The Home Service Expert Podcast - Secrets to Service Champions’ $500M Success with Leland Smith

Episode Date: August 27, 2024

Leland Smith is the Founder of Service Champions Heating & Air Conditioning, an industry leader that continues to provide homeowners in Southern California with services beyond expectations. In this ...episode, we talked about recruitment practices, training & development, happy money promises...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 We were going to be the most expensive, but we were going to pay our people better than anyone else. And the quality of work had to be there. We couldn't cut corners. If anything, we would overdo it to do extremely quality work. And customers never complained. And, you know, they saw the quality. And, you know, there's Bentleys and Mercedes and there's Hondas out there. And too many of the people in our market that I see are half our price, but they do half the quality. They don't do anything that we do.
Starting point is 00:00:32 And that's the difference. We insist that the quality was there, even in the tune-ups. Our tune-ups were at least an hour and a half, and pulling blower motors, pulling heat exchangers, all of that, the quality was there. And how we taught our people to get the customer involved to see the quality so they would buy into that fact that we're not cutting corners, we're not just collecting money.
Starting point is 00:00:55 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, the 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 asked the team to take notes for you. Just text NOTES to 888-526-1299. That's 888-526-1299. And you'll receive a link to download the notes from today's episode.
Starting point is 00:01:46 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 elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast to get your copy. Now let's go back into the interview. All right, guys, welcome back to the home service expert. I've got the man, the legend himself, Leland Smith. He is based in California, Southern California. He's the founder and chairman of the board at Service Champions, Plumbing, Heating, and Air Conditioning. The man is a legend. It's a pleasure to have you on the podcast, Leland. Great to be here, dude. So where do you want to start? I mean, what does life look like for you today? Tell us a little
Starting point is 00:02:30 bit about the journey of where you're at and what you're looking forward to. Well, it's been a lot of fun getting here. And in my third sale, I sold in 19 to an equity group, and 18 months later, sold again and it was bought by the current Odyssey Investments, great group. And I'm currently the chairman of the board, but I was the CEO for about a year or so. Then Frank DiMarco came to CEO and they put me in the chairman of the board position. So it's a good group. I think we've got a phenomenal operating team that's unbelievable. We're performing well. And it's nice to be. I think we've got a phenomenal operating team that's unbelievable. We're performing well.
Starting point is 00:03:07 And it's nice to be around people like that. So successful people is a good thing. Yeah. Now, I know Frank well. I keep bumping into him everywhere I go. And he's very energetic about the business. And unlike the founders, they still got to go do a lot of work for them to get what they want. Yep.
Starting point is 00:03:28 Because you already had two turns. Very lucky that I did. So Southern California, I know they're doing what's called, is it called seed clouding? I just heard stories that the season isn't as long there and it's a real, it's a hard place to operate. In particular, HVAC plumbing, lots of competition, lots of laws that make it harder to actually be a good owner. What is your take on it? Not true. Not for us. I think you've heard, I've always had a group of people, four or five owners that were always larger than me. And Kevin Comerford up north, he I've always had a group of people, four or five owners that were always larger than
Starting point is 00:04:05 me. And Kevin Comerford up north, he and I always had a group. And if I was 10 million, we were hanging out with 30, 40, and $50 million. And when I closed the first time in 19, we were 50 million, but our group was 80, 90, 100, and 120. And they were mainly back east, and they always would say, if we don't have weather, we're not making any money. We only make money four months out of the year. And they couldn't understand why Kevin and I were making money every month out of the year. And we're in California.
Starting point is 00:04:37 There's no weather. I mean, 80 degrees out here, they're dying, and back east, 80 degrees is springtime. And it was all an attitude that we had that we were a service repair company but we called ourselves a maintenance company because clubs were the most important thing so when september came and the weather went away for us here we were still busy our guys would run three calls a day when we were slow and they'd run three maybe four when we were busy
Starting point is 00:05:12 but we were always constantly busy and we were never slow and so whether i think kevin has a saying that whether it's whether you do it right whether you treat your customer right whether you do quality work that's the weather the weather for us here in California made no difference to us and they just couldn't get it back East that 12 months earlier we made money every single month so it's really an attitude how you approach that what do you like to make if I remember right it was somewhere in the line of 21 or 22 percent yeah when we closed in 19, it was 25%. I'll just tell you a quick story about Horizon, which is part of a group of great guys. Mark Aiken and Dave Geiger were a huge part of my success being with them. And we were closed. We were 50, and they were 100, 120. And they just had sold before I did, maybe a month or so.
Starting point is 00:06:07 But they were good guys. And I even forgot your question now. Yeah. So 25%, you said. Oh, 25%. I'm sorry. I was talking about them. There was a meeting that we had, and we're 50, and they're 120. And Frank DiMarco tells me the story that Dave put it on hold and goes, how in the hell can Leland be in half our revenues making the same money we are at 120 and he's at 50? And it was just the philosophy that Jim April's taught me in 1992. And we really applied it strongly in 2000. We started Service Champions was we were going to be the most expensive, but we were going to pay our people better than anyone else. And the quality of work had to be there. We couldn't cut corners. If anything, we would overdo it to do extremely quality work. And customers
Starting point is 00:06:58 never complained. And they saw the quality. And there's Bentleys and Mercedes and there's Hondas out there. And too many of the people in our market that I see are half our price, but they do half the quality. They don't do anything that we do. And that's the difference. We insist that the quality was there, even in the tune-ups. Our tune-ups were at least an hour and a half. And, you know, pulling blower motors, pulling heat exchangers, all of that, the quality was there. And how we taught our people to get the customer involved to see the quality so they would buy into that fact that we're not cutting corners.
Starting point is 00:07:36 We're not just collecting money. And they'd get involved in the club membership. And we sold like 25,000 club members. And I always tell people, every club you sell is two tune-ups you don't have to market for and our marketing expense for a tune-up is like 242 dollars so that's over 500 when you sell but we don't have to market and currently then and now our marketing expense is about five percent and we're well over 110 million now. Your marketing as a percentage of revenue is 5%? 5%, maybe 5.1.
Starting point is 00:08:11 That's incredible. I love it. What do you feel about loyalty these days? Because I still have the people I started the business with that still work alongside of me for the most part. But I feel like HVAC and plumbing, it's like a lot of guys go to the next bidder. Like, whoever's going to pay me more this summer, you know? Well, that's the key thing. Again, Jim Abrams taught me that we adhere to it totally when I was in operations. We pay better than anyone because we charge more.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Give you an example. The last two years, I've had two guys, sales guys, make $1 million in commissions. They didn't sell a million. They earned $1 million and they were selling close to $7 million. They're awesome. The other guys below them are in the $700,000, $800,000. They're awesome. The other guys below them are in the seven, eight hundred thousand. They're making really good money because one of the key things we do, again, we learn this from Horizon, Dave and Mark. You got to ask for it. So if you're out just for a piece of equipment that you're replacing a furnace or condenser, we insisted that every single time the first time we got it from Dave, offer a water heater because we do plumbing. We sold 47 water heaters the first month only because they offered it. And our price was almost twice what our competitors were, but we did a good job.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Then we got to a point now that we're offering water heaters. You have to offer ducts, replacing ducts, insulation, and they're even offering water softeners now. But you've got to offer it on every call and let the customer tell you, no, we don't need that now. Because they're never going to tell you, hey, I want to change my ducts for me or put insulation in for me. They're not going to do that, but you've got to offer it. And if anything you ever want in life, you've got to ask for it. And if you don't ask yeah they're not going to give it to you especially when it comes to money and that's one of the greatest things horizon taught us that we've glided across the board you got to offer it and let them say no i don't want that and one out of four the water heaters we sold 47 unbelievable and then the ducks
Starting point is 00:10:23 is the same thing we're about 30 40 ducks on every job when we walk out and they're not looking for ducks but we're bringing it up to them we require the check to take seven pictures in the attic to bring down to show the customer we've even got a video on youtube that shows you properly how we're going to seal your ducts. And I'm told when they see the video, that sells them on it. So just to see what we're going to really be doing. Hope that helps. No, I'm taking scrupulous notes here. When you start adding departments, when you first started out, I'm sure there was either HVAC or plumbing or electric that was like the biggest amount of money. How do you get all
Starting point is 00:11:07 these new departments? Because I've seen you do it. I've seen Dave do it. I've seen Paul Kelly do it, where you just offer more to your clients. And for me, I've always thought, I've seen you guys do it, but it's not as easy as just adding a bunch of services. Because you still got to get the supplier agreements in place. You still got to get the supplier agreements in place. You still got to get the technicians trained up. You still got to be able to turn over a lead that other department. What are some of the things not to do when adding departments? Well, I just say, I don't know what not to do, but I can tell you what to do.
Starting point is 00:11:40 Tell me what to do. There to do. When we started with heating and air conditioning, still are strictly residential, no commercial, no canoe construction. I like to sell it on Monday, install it on Tuesday. Tuesday night, we collect. And Wednesday, I see a job cost report. And I wanted to make sure that it was sold right and just understanding. But when we started, we were only doing day one.
Starting point is 00:12:04 We did direct mail, still do. And we were doing tune-ups. And from tune-ups, we taught the guys how to turn duct leads, equipment leads, insulation leads. And there's a lot of training because we train every single day. And eventually later on, we did Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, but we trained all the time and still do. I think that's a critical part. You get your techs in the room, if it's clubs, and we got guys that were selling 60% and 70% of their jobs clubs. We'd have them talk to the other techs.
Starting point is 00:12:37 So it's called teaching techs. I might be in there monitoring it, but I wouldn't be teaching them anything. But I'd find out who didn't sell yesterday and why. And Jim, you sold 70%. Tell him what you would do. So that would be the club side. But the departments you're talking about, I think the first department was ducks. And that's, I mean, when I was in college, I was putting and selling ducks. My father had a company and I knew how easy it was because I was a skinny guy in the attic. All I was doing was blowing. My brother was throwing it in the box. So not a lot of talent. So you can teach somebody in a week or two. And right now, they're making like 100,000 just
Starting point is 00:13:17 insulation, blowing it in, Texar. But it's not that hard. It's expensive to buy the truck. So what we did first year, when we hit a million in revenues, up to a million, we subbed it out. And the company we subbed it out to was half our prices. So we made 50% by subbing it out. But once we hit a million, we bought the truck and it's a 40, $45 with a generator on it and then we also added what we call a whole house attic removal we go in and suck all the insulation out seal all the joints for the rodents put the insulation back in and do radiant barrier but an 18 000 job not a lot of skill to teach these guys we're installers there's a lot of skill and techs are a lot of skill but we did it ourselves and brought it in and i think when i saw we had seven trucks
Starting point is 00:14:09 or so doing installation they could do a couple jobs a day doc's the same thing it's not a lot of talent you got to do it but you got to be in the attic all day and in our training room we have a built-in attic that's about eight feet off the floor. And we put them in there their second week of training at about 120 degrees for two hours to make sure they know this is your job. You're going to be in the attic all day. It's going to be hot. And we'll lose a couple guys once that happens. But to develop that department, it's a matter of getting your pricing. We were at eight run would be about eighty five hundred dollars about a
Starting point is 00:14:45 thousand dollars a run and we wanted to be the margin around seventy percent gross margin and we paid the tech who turned the lead five he would i overdid our sales people to get them excited about installation paid them twenty percent and those jobs were eight to ten thousand up to eighteen thousand that they can make good money on. But again, that part was fairly easy. A basic truck, buy the ducts. You just got to go out there and have an installer teach them how to seal it. In fact, if you look on YouTube, about 17 down now, there's a YouTube has Eric Asensio showing you how we would install the ducts and how we would sell it. And once they show that, I think I said earlier,
Starting point is 00:15:27 once they show that to a customer, they were really bought into the quality that they're going to be buying. And so I hope that helps a little bit. How important is it to use financing? How much do you think that that made a difference in making that, whether it was a hot water heater or the ducts? How much of the business was built off of, we call it promotions, but financing? Financing, to me, is absolutely huge.
Starting point is 00:15:54 We were running about 70% of every job financed. And the theory is, even if the guys got money, they don't want to write a $40,000 check, but they might buy into a $263 monthly payment. And as we acquired companies, we would see companies that had no financing or 10 or 15%, but as we taught them, sell the price, offer everything. Don't just do a $15,000 air conditioning, offer a $40,000 system that has ducts and insulation and water heaters offer everything. Don't just do a $15,000 air conditioning. Offer a $40,000 system
Starting point is 00:16:26 that has ducts and insulation and water heaters, everything. But don't say 40 first. Talk about the payment. And we've restricted our guys to payments that you couldn't use any financing, cost more than 5%. We didn't want the 20%, the 36%, all the crazy stuff. But you can sell by the payment. Then you can tell them the price. And we found out every company we did that with sold more, the more they use financing, the more customers will let go and sign up instead of letting go of all their cash. Yeah, I've noticed that too. I want to go back to training a little bit. You decided to train
Starting point is 00:17:05 every day, then you went to four days a week. Did any of your operations team or any of the management say, we're too busy? We've got too many leads coming in? There's a fine line there, and I 100% agree. Train, train when you're done, retain. Train, train, train. Keep training. But how do you work that out with capacity planning? Well, when I was in operations, typically the training was between seven and eight o'clock in the morning. And it'd be very specific. It may be maintenance techs about clubs. It may be about service techs about turning leads, but we did training every day. And my feeling is, if you don't do train and you're focused on just running
Starting point is 00:17:45 the leads, you're not going to make any revenues. You want to teach these guys when they run those leads, how to generate revenue, how to generate leads, how to sell products. But if you're not focused on that, you just want to run the lead. You're not making money. So you've got to make them really good. I would say like a doctor, you know, not train a doctor who's going to operate on your brain because you just, he's got two more operations that day. You want to make sure they're trained to do it right. And the benefit of the company is you've got to keep your installers busy. You got to keep your, you know, all your crews busy and you owe it to them. So you need to learn that. And I have a saying that I always told the techs that I don't make a dime
Starting point is 00:18:24 unless you make a dollar. My life is about you making that I always told the text that I don't make a dime unless you make a dollar my life is about you making that dollar so the training was getting them to make more and more dollars and if we didn't do the training for these two guys that made a million dollars last year they wouldn't make it a million dollars they might have made a half a million or whatever but if they made a million imagine how much money we made off of it because we trained them properly. And then back to the clubs, that was the most important. If anybody was under 50% of clubs, they were in that day training how to get better at it. Under 50%. So you sell a club and you, did you, what was the secret?
Starting point is 00:18:59 Because you were involved in the training, at least observing it. Right. Some of the guys call it a protection plan. Some of it, you know, you're building a fence around the client. What do you think is the key to selling every single client a club? The key is, in my opinion, is we market primarily for tune-ups when it's not hot or cold. So when the weather's gone, we're flooding direct direct mail tune-ups the tune-up has to be done correctly they've got the customers got to buy into what you're doing and they've got to see
Starting point is 00:19:31 it so when we train this 14 weeks we train them how to get the customer out to see what you're doing share with them what you're doing and they see that and most of the time customer goes nobody's ever done that before so they see the value of it and they see you. And most of the time, the customer goes, nobody's ever done that before. So they see the value of it. And they see, you know, we educate them about the electric company, the manufacturers. All we require is this twice a year. All it does is save you money. And since you're a maintenance customer, in the middle of the summer, if it goes out, you might have to wait two weeks for another company.
Starting point is 00:20:04 We're going to be there the same day for you. And you sell that product the entire time from where you park your truck, where you read them at the door, you're building value in everything you have. And you want to sell that club. And even the call taker, when they take the call, one of the questions they ask, who's your normal maintenance company? They always go, I don't have one. You don't? Oh man, that's the best thing. We are the best maintenance company out there. Make sure you ask Bob about that when he arrives about our maintenance program. Then we dispatch them to it. It's the same thing. Mrs. Johnson, John's on his way. Oh, by the way, I noticed you don't have a maintenance company. Be sure to talk to John about the
Starting point is 00:20:43 maintenance program. And you'll find half of them will ask them about the maintenance company before they even get to a maintenance program before they even get to it. So you're always talking maintenance, maintenance. And I would tell you my last year in 1965, 65% of our revenues of the 50 million came from the clubs, the maintenance customers. Those were every day. We never sent a guy home early for any reason. They always had work. Do you feel like over 10 years, whenever anybody talks about a club or a membership, they say, you got to make sure you're asking the customer about equipment age over 10 years, you're dispatching to better guys to do better turnovers.
Starting point is 00:21:24 Yeah. We always ask the 10 years older are your sales guys. We call them either a selling tech or a turning tech that's going to turn the lead to a salesperson or a salesperson. But the one through nine, we're doing millions off ducts and insulation off guys right out of the class. There's so much there that people don't even talk about. Our competitors don't do insulation or ducts, but they go out and learn how to do that. We pay them 5%, like a employee with Christian Corrin, who's 21 years old, went through the class. In the first nine
Starting point is 00:21:56 months, he made $100,000 by turning leads. 21 living at home. Next year, he made $130,000. Next year, he made $150 made 150 and bought a house bigger than his parents' house. Now he's married with the baby and he's making a lot of money knowing nothing coming in. Only listening to what we're telling him to do and how to go in there and do the tune up right, communicate right, be well-groomed. We're very strict about this right here you couldn't work for me no beards in the field no tattoos clean uniform always put an extra uniform in the truck so their shirt got dirty you changed it shirt tails have to be in just really clean i think i mentioned also you know these guys in training when we do the interview i'm the last one and i would i've got
Starting point is 00:22:44 two gorgeous daughters if one of my daughters was in the house alone with this guy my first thought was what would she think would my wife buy from this guy and i just really in the training is all about hiring personality you cannot teach personality you can teach the technical but a guy's got to have a great personality to walk into a home talk communicate, communicate, and get this customer to understand what they're doing and ask for the order. You don't get them all, but if you don't do all the good stuff before you ask for the order, you're always going to get no. Did you find a little honey hole as far as where to recruit from? Like people say discount tire, sometimes it's restaurants and to get the bartender or bus boy.
Starting point is 00:23:27 Is there any spot that you're like, this was the spot to go to find great people to come work for service? You've done it nearly now, almost 20 years. I know 15 years before I sold, we had a smaller class, maybe six. We got up to 20, maybe 10 years ago, but we'd get 20 and we'd start the class, but every single week we recruited. We were looking for new techs. Even if the class just started, the next one's not going to start for 14 weeks. We would have 25 to 75 people come in.
Starting point is 00:23:58 And I did the first ones at the end of it. I wasn't doing them, but the whole thing was to get these guys in there and women and sell them on the company. We sold them how great Service Champions was, how well we pay, stories about guys. Then we asked each person in the room, stand up and give me two or three minutes about yourself. Explain to us what you're doing and what you're looking for. And we'd have four managers in the back. And that was the interview, your first interview when they stood up up then we'd make a note of who we're going to keep there that day an interview and it was just a group thought about what
Starting point is 00:24:34 would this guy's personality work and again if we had 20 in a class like I said we'd lose to the first week when they were all played to in the attic we probably doesn't know the other two but out of 20 we keep 10 every 14 weeks and We'd lose two the first week when they role played two in the attic. We probably lost another two. But out of 20, we'd keep 10 every 14 weeks. And that's where we built our company because we always had techs. We always were training them to get better. And that's what made the profit there. That's what made the clubs 25,000, almost 50,000 tune-ups, already ready for the next 12 months for these guys.
Starting point is 00:25:03 So that's why we always had work for them. so the training to me was nobody was doing it when we started it but I got tired of text working for other companies we're not disciplined they weren't structured they they couldn't understand our pricing they didn't understand how to be clean shave and how to talk I just got fed up with us that we can train this and i got one of our good sales guys became our main ray gonzalez our main trainer and we've got two of them now for all of us all of our locations but we're training trying to train all of our techs ourselves we do get texts that come in every once in a while that are good, but most of them, of the 20 some salespeople we have, I think 17
Starting point is 00:25:45 came in as maintenance techs, service techs, selling techs for service and into comfort advisors. How do you, is there any signs, and this is going to sound bad, but do you look for somebody as far as like, are they in shape? And, you know, obviously eye contact, they tell a good story, they smile. Those are like givens. But what about just the way they, you know, if they're overweight? Yeah, we've not had much nutty failure. I've got Daniel Andrade was one of our great salespeople and he was a little heavyset. But he got up in the attics and the restaurant and we
Starting point is 00:26:25 told him, you're going to have to do this. And that's part of it. And we never had any real challenges with it as long as we were upfront with them. And then we trust but verify, trust but verify a lot of things that they did get in the attic where they had to take pictures and they had to show us that you were there. And he was a good sales guy. He worked well he's the only one i can think of right now i'm sure we had several other ones but i have no recall of that being a challenge at all do you guys send back somebody to check the workout often that's really what the service managers need to do randomly we always want them to think we're doing every call but but we'd like to send them out. As soon as the guy leaves, five minutes, knock on the door. Don't announce yourself,
Starting point is 00:27:09 but knock on the door. Say, I'm here just to check the work that he did. Won't take me five minutes. And one guy, I won't say his name. I love the guy. It was great. We did that and found out he didn't even change the filter on a tune-up. And that's obviously the first thing you do. So we called him and said, let's go back and look at a couple more filters. And he looked at the out he didn't even change the filter on a tune-up and that's obviously the first thing you do so we called you once let's go back and look at a couple more filters and he looked at me and looked at the manager and said no i i should quit because you're going to find i haven't been doing the tune-up so he'd go to the house park in his car for an hour and a half and come back and close it out so you've got to check again reagan's great saying is trust with verify you've got to check. Again, Reagan's great saying is trust with verify. You've got to have people verifying your installs.
Starting point is 00:27:47 You've got to verify your tune-ups, your service, and happy calls, just calling the customer. I noticed he was out there today and you didn't join the club or you didn't invest in the UV light. There's a reason you didn't do that. And you'll pick up sales on your happy calls. And you also find out about guys not doing their work. I think any company, if you don't think somebody is stealing from you, you're fools. I guarantee there's people stealing from our company today. We just haven't caught them. We haven't figured
Starting point is 00:28:17 it out yet. Sometimes it's small. Sometimes it's big. You never know, but it's happening, but you always got to be looking for it. Tell me a little bit about happy money promise that allows customers to pay what they think is fair if they're unhappy. Well, from the beginning, my philosophy has been treat your employees like family. Treat your customers like family. And I remember, again, I was the only one in the office when I started in March of 2000. phone call man called in said I've been getting your letters for years it sounds too good to be true and I talked to him I said I'll tell you what and the man the tickets out there if you don't like what he's doing just tell him Leland said you don't have to pay and that's been kind of the philosophy is if they're unhappy, I want the call center person, make that customer happy on that call, meaning treat them like family.
Starting point is 00:29:12 If that was your mother calling in or your father, how would you want them treated right now by a call center agent? And you do that. I don't care what it is. Give it away for free. give them a discount, but treat them like family. Now, if you made a bad decision, you'll never get in trouble. I might teach you how to make a better decision, but you got to treat them like family. And that's where the happy money promise came, that they knew if they didn't do it and that customer wanted to talk to the owner, Leland, 100% of the time I'm talking to them, it's going to be free. And I would thank them for letting me know what our tech did wrong. We'll make sure it never happens to another customer. And then when I hang up, I would go down the hall and find out who did this.
Starting point is 00:29:56 What did they do? Bring them in, teach them not to do it again and teach everybody else not to do this because customers never call into a plane just for the heck of it. Somebody in your company did something wrong and you need to fix it. But the happy money promise was simple. If you're not happy, we can't make you happy. You don't pay. And we would give away repairs at no charge. But out of 100 calls, it happened once or twice, even on equipment, $40,000 systems where competitors are 20, but cutting corners, one out of two might call and we'll discount it. I mean, I've had calls with customers that say, just, I tell you what, pay me what you think is fair and I'll take it because 98 of those 100 will pay our price.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And it's a great reputation knowing that you can say on the phone, especially if they're about ready to hang up, but call center's on the call. And they say, well, I'm going to call around for a few minutes. We try to teach the call center people to say, you know what, Mrs. Johnson, I know there's other people out there, but we are by far the best maintenance and repair company. I'll tell you what you do. If you book it today, and for some reason you don't like what it is, just don't pay. Just tell them, I said it's free. 50% will book it right then. And they don't get it for free. They're impressed with what we do. But if you were the cheap guy and you're cutting corners, you'd have a major, major problem with the guarantees that we have. Because I just
Starting point is 00:31:22 guarantee you, I wouldn't want anybody to get any work that I wouldn't want from my own family or anything else from these guys. And I want everybody to be the same. I want them to be happy. I want them to treat customers fair. And that's what we're about. When I came and visited you,
Starting point is 00:31:39 it's probably been three or four years. You can come back anytime, dude. I will. I'm going to come back. Hey guys, I hope you're enjoying today's podcast. A quick reminder, the Freedom event is happening on September 25th to the 27th.
Starting point is 00:31:54 In today's stuff economy with PE firms invading, lead costs spiking, and customers cutting back, it's time to protect your bottom line and your future. At Freedom, you're going to learn how to bulletproof your business from home service legends like Paul Reed,
Starting point is 00:32:08 owner of Northwest Roofing, a $30 million a year business. Aaron Gaynor, the owner of Eco Plumbers, a $75 million business. Ken Goodrich, the chairman of Gettle, a $250 million business. And Leland Smith, founder of Service Champions, a $500 million business. Listen, you can keep doing what you're doing and hope for the best, or you can arm yourself with the proven strategies I've used at A1 Garage Door Service. Get your tickets at freedomevent.com. That's freedomevent.com. Now let's get back to this episode. You had two guys back to back, about 20 feet apart, and that was your rehash team and i think one of them had told me i'm allowed to lower the price 40 to try to earn the business i don't remember
Starting point is 00:32:54 the exact numbers but i remember thinking to myself obviously a zero hurts more than a discount but how did you do the math obviously it's it's just a financial calculation. You sit down with a CFO and say, how do we recoup some of this business? We're going to gross profit or whatnot. But explain to me the methodology behind that. The key thing is sometimes salespeople don't always push hard enough. So if we knew within seven days that they did not have a scheduled call or a scheduled visit, rehash would make that call but they also would make sure they did go back on their visit or they did go back on the phone call or they make the call and their whole goal is to find out mrs johnson what was the reason you
Starting point is 00:33:39 decided not to go with this today and it might be, it might be something else. But if it's price, because we would talk to them, let me get Bob back out again. And let's see what we can do about getting to the price. Or if they wanted to talk about it, they would try to sell it on the phone and send the guy, the salesperson back out to sell it. My philosophy about the 40% was, if we had 30 crews, and we got four crews not working tomorrow, I would sell it at cost to keep that family's crew busy instead of me trying to make money and that family's going hungry. So they knew they could do anything they could to get that sale if that kept that family, that install crew working the next day. It wasn't something they would do all the time, but a lot of times they get it full price by answering some questions or just get the guy back
Starting point is 00:34:29 out for another drop or two. But the key thing, if you're not making the phone calls, you're not learning what's going on and you can pick up sales that you would never have before. Oh my God, I got so many freaking notes. And I'm not charging anything. Yeah. I know, that's impressive. There's just certain things where I hear this all the time. You train, train, train, get your rehash team,
Starting point is 00:34:54 you got your money back guarantee, or if you're not happy, guarantee. But when I came and visited you, one of the biggest things I realized was how long you guys took to do a tune-up. And I came back from my 29-point tune-up, and it became 151-point tune-up. And that meant the case came out of the garage door opener. It meant so much more than it used to be.
Starting point is 00:35:14 And it was very detailed, and it was really explaining the customer going through the process. It doesn't last necessarily an hour and a half, but if you do it correctly, it almost takes an hour. Yep. True. As part of also that hour and a half is a warmup that takes maybe five minutes or so looking for a compliment within the house, just getting that communication to let them know that I'm a tech, I'm here to help you. I'm not here to do anything else. I'm just a nice guy. Tell me what you want me to do and i'll do it and then they'll go through everything they can find they'll bring it all back to the customer and explain it to them and whatever they don't want to do they don't have to do but this is what i found
Starting point is 00:35:54 for you and it doesn't have to be high pressure it's just got to be an offer just an offer yeah and so now do you look in like service Titan to see if they made an offer? Is that how you kind of keep things? They do now. Yeah. They always look and before the same thing with the other company we had, the dispatcher or whoever's dispatching a crew, they would always look what they offered, what they didn't offer.
Starting point is 00:36:19 And if they didn't offer what they're supposed to, especially a salesperson, he didn't offer water heater or insulation or water softeners or whatever they would go to the manager and bring the guy in the next day you've got to offer this i'll give you an example frank spears one of my first sales people great guy we started doing insulation he didn't want to offer it for a year he didn't offer it and he lost his bonuses for a year because i tied 35 000 a month you had to sell a ventilation for salesperson all you do is offer it he refused to offer it for a year he didn't tell me this until me and didn't pay attention to it he said in january i started
Starting point is 00:36:56 offering my first month i sold 85 000. i've been selling 70 80 000 every month since then and i've got every bonus and i'm making 20% off of it. All of a sudden he's making more money. But when we do these things, especially when you're at a department, we always try to get one or two guys. I would talk to them, get them focused on it. And they start selling, making the money. The other guys are realizing I'm not making as much as I can.
Starting point is 00:37:23 And we do that consistently. You'll never get all 20 to do it right away. You get one or two and they show their checks and they talk about it. You'll get three or four. Then you'll get the others. You know, I never really got my hands on it, but you used to have a letter and you're kind of the guy that's known for like these letters you send all the time. I mean, how much of, how much do you spend on mail? Like of your percentage, if you're only spending 5.1 on marketing, how much of this is letters back to your existing clientele?
Starting point is 00:37:54 Originally it was a hundred percent. We had 400,000 homes in Orange County that were 10 years or older. And we would generally at first hit them about once a season and after we got into it we were hitting them four or five times a season and i couldn't tell you right now the percentage of it but i'd say it's a large percent because the one thing that you've got to know when you do the tune-up letters you have to have a tech that can go out and either turn that lead on the older ones or sell it. Same with the young ones.
Starting point is 00:38:29 Turn a lead for a ducts or insulation or we can sell it. Because if you go out thinking you're just going to do a $79 or $88 tuna and you're going to make money, you're going to go broke because each one of those are $250. You have to train people to turn that lead that can sell. And that was a key thing. I had a fortune of three guys come on board my first year. They were making $40,000. And they were getting a call every other day from the competitor.
Starting point is 00:38:56 Second year, they made $80,000. Next, $120,000, $160,000. Now they're all in the $700,000, $800,000, $900,000 income because of the tune-up. But you've got to have somebody behind that. You've got to have somebody do the tune-up right as we talk. Then you've got to have a guy who can turn it to a guy that can sell it. And that's where all the money was made. And that's where all the training came in.
Starting point is 00:39:15 Because if you've got one guy that's not doing it, train the other two. Have that guy train the other two. They're all happy to make the money. So if that helps yeah you still believe that um so you're you you've got a comfort advisor so let's just say and i work for service champions and i'm a tune-up technician am i calling a comfort advisor out there if if they don't need a new unit but they might decide they want insulation or the hot water heater or is that just me selling it without no we would that would be a new trainee that's a
Starting point is 00:39:54 maintenance tech we have a couple levels but they're maintenance tech learning they would call the office and the main dispatcher would decide who they're going to send out or we have a dispatcher that only dispatches the sales people and she's been with me 30 years and she knows who's good who's bad who would be the best for this and she would decide who goes out and we try to get out there that night if we can if we sell it that night we want to put it in the next day and during the during the um summer we're never more than one or two days backed up. So we try to get to them as quick as we can so they don't change their mind or call somebody else. But no, that tech would call into the office and the main dispatcher would decide who we're going to send
Starting point is 00:40:37 out. So there is another group that we have. They're called channel managers, which is a salesperson. But he gets three to four guys that runs calls and his job but there's no lead for him that day this had happened with jim dotson our my number one guy first employee one morning he was at home at 10 o'clock i said what is he doing at home well we don't have any leads i said no i don't care what it is at 10 o'clock in the morning he's going to be in front of a customer. And we started the training visit thing that he would have a couple of guys, or Barbara, who's been with me 30 years, would go and pick a call and send Jim out on it. And Jim would show up as a supervisor just to look at what the guy's doing. But he's looking to turn a lead,
Starting point is 00:41:22 and then he's teaching the guy that's there as well. He's watching what Jim's doing to turn that lead. And we would keep those guys with him three, maybe four months and change it up. Then we got guys really trained well how to turn leads. But Jim is out there selling it. Most of these guys, when they go out on these training visits, they were closing at 56% of the time. No lead, just a regular call, a guy who wasn't really good at turning leads, 56% of the time the leads were turned
Starting point is 00:41:50 because we sent a salesperson out there just to observe what he's doing and then turn that lead himself so the other guy learned. If I'm Jim, how am I being paid if I turn that lead? So I'm just a new guy out in the field and your dispatcher calls me up and says, Hey, Jim's going to meet you at the job today. Jim sells it. How does Jim get paid versus
Starting point is 00:42:11 the new guy? Everybody gets paid the same. Just as if he turned it, we pay 5% of the sale price to the guy that turned it, but he's there. He still gets the 5% and Jim gets his full price. Whatever. Oh, so they each make money on it. You just double pay. They make money. They're learning. But the key thing is we're not taking anything from the guy. Again, we want to pay these guys well. We want them to stay. And nobody's doing this. Nobody pays the way we do. We rarely lose people. Turnover is extremely low. It's all about how you treat your people. I mean, I try to tell the managers, don't expect any respect until you show respect. So you go out, show your guys how much you respect them, how much you're going to help them.
Starting point is 00:42:58 And they, in turn, will start respecting you and start listening to you. If you try to do it the other way, you're going to lose people. I'm taking a master course here as usual. What was your dispatcher who's been there for 30 years? Barbara Brimbaugh. 30 years. Barbara. Had a company before Service Champions called Howlite Lemonade and Heating.
Starting point is 00:43:17 Does Barbara look for if they speak Spanish? Does she look at how old they are? Does she look like if they were military vets? What exactly is she looking for if they speak Spanish? Does she look at how old they are? Does she look like if they were military vets? What exactly is she looking for for a match? She would tell me that I can't teach people how to do this because just what you're saying. She looks at everything. She looks at the guys. How's he been this week? Has he been selling? Has he had a personal issue going on? Is he in a bad mood or we got this great lead somebody else
Starting point is 00:43:46 will probably run it but she knows the people and she generates a lot of sales for us that we might not have had because she's picking the right person and the guys don't get upset at her because they know what what they're good at you know like dachshunds average invoice is around 23 000 some guys are 15 so if it's a good system and and it looks good and it's 30 years old or so, she would obviously send Dotson over to the guy that's got a lower average invoice. So it's a lot of factors that she looks into. But you just got to know what to look for. And she's done it so long, I probably couldn't explain it to you.
Starting point is 00:44:24 I'll get her online sometime and talk to you and she'll tell you. She could probably write a book on it. No, I'd love to talk to Barbara. This Double Your Profits in Six Months or Less, the book that you told me all about. Right. About, it's not, and I want to be very careful
Starting point is 00:44:41 how I explain this, it's not cutting your way to profit, but it's staying on top of things. And just not getting to the point where, you know, if somebody needs a stapler, they order 10 of them. And there's a little bit more accountability. And I think a CFO does a great job of doing that if you get the right CFO. But talk to me a little bit about how that book changed the way you were doing business. This happened before the sale.
Starting point is 00:45:06 I can't even remember who told me to get it. I think it might've been Gus in Dallas, but I read it over a weekend. And basically the book tells you, look at every employee you have and ask yourself, if I fired this person tomorrow, what would happen to the company? And the same with the expenses. If I eliminated this expense, what would happen to the company? And the same with the expenses. If I eliminated this expense, what would happen to the company? So as I went through there, I found seven employees that had been hired that weren't doing their job and they were replaced, but nobody got rid of them. So I went with all the managers. I had the list and I said, if we fired this person, what would happen? We should have fired him a long time ago. So I fired my controller and accounting manager replaced him with one
Starting point is 00:45:51 person, Daniel Hamm, who replaced it all and did a 10 times better job than what I had. And it was just looking and you got to ask mainly, well, you can look at the field too, but it's just an interesting look that we were overstabbed by incompetent people by seven and that all went to the bottom line to make profit and then the same with the expenses you're not going to have managers not all the time we'll look for expenses that we can eliminate that's going to make their job harder and i've told this story before i would sign all the checks.
Starting point is 00:46:25 I was there on a Sunday. Just learned what an ACH is. ACH, what? Automatic Transfer. It's $10,000 to the dumpster that we had out back. And I thought, okay. Then I looked up and found out the dump site was 1.2 miles away from our building. So Monday, I asked Louie Ortiz.
Starting point is 00:46:44 I said, take it all out of there, put it in our stake bed, drive it to the dump site, come back and tell me how long and how much. It took him 30 minutes. It cost $20. $20 a day, $600 a month, and we were paying $10,000. So I went to the warehouse manager and I said, I want that dumpster gone right away. And your staff is now going to take all the trash up to the mile point, 1.2 miles. And he said, you know what? We're pretty busy. I don't
Starting point is 00:47:13 think we can do that. Well, next week I farted and we got rid of the dumpster and we saved $110,000 on one item that everybody knew about, but nobody was looking. And that's one of the things people call me sometimes a looker, that I was always looking how we could save money, but I never knew what I was going to find until I saw it. Then I knew, oh, that's what I was looking for. And even text signing in for meetings. I was finding text signing in at 6.30 for a 7 o'clock meeting. And you get a couple hundred
Starting point is 00:47:45 checks doing that for 30 minutes four days a week 52 weeks that's a lot of money and so we made it you can clock in at 6 55 but you couldn't clock in at 6 30 unless you had worked it so a lot of money to be saved if you're just looking and ask your question is is this necessary? Like you said, 10 statements. If your office supplies is 1,000, all of a sudden next month it's 5,000, you want to look and find out why. What happened there? So you've got to be a looker. I'll start wrapping up some of these questions. When you really think about this training that you do and having guys go meet at the house and bringing guys in four days a week, it sounds like to me, a hundred percent, this was a hundred percent an investment. There's
Starting point is 00:48:33 no way in hell because their conversion rate would go up. Their average tickets would go up. The customer satisfaction would go up. You looked at this a hundred percent through the lens of, if we don't do that, we're failing. We're failing the installers. We're failing everybody. They need to have this. And you got it at an early enough time that it didn't interfere with the normal schedule. It was like on their time. They had to show up.
Starting point is 00:48:57 That sounds right? Yeah. The installers, I mean, when we trained our trainers for the 14 weeks, it cost us $15,000 a tech to get him in the field. But the tech could make us $80,000 his first year, which is in well more so cover his expenses for that. And now we've got a full-time future tech that's there with us. So we got 280 out of 300 trained. I would have never had 280 techs if I tried to hire them from our competitors. And we would never have grown the way we were. So by having the right person trained and there to understand the pricing and the value of the
Starting point is 00:49:40 pricing, it was a huge investment. Sometimes the equity groups couldn't understand why are you spending so much money training? Because there's nobody out there that knows what we were doing. We were so structured. We were disciplined. We paid well, but we expected everyone to be treated the same. Jim Doxon, the number one guy, I would never treat him any different than a new guy that just started. They made a mistake. They made a mistake. We bring it up to them, but we want them to get better at what they do. So the training part, I think, was our biggest success that we did. What do these letters look like that you'd mail out to the homes? It's time for your annual tune-up. Simple ones. CSG is not in business anymore,
Starting point is 00:50:21 but that's one of the main ones that I use. I've used for years. It just talks about investing $77 in a tune-up for your system. And there are two pages. There's ways you're supposed to insert the letter. And you do a live stamp instead of pre-sorted. People like Nexstar and CertainPath out there, they have letters similar to that. But we had a tune-up letter. We have a lead letter that we would mail out. But they're really simple. But you've got to, like I was talking to somebody earlier today, is that I've heard people say, we need more marketing. The problem was we didn't need more marketing.
Starting point is 00:50:59 We needed a better call center because you can mail these letters out. And if a call center takes 100 of them and books 80 calls, but 20, 60 or 70 cancel, and you only run 10 or 15, it's not the marketing, it's your call center. But it looks like your marketing's got a problem. So you need to track every call center agent you have on marketing. How many calls did they take? How many did they book? And more so, how many ran? Because if they don't book it right and don't build the value,
Starting point is 00:51:30 you're going to keep on calling somebody else and go somewhere else and they'll cancel it. But if you did, if you had 10 or 20 call center and you rated them the same way, you would see where your worst call center is, agent is, and which one's your best and do better training. Because there are certain words, like I think I said, that one of the key words to say on a call center, who's your normal maintenance company? People don't ask that, and that gets them thinking, oh, I should have one. So different things like that are building value. You know, it's really not overcomplicated the way you describe these things.
Starting point is 00:52:07 Know your numbers, look for expenses to eliminate, double down on training. Is there anything you did? This will be the final question. So my wrap up questions. Is there anything you did? You kind of were vague to attract talent and recruit. One of the words you said is recruit. Right. What does it look like to go out and get these classes of the words you said is recruit. Right.
Starting point is 00:52:25 What does it look like to go out and get these classes at the time of 20 people? I mean, is it just as simple as putting an ad out there on Indeed and Glassdoor and ZipRecruiter and all these places? Or how do you go get it? That's pretty much what it is. You know, we would do it every week,
Starting point is 00:52:40 no matter the class started or when it's going to start. And we would build value about your potential to make up to 90 to 100,000 your first year. And just a really positive HR department would write it, make it look nice. The key thing was, is getting them in there. If they saw 50 people there and we would do nothing but build the value of service champions, we wouldn't do anything negative. We just told me how great the company is then we would tell stories or maybe you might even have a maintenance check like kristen corey i talked about making a hundred thousand his first nine months this can happen for for you and we've got that and then we have them stand up and that's
Starting point is 00:53:19 their interview and that personality i think this is one thing i don't think other companies do we hire strictly by personality and we can train the technical stuff but you can get a guy that's really technical that can't talk we might look at him for an installer because they don't have to do a lot of talking they're already sold but the personality side i think is good for your call center you want really bubbly call center you want a bubbly dispatcher. You want people that are treating the techs nice in the field instead of being rude. So you just want a good environment.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Like in my case, I loved going to work every day. I had great people. I had long assistants been with me 27 years. Gary Rita, GM, had been with me 15 years. I mean, these are all long-term people because they were treated like family. They were paid better than anywhere else. And they were never looking to go somewhere else. Once they're there for a year and they see the money, if they ever left, they would come back in a day or two.
Starting point is 00:54:17 I had one guy, Angel, left for one day and goes, oh, this is nothing like service champion, came right back. So as long as it's in your heart, you've got to have it in your heart to treat the people, your employees, and you've got to have it in your heart to treat your customers the same way. How would you want your family treated and do that? Brilliant. Well, Leland, this is absolutely phenomenal. you're going to be at the Home Service Freedom event and that is in September 25th not too far from you over there in San Diego
Starting point is 00:54:53 and it's going to be a killer event I can't wait to see you and I literally got a list of all my managers going to listen to this one because they need to hear this from someone like... I'll do a conference call with them.
Starting point is 00:55:10 This is great. I'd love it. I'd love it. And then maybe you could just close us out with... We talked about a lot of stuff. I've got one, two, three, four, five, six, seven pages of notes. Maybe we didn't hit on something. Maybe there's something hot and heavy on your mind or just something to leave the audience with here before we depart.
Starting point is 00:55:30 I would say the one thing in looking at other companies we buy and seeing even some employees quit and start their own company, their whole goal is they saw what we were doing. And I would tell people in our weekly all company meeting that if you're going to quit, you need to bring everybody in this room with you. Because when you go somewhere else, these people aren't going to be there.
Starting point is 00:55:53 And they find that out that people don't care. They're not doing good work. But I think the most important thing is the owner has to be there and be the leader. I didn't have to do the training, but I would always talk positive.
Starting point is 00:56:08 If there's out of 300 employees at that time, there's obviously employees you don't like, but you got to respect them. One of our top guys, I didn't like him at all. He gamed at me all the time, but I would just write a new policy of the sales plan and get past the game. I respected his ability to sell and I expected his ability to keep our
Starting point is 00:56:29 installers busy and keep the company profitable. So as an owner, you've got to be there. You can't be a one day to our guy and come in and complain the next day. How come things aren't working? You've got to be on top of it. You've got to know everything. You've got to know the people. You've got to know what questions to ask and more so you got to know what to look for like i said i was considered a looker only because i didn't know what i was looking for until you started looking and you just you'll see things that are happening that are costing you money or costing the tech
Starting point is 00:57:00 money or other side of it i I always would listen to the employees. I mean, if they had a concern, come to my office, tell me. I either explain to you why we do it or I'll change it. Or maybe we might just disagree, but at least you'll understand why we're doing something. I would never not talk to an employee. When we were acquiring companies, I think we had almost 2,000 employees and I was still giving up my cell phone. And Frank DiMarco said, dude, stop. That's way too many people to call you on your phone.
Starting point is 00:57:30 And he was right. But, you know, just being owner of service champions out of the 300 or so, everybody had my personal number. And I'd give it to customers the same way. I would say, this is the number my children call me on. So call me on this you'll get a call back but just being involved being there every day i'd be there at seven i'd leave at six or seven and i was always treating them like family and paying them well and treating
Starting point is 00:57:58 them well they wouldn't want to leave if they did they saw a total different concept at other companies that i never paid attention to any local ones but the biggest thing i think that helped me overall was having a group of four or five other company owners bigger than me that i found in certain paths or different places and we called every tuesday for an hour no agenda just talk you got a problem let's talk about it and we shared financials every month. And that tells you a lot. We had one member who would not share his financials because
Starting point is 00:58:29 he only made money four months out of the year. He was back east. Well, he didn't stay in the group. But sharing financials, you can start looking at that, all the companies, and seeing people doing something better. You see what you're doing worse and start making corrections.
Starting point is 00:58:46 Surround yourself with people that are smarter than you don't think you're the smartest one in there because you're probably the dumbest surround yourself the smartest listen and learn and I take them out to dinner and buy them the best wine I possibly could ask them a question and shut the F up and take notes and I go go back and do it and i'd go visit it with someone a month later so i hope that helps yeah we call that rip off and duplicate i love there you go but they knew i was doing it it was all a gift this is so good this is one of the best podcasts i've ever had you know no matter what size you are or how successful you think you are, there's so much just to learn. And that's one of the things I'm a student for life. And I can't wait to see you
Starting point is 00:59:30 in person. And I'm going to take you up on that call so you can hear it from the horse's mouth. You call me anytime, but just know you're never the smartest, whoever you think you are, unless you're learning from somebody else. You're always, always learning. And you've got to always be learning. There's always stuff out there you need to know. I agree. Hope that helped you. This was fantastic.
Starting point is 00:59:54 You did great. Very, very, I think. Looking forward to seeing you. A lot of people are going to learn a lot. I can't wait to see you, buddy. I appreciate you. Thanks, Tom. All right.
Starting point is 01:00:03 See you, buddy. Great day. 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. I can share with you how I attracted a winning team of over 700 employees in over 20 states. The insights in this book are powerful and can be applied to any business or organization. It's a real game changer for anyone looking to build and develop a high-performing team like over here at A1 Garage Door Service. So if you want to learn the secrets that helped me transfer my team from stealing the toilet paper to a group of 700 plus employees rowing in the same direction,
Starting point is 01:00:38 head over to elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast and grab a copy of the book. Thanks again for listening and we'll catch up with you next time on the podcast.

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