.
I can get those down for like a buck 50.
Amen.
So it's a handwritten card.
Same.
And it says we could take the $1,500 off of your repair.
And you could programmatically build this with an API.
So it's not a human being.
Yes, you can.
And it's an envelope, it shows up.
It's a personalized letter.
It's going to get read.
It's got a normal stamp on it.
It's got a return address on it.
It's got handwriting.
And it gets opened up and it says,
we got this program.
We could do this.
By the way, it's 268% return on investment.
I'd bet you 30% of the people would do it all day long.
But the problem is our contractors aren't, you know,
really good at direct mail or follow up
or putting these little implementations.
inside your operation like the buyback program or incentivizing the technicians to always bring that
up inside the operation like all those little things guys is what you guys are missing and what's
keeping you you know under the 10 million dollar um mark well let's talk about a couple more things here
so personal brand you're one of the biggest things i think with this AI world is just build
build your personal brand i've been going so hard and you but but it's so important it is i mean right now
PayPal came out and said the personal brand of the CEO is important of the company itself.
For talent recruitment, for clientele.
Everyone should be.
I'm working with a coach right now.
And you know how much Alex Formosi spent on his book launch?
No.
$8 million.
So I'm looking at how could I do that?
Maybe $10 million on my book launch.
All I want to do is get my money back.
I don't want to make money.
I don't want to make money in the book launch.
I want to grow authority.
Personal brand.
Of course.
I saw a statistic on also that said, your personal brand is 20 times more effective than your company brand.
Your personal brand is 20 times more effective than your company brand.
And look at just to give you guys why it, why it resonated with me.
My following on Nuveit page is like, you know, I don't know, like 5,000 people.
Am I following my on my Instagram and Facebook page is like over 250,000 people now?
Like, your personal brand is way more powerful.
And everybody in the home service industry, listen to me, because I've told this to you too.
I told this to you.
I told this to chat to AG, which he still hasn't gone his ass in there.
But you guys, for the next three years, it's all put a freaking camera in front of you guys
and just pretend it's not there because you will catch the most dopest moments.
Yeah, yeah.
If you can get it happening at work, I mean, that's what these guys are working on is like in your natural habitat.
That, bro.
And I think it's super important.
And I think certain PE companies probably are like, that's a waste.
You don't understand the deal flow, the connections, the learning that happens.
And this is where you connect the dots back to the company.
Every single video that I post, what am I rocking?
My new VE hat.
My new VOLO.
It's important to, I'll tell you this.
I just had a really good meeting with a guy who's got tons and tons of tons of
tons of followers, like 700,000.
And I said, do you ever get caught up in the vanity metrics?
and he says all the time.
Yep.
And Rob Williams would say,
Roy Williams would say,
hey, you want to just get as many people as possible
because they all have friends.
But I know this girl, she's making 200K a year.
She's got 900 followers.
And it's all sold to those 900 people.
Is I want the right followers that trust me
and know I'm giving them good information.
You know how I measure my personal branding,
affecting my business by the revenue spike when I'm putting the content up. So meaning if I didn't have,
if I had all these followers, you know, 250,000 plus followers, if I had all those followers and NUVE
wasn't doing shit and we weren't closing deals and we weren't making, you know, we weren't
increasing our MRR, we weren't selling, dude, we sold $14.2 million of fucking thermosets
in our first year. If that wasn't happening, then I would stop the personal brand. But because
I know how much it's affecting my actual baby, Nouveh. Yeah. That's what we're.
why I keep going so hard on it. That's why you always see me with my new VATs. That's why you
always see me talking about it because my the personal brand is feeding it. You said it be you said
it best and this is what this is one thing I'll never forget you told me. You you, you
marketed for A1 how'd you say say? Yeah so basically A1 built my reputation. That's what you said.
And then I'm rebuilt and now I'm doing it back to favors. Amen. And you know A1's a beast.
Bro. And that's why people are like man if A1's on this,
it's got to be good
like even like the way
at least the vehicles
or the finance companies
so now I'm able to negotiate
for them because of how quick big we've got
but they're like dude
you've been podcasting for a decade
you're writing books
you're talking on stages
you start doing that
and get comfortable with that
you become a secret weapon
I mean you know
if we put our name on something
that we believe it
it's gonna do well because
of course
I've never really did anybody wrong
like I just I talking about Mantle
I'm like
it's a great software
for the right person
but I don't
have secrets.
That's why when people come to my shop, I'm like, this is everything we're doing.
I think that's one of the people, that's one of them, your, your things that nobody really
gives you enough credit for time.
How many people have been through your shop?
When I was at next year, we had, you know, hundreds of contractors there.
Every Thursday, we would have people come in and just tour the shop around for a day.
And that's one thing you do for our industry.
And I think that industry is always going to pay you back for that.
They do.
And that's why, you know, guys like Aaron told me, try this, do this.
half the stuff he tells me
I don't do it because we look at it and say
we've already got software doing this
but every once in a while
it doesn't need to be here and it could be somebody and I'll go
anybody I just told you 15% higher conversion rate
$1,500 more per ticket
because somebody was willing to call me and say you've helped me out
enough I'm going to repay you the favor
you know what I think people do really wrong time
that they need to do a little bit better
they need to start paying attention
to those little golden nuggets
that people drop because look I'll give you one example when I was when I was growing my social
media following I was just doing 30 second 30 second you know 90s quick and then I had a meeting
with Tai Lopez and he's like no no no no you're doing it wrong you're doing it wrong you got to
fucking start putting you know two three minute content and I just saw the fucking
spiked up so yeah you got to listen to people yeah no that's why I got one of my let's work
with me is like dude he's like this is going to be fun and they're like you're doing it wrong
So I'm just listening to the playbook hiring the right people.
And then we're going to start treating the content like we do the business
where how many people watch this video?
And then you change it.
And you like, I must say, we haven't been running the social media like a business.
Yep.
And now we are.
Good.
So what's up with Nuvei?
Good, man.
So, you know, first year, $14.2 million ended it.
I'm super proud of our team.
How many demos are you guys doing a day?
Bro, on a slow day, we're doing, and look, it goes back to how sales oriented I am, okay, and how sales driven I am.
We're probably doing six to eight demos a day.
Right now, for the last 45 days, knock on wood, please keep letting it go through.
We're closing about two to three deals every single day.
But the one thing that we are is a fucking sales machine time.
Like we have some of these SaaS companies that I talk to and I'm like, okay, how many STRs you have, which, you know, are lead setters or how many AEs?
which are sales guys.
It's the same thing to contracting.
And I always ask them, it's like,
oh, yeah, I got two STRs and I got a couple of AEs.
It's like, no wonder you're stuck where you're at.
That you need to turn on the fucking gas, bro.
My goal is to have 50 SDRs.
Listen to me, 50 SDRs by Q2 of this year,
and I want to have 15 AEs running two appointments every single day.
If I get there, it took service time 14 years or 12 years to get there.
I'm going to do that shit on you.
So are they just doing outbound?
Outbounding, yeah.
outbounding trade shows.
So I'll try to bring around the trade shows soon,
just so people could put a face on it.
You know what's the one thing that's funny to me?
When contractors see us at a home show at a, you know,
at a freedom event or at a pantheon,
the first thing that they come up to me and they say,
Ishmael, your people will not stop calling me.
Yeah, you know why?
Because they're incentivized.
They're incentivized to call you.
Let me ask you something.
So a stat that I really would be interested in,
if I'm you running Nuvei,
is I'd be looking at a graph of purchases by a company.
And I expect those purchases to go up.
Because what I find the biggest mistake is people chasing,
people coming in the front door,
but don't realize the back door.
Because what if you could get every single company to say,
I'm going to start including these on every service call?
Or I'm going to start including these on all my membership.
So my goal, Tom,
and we're almost there.
In the next 90 days,
we're going to release our third version of version one,
which is knock on wood,
we're going to be able to sell thermosets
for $99,
which would freaking open up the floodgates to
because contractors.
That's what me and you talked about.
I said,
figure out of the way to give me away from free.
Ever since you told me that,
that $99 thing has stuck to me,
contractors will give a $99 thermostat
with their logo and all the technology behind it
to every single customer
if I could give it to $99.
You know what it's going to do to Honeywell and all those guys?
I told you, forget about the EBIT game
and play the ARR game.
I am.
Because that's such a better deal
that you've got the ability
to play both.
Now, if you're not playing
the eBay game in the beginning,
it would crush you because it costs a lot of money
because you've got to wait for the membership.
Exactly.
That's where you said...
So now that I picked up the memberships,
now I could decrease the...
Yeah, because now you've got this money coming in every year.
Of course.
So now it's kind of self-fulfilling.
The next six months for Nubei,
Tommy,
are probably going to be the most insane months.
My goal is to take Nubei IPO by the end of next year.
I've hired a badass CFO.
I have my...
My sues.
Where do you want to be an ARR?
By the end of this year, I'll probably be 24, 26 ARR.
This year, for IPO, what do you want to get?
Like, 50?
48 to 50.
40.
40 to 50, mill of ARR.
And I, what do you think it's worth multiple-wise?
Have you talked to anybody?
At 48 to $50 million of ARR, you're probably close to 800, 750.
Because we also pick up on the thermostat, Tom.
So you're like 20x, you think?
Probably lower than that, but we also make a ton of money on the thermostat, too.
So we would like I talked to Tom Howard and he's the one that told me this like we're running a 39% gross profit right now with our thermostat
Sophia which is our version two with voice and monitoring and it's just a sleek round beautiful thermostat
We're gonna sell it for 289 as a premium thermostat and it's gonna pick up about 11 points of 10 to 11 points of gross profit my CF already
calculated it so we're probably gonna be running about 50% gross profit on our thermosets
When you run a 99 dollar is this gonna blow my god bro because look I'm covering both bases
I have a $99 thermostat.
I have a $199 thermostat.
And then I have a $289 thermostat.
One is meant to give away.
The other ones for memberships and the other ones for new installs.
Those are the three tiers I'm trying to give.
Once we open up the floodgates to that, bro, we have, let me tell you how exciting our version to us.
We have almost $500,000 of pre-orders paid for already of people waiting for that thermostat.
$500,000, $520,000 of pre-order thermostats of, of,
of people waiting for that thermostat.
Here's something I think about.
What if,
what if you did mailers and you said,
no,
you did them for you.
Yeah, for Nouveh.
And you sell,
for $99 will come to do with tune up.
And then for every one of those,
you said if you sell,
if you,
I'm just thinking it would cost you money.
Let's say it cost you $50.
And you just say,
hey,
all I'm asking for,
I got you a tune up.
I got you a tune up.
Okay.
I got you a tune up.
And the thermos.
Yep, you got to put it.
That's the lead.
It's $99,000 including the thermostat.
But now you're in the door.
You would not.
And all you got to do is you got to pay me $100 because I just, like, you do all the marketing.
Is that what you could have a bet?
But then you're actually in control of your own destiny.
Of course.
Right now we're not.
We're waiting for them to sell them.
Yeah.
So now you say, I'm going to give you these leads.
You got to sell them.
Hey, for, you know what would be better?
If for X amount of thermostats, I'm going to dump X amount of money into your marketing budget
and direct mail for free thermosts or for, you know, free tuneups or whatever.
If you sell 100 thermostats, we'll dump whatever, $5,000.
Or if you...
But what if you could generate 5,000 leads per market?
Oh, my God, bro.
That's 5,000 in the thermostats.
These contractors would be loyal to our brand.
Oh, yeah.
Because this is what I've told you since the beginning.
We're not a thermostat company.
But nobody's offering that.
No.
99 bucks with a new thermostat that I can control from my phone.
So if you drew up the right ad, you can even do social media ads.
And if you can generate...
If you can figure out that it costs you 50 bucks, but you're getting...
I didn't have to look.
I mean, your CFO could figure out how this could scale,
because obviously the more homes you're in.
Yep.
How many are you guys in right now?
34,000 active units.
We deployed about 78,000 units already, our first year.
We have a company called Top Line here in Air Conditioning, Pennsylvania.
Good guys, yeah.
And really, really good fucking all social media ads.
They were running tune-up, I mean, they were running free estimate ads,
and they were getting the regular conversion 15, 20% on social media.
and then they started putting a free thermostat on their ads
and it spiked like their conversion like 15, 20%.
Well, it's a badass thermostat,
especially if you could say it's a smart thermostat.
It's a smart thermostat.
So it's going to lower, it's not going to be,
like if you could prove that it saves a few hundred bucks a year.
This is the one proud statistic that I'm most proud of Nouveh
and the technology that we have behind.
We are generating between 6,800 to 7,000 logo clicks a month
for our contractors.
Meaning, listen to me,
meaning those people
would have been searching
for you online.
Yeah, so there clicks to book?
Yes.
6,800 to 7,000
on these 34,000 units
that are active right now.
So we could already,
we could already predict
what happens at 340 at 3 million.
That's the whole thing that Nube does.
Newbe.
We keep people away from Google.
We keep people away from Google and online.
You book the call through the,
yep, just through the app.
Through the app and the thermostat.
and the thermostat.
API, we just finalized our deal with service tighten.
They're going to be able to dispatch a technician from the thermostat and that, meaning,
hey, Sophia, my water heater's not working.
Can you send me a technician?
It'll dispatch a technician from your voice all the way to your dispatch board without talking to a CSR.
Hey, Sophia, can you turn on my AC to 72 degrees?
Hey, Sophia, my AC doesn't seem to cool off.
Can you send a technician?
And they will give you the slots of, hey, today at 1 p.m., tomorrow at 3 p.m.
and you click confirmed dispatches the technician without ever talking to a technician.
That is one technology that I'm super proud.
You get that fucker in a million houses.
Oh, it's done. It's game over.
After five, I talked to our, he's like, look, Ishmael, between 500 to a thousand,
500,000 to a million units once you're at that, you have, yeah, it's, bro, you're, you
I like the 99 dollars and I like starting to think about lead jet.
Yes.
I'll get on lead gen, but the 99 dollars are already implemented.
We'll have three different tiers, one at 99, one at one at one.
99 and one at 289.
Well, especially if you could get the Nileys in the shoulder season.
Bro, imagine if we could give thermostats off for free later on Tom.
Once we cure the cash flow and once we, you know, we have enough subscriptions coming in where we're just like, hey, as long as you sign up for our membership, here's your thermostats.
Install them everywhere.
Yeah, no.
If you get them for free, that's what I've always talked to.
Yeah.
Now you're like a mass mass.
It's game over.
It's game over.
You know how many contractors would be like, fuck these nests and Honeywell and Echo viz.
Let me take them off the wall and put my logo in there.
Of course.
And it doesn't cost you anything.
That's the main thing.
I mean, if you keep up with that kind of production?
Oh, not right now.
Not right now.
But by the time I read.
100,000 a week.
Bro, more.
I was burning $812,000 last year a month.
Yeah.
That's the thing is that that's when you go to the right partner.
Yes.
And say I just need a couple hundred million because we're going to give these out for free.
That.
So you're going to come down.
Once I have the right partner.
once I have the right partner, Tom, it becomes that's where the IPO comes into place.
So I'm excited, man.
Honestly, I'm excited about Nuva.
I'm excited.
Thank you for partnering up with this.
I don't think people know that you helped tremendously.
I was the first guy that I was like, you guys, this will work.
I mean, I love Travis.
I love Tom Howard, but I know you're just going to make the phone calls.
Oh, bro.
I'm not.
I'm not.
You know, you did.
You found the right CTO and the right CFO.
With those hires, that's what's going to make this thing.
Sprint. Yep. Yep.
How do people get a hold of you, Ishmael?
Look, I have a Facebook group called the NCU Nuveh Contractor University where we just put content
all day long, free content. My Instagram is Ishma Valdez CEO. My Facebook's Ishma Valdez CEO.
I'm always, you know, I'm just like you, I'm always giving content for free.
Yeah.
How to pay people. How to, you know, lead generate, how to bonus people, how to treat, how to, you know, construct the perfect.
customer experience like we are we are so detailed in our in our content that we put on
NCU that every single contractor you go on our new at home.com you build a profile and
then you get access to hundreds of videos that we've done I record everything Tom
everything if it's gonna be a 30 minute Zoom meeting about financial the Ellen Roar put it on
NCU if it's gonna be a we just did one with Aura and we talked about managers and
recruitment and all that everything that I do I record and I put on NCU and we
label it. There's forms. There's forms that nobody, dude, we have forms to write up people. We have,
we have our employee handbook on NCU where people could just download it, take out the next chain
logo, and put their logo and use it. It's California compliant, meaning you're fucking
compliant in the world. Yeah. We have, uh, we have customer satisfaction sheets. We, we, we have
everything on NCU. I want to build the first digital, uh, university for contractors where they could
actually get educated because I know, I know, I know how bad it feels and I know how, you know, how bad it is
to run an unprofitable business.
I think the biggest problem with most companies is they're the bottleneck.
They don't have the talent and they don't have the data.
All day long.
All day long.
And, you know, they know just enough about the trade, but they don't know anything about
their great operators, Tom.
Most of them are mediocre.
Sorry, they're okay operators.
They're missing the most important thing, which is the marketing and sales, man.
Marketing and sales is where the money's at.
Marketing sales is where the gold is at.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, dude.
You drive the right leads.
but by the way, sales come from marketing to the right people.
People always ask me, they're like, how do you get clients pay that?
Like, I'm very careful on who I market to.
And I'm not trying to be discount city.
You know, I don't want to attract those type of clients.
Amen.
Close us out, brother.
Any final thoughts?
Bro, thank you for always having me on, Tom.
We have a badass group of people, me, between me, UAG, Travis, Tom,
you know, what we call ourselves LSD.
Like, I believe we are probably one of the most impactful people inside our industry.
and the best part about it all is that we're just willing to give it all for free to our contractors.
That's good, man, because I think Hoffman will do a deal here in the next year and a half.
Peterman.
Peterman's doing a deal, AG, so at that point, we've got like seven us that have all done deals.
Yep.
So what happens after that?
That's going to be the interesting one.
We're going to start doing more deals together, but like it's billions and billions of dollars just between that small group.
I know.
I know.
So I love working with you, brother.
I want to do a lot more with you in the future.
But we'll go out here and.
and enjoy the party.
All right, let's go.
Thanks, brother.
I appreciate it.
Hey there, thanks for tuning
into the podcast today.
Before I let you go,
I want to let everybody know
that Elevate is out and ready to buy.
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in over 20 states.
The insights in this book are powerful
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It's a real game changer for anyone looking
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