The Home Service Expert Podcast - Skyrocketing Sales Through Effective Negotiation and Role-Playing Techniques
Episode Date: August 25, 2023Brian Burton is the current VP of Sales for One Hour Heating and Air Conditioning of Southeast PA where he trains the next generation of professionals in the trades on how to sell the right way. He fo...rmerly trained technicians for the Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mister Sparky Electric on how to identify and present solutions to homeowners strategically. Additionally, he is the host of the “Waste No Day” Podcast, a podcast devoted to challenging, encouraging, advising, and highlighting the men and women of the home services industry. In this episode, we talked about sales strategies, hiring technicians, plumbing…
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When you want help with your sales, the first thing I say is like, first question I ask is,
how's the role play going? And so it's twofold. One, you have to be role playing. Two, you got
to be role playing stuff that actually works. It's always horrible when someone says we're
doing role playing and I say, well, what are you role playing in terms of asking for the business?
And you hear something like, so do you want it? And you're like, that's no,
you're role-playing the wrong
thing. So it's not practice doesn't make perfect, right? As Lombardi would say, perfect practice
makes perfect. So yeah, role-playing it is supposed to be humiliating, right? It's supposed
to take you out of comfort zones. It's supposed to like, it's supposed to make you kick down
walls of anxiety that are keeping you from actually getting up in front of your peers
and doing it. When you master doing something back and forth, like between you and me in front of a
bunch of judgmental technicians that all know how it's supposed to go and they're quietly or loudly
making fun of you for doing it wrong. When you get it right in front of that group and you go to do
it, it's nothing. I'm telling you, it's nothing to do it in front of the client after that.
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.
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.
Okay, guys, welcome back to the Home Service Expert. My name's Tommy Mello, and today's an
exciting day. I got Brian Byrne, one of the first days we're shooting in the new video room. It's going
to be amazing. Brian is a fellow podcaster. This dude is giving it back to the trades.
A lot of business owners, but more importantly, technicians, CSRs, dispatchers, getting the right
mindset, learning about getting healthy, financial wisdom. Brian's an expert in leadership, sales advice, marketing, so many
things. Here's a quick bio. He was based out of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He just moved to Phoenix.
It's an exciting time. He's the VP of sales at One Hour Heating and Air Conditioning of Southeast
Pennsylvania. From January 22nd to present, Mr. Sparky Electric, operations manager. He did that for four years previously.
Benjamin Franklin Plumbing did that from 2013 to 2022.
Brian is the current VP of sales at One Hour Heating and Air Conditioning of Southeast
PA, where he trains the next generation of professionals in the trades on how to sell
the right way.
He formerly trained technicians for Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mr. Sparky Electric
on how to identify and present solutions to homeowners strategically. Additionally,
he is the host of Waste No Day podcast, a podcast devoted to challenging, encouraging,
advising, and highlighting the men and women of the home service industry.
Brian's a good friend of mine, and I'm glad you're here for Do A Killer podcast.
Yeah, I'm glad to be here. Finally, to reciprocate, you've been on our show three times, and two of them went long.
You and I can tend to do together.
So we made two parties out of them.
So really, it's been like five times.
It's a cool podcast.
I mean, talk about some of the people you've had on your podcast,
what the podcast has brought to your life, your family,
your profession. Well, we've had Brian Burton on every week so far. So there's that, you know,
what more do you need? We've had Mr. Tommy Mello. We've had my probably original mentor in selling aspect of the HVAC plumbing trade, who is Ken Goodrich, has been on twice. I really attribute
the majority of growth and development that I've seen in my
life to Ken and his old team there at Yes Air Conditioning and Plumbing. And from there,
we've had like Chris Voss, author of Never Split the Difference, one of the most successful FBI
hostage negotiators in history. If you haven't checked that book out, you're missing out. We've had Tim Kennedy, the MMA fighter, fought for two belts in the UFC,
special forces sniper.
It was his team that took out al-Baghdadi.
Man, what hasn't this guy do?
He was the star of the show Hunting Hitler on the History Channel
where he would fly to South American countries
looking for escaped Nazi war criminals, all kinds of stuff.
This guy's just a legit American hero
and just an awesome guy all around.
I heard him on Rogan's show
and I worked some real sales magic to get him on.
What did you do?
What's the pitch?
So I was looking on his website.
If you're going after higher level people to get him on,
it's really difficult to get through a gatekeeper
when you're a plumbing podcast. Nobody's ever heard of you because this was like, this is our, I don't
know, maybe year end and we didn't have a whole lot of downloads at the time. So I went on his
website. I try to find like a sneaky way in where I'm not just going through their PR firm because
they want, you know, they want you to pay to get them on. Sure. So, and we didn't have a budget because it didn't make any money. It still doesn't. So we don't pay to get them on. And we didn't have a budget because it didn't
make any money. It still doesn't. So we don't pay people to come on. So you scroll all the way down
to the bottom of the webpage. And I don't know if it's still there, but in very fine print,
it says contact him for this, her for that, them for this. And in very, very tiny print, almost like a gag, it said, or if an American is in grave danger,
email me at timkennedy, I'm not going to say the email, blah, blah, blah.com. And I'm like,
I'm with my wife, like we're actually laying in bed. And I'm like, get the hell out of here. Like
she heard him on Rogan with me on Jocko with me. We were huge fans of this guy. I'm like,
there's no way this is going to be real, but what do we have to lose? So I made the subject of the email. It was something like
plumbers in grave danger, dot, dot, dot. And then the body just said of dying of boredom,
if you won't come on our show, the waste no day podcast. And then I just told him what the show
was and that we'd really appreciate him, you know, spending an hour on the phone with us.
And he got back to me like the next night.
I was sitting at a buddy's house and I got an email that said, love to do your show.
When do you want to do it?
I was like, oh, that's awesome.
There's no freaking way.
That's Tim Kennedy.
And it's such a generic email too.
So I'm like, sooner the better, because if he realizes how small this show is, he's going to obviously change his mind because he's got better things to do. So we did it that week. So I, first
thing I asked him when we, we get them on the phone before we actually start recording, I say,
what made you decide to do our show? You know, because I'm going to want to use this for someone
else later, I'm sure. And he said, I was laying in bed, waiting for my wife to get out of the
shower, doing her thing. And, and it's Sunday night and I in bed waiting for my wife to get out of the shower doing her thing.
And it's Sunday night and I'm going through all my emails to set up my Monday morning.
And he said, I saw this HVAC taxing grave danger, whatever it said.
And he said, so I opened it and I read of dying of boredom.
And I started laughing right as my wife walked out.
And she looked down at me on the bed and said, what are you laughing at?
And he said, this podcast asked me to do this podcast. He said,
I get hundreds of podcast requests a day. I don't even read them. But he said, because of this one,
I read it to her. She laughed, walked away and said, do the show. And I said, okay. And that
was that. That's awesome. You know, it's, it's interesting about getting creative you know you ever heard of
blue fishing no oh you got to read that book write that down done and done blue fishing
he talks i'm brain farting anyway this guy used to be a bouncer and in hong kong
and he's an american guy short bald, bald, you know, some,
some would say overweight. I don't, I hope he's not watching.
You don't want to say that about a bouncer.
He's a great shape now, but you know, the dude drinks whiskey.
He's got motorcycles. He's just uber successful.
And he's the guy you call if you want to make something happen,
you want to have a meal in the, the sixth chapel.
You want to go meet anybody like he makes make something happen. You want to have a meal in the Sixth Chapel. You want to go meet anybody.
Like, he makes the impossible happen.
And it's a great book.
And Steve Sim, S-I-M, S-I-M-S, Steve Sims.
And mind-blowing, that's going to change your whole life,
I promise you, for what you're doing with your podcast.
So I always like to start out with just hearing about what you did in the home service space,
why you decided to start a podcast, what the future looks like.
Sure. So I'm third generation, technically third generation plumber, started in new construction,
carrying buckets of gravel and kick axing foundations to lay sewer. Just hated
waking up every morning to that kind of work. I'm not afraid of hard work, but I would get
dropped off in the foundation of a home by myself to spend the day there with a pickaxe and some
piping and a blueprint. And I'm, you know, like yourself, I want to be around people. So being
there all day was pretty miserable for me.
So I did that for as long as I had to and then eventually got my own truck in a drain company
because it was the fastest path to, you know, I didn't need my journeyman's card to get into a drain truck.
So I started drain cleaning.
And then 2004, my wife got pregnant.
So her parents were living in Las Vegas at the time. And her dad,
big, intimidating Puerto Rican dude, was just going around to plumbers at gas stations,
just banging on their window and saying, yo, how much you make last year? And every one of these
guys that would answer, he knew I made 30, 35,000 a year in a plumbing truck in the Detroit area. So he would hear $60,000, $70,000, $80,000
a year. And he would call my wife. These guys are making two, three times what Brian's making. You
guys got to get out here. So I went. So we went. We just moved. We never even visited. We just
packed up our stuff and moved. Not too unlike this recent trip to Arizona. But the opportunity
was there. And we just wanted to jump at it. So we opportunity was there, you know, and we just,
we wanted to jump at it. So we rolled out and I went to two companies. We spent every dime we had
to get out there. We had no money. My father-in-law had to loan me gas money so I could go hit a
couple, put a couple applications in, hit the first place. And it was like, you know, you're,
you're a real blue collar plumber who had his entrepreneurial
seizure as Michael E Gerber would say, and started a business. And it was a very small plumbing
company. He was everyone there. I interviewed with him, loved him. He offered me like 25 an
hour or something, which I was like, Holy crap, I'm going to make like twice as much as I did.
Yeah. Move over a Gates family, you know, here comes the birds. So in my head, I said, done, I'm taking this job.
But you know, we had the old map book and I had written down directions from my in-laws
condo where we were staying, where I was in a top bunk bed with my brother-in-law to that company.
And then another company and then another company and then back to the condo. So I
knew exactly how to like triangulate from home to these three places and back. So I said, well,
and I told my wife I was going to see three companies. So I went to the second company
and that was yes, air conditioning and plumbing. And Lance Fernandez was Ken Goodrich's GM at the
time. So I went in, asked for an app. Mona happened to be
the lady who saw me and gave me an application while I was filling it out. Lance came walking
out randomly and just said, you know, what's up? What are you doing here? And I said, I'm here to
put an application to be a plumber. And he said, that felt derogatory where he was like,
is that all you want to be? And I'm like, you know, we're proud in the trades. Like,
isn't that enough? And he said, do you want to be a plumber or do you want to learn how to make
money? I'm like, well, I want to do both. And he said, would, would you be opposed to learning how
to sell? And I'm just like, Oh, now that first company, that guy had warned me about this quote
unquote, warned me about this company and said, they're going to try to teach you to rip old ladies off. So I had that going in, you know, that negative mindset going in. And I'm like,
as soon as he said that I'm halfway out the door. And he said, I'll tell you what, you know,
I don't want to be some penny loafer wearing used car salesman, you know? And I said that to him.
And he said, I'll tell you what, give me 10 minutes in the conference room,
whether you come to work for me or not, I'll give you a, I think it was like a $50 gift card,
a visa gift card.
And like I told you, I just borrowed money from my wife's dad for gas to get there.
Let me tell you who had 10 minutes to make $50, this guy right here.
So we went in the conference room and I bet you it was like five minutes before Lance had me sold.
And I don't really remember the conversation,
but as you say all the time,
I remember how he made me feel and how he made me feel was like,
not only was there more to this career and more money to be made,
but there was more to me.
And he told me something I'd never heard before.
He said,
you've got a million dollar smile.
You just don't know how to use it. Oh, I like that. And dude, I'm like, I had goosebumps like five times talking to
him because he told me how he sold his way out of being a HVAC service tech to now the GM and part
owner of Yes. And it was all integrity driven, keep your principles, offer upgrades more than like emergency stuff. He was big on the IEQ.
I became big on water treatment. It was all like professional stuff. It was just above board,
really pro status rebuttals and making people feel a certain way as opposed to pushing things
on people. Whatever he said in that room, I was sold. I actually did skip the third one,
I believe, or maybe just ran in and out and got home. And my wife said, you know, I said,
I took a position and she said, famous question, what are they paying per hour? And I said,
it's not hourly. Zero. It's performance. Panic. One sets in for mama and she's just like,
what? And I'm like, but I will make more here than if they were paying me 30 bucks an hour.
It's exactly what I did. It was like 60 the first year, 80 the second year, just boom,
boom, boom, kept going up. So I did that. Now I took an opiate addiction with me for years.
That kind of the hope for me internally was moving there would, would help me get rid of that
addiction. Okay. Let me tell you, it's way easier to find there than it was in Michigan.
Like everywhere, everyone in the trades, it seemed like, and that's not the case, but it,
everyone I found myself around was, was an addict and had real easy ways of getting a hold of that stuff. So around probably 2010,
I just called a timeout, like I got to get off this stuff or I'm going to be dead here soon.
So my stepdad had gone through an actual crack addiction and he kicked it at a facility called
Teen Challenge in Pennsylvania, which is actually an adult rehab center. So I moved, I moved into my
mom's basement in Pennsylvania and went through that program. Halfway through the program, my wife
came to visit. So this is, you're working for YES for five, six years? So it was probably five years.
And then I left on my general manager's advice. I wanted to go get better at sales. I said, like,
I've done everything we
have to offer here. You know, we had Terry Nicholson in and we had Carl DeBinney in and like
all the trainers came through and I took everything they had to offer. I was going to Tom Hopkins
bootcamp out here in Scottsdale every year on my own dime. And anything that came through Vegas,
that was sales training. I spent every penny necessary,
took out credit cards, like whatever it took to get the training. And I said, where can I get more?
And my GM at the time, who was going to lose his most, his prize position. Yeah. One of his biggest
producing plumbers said timeshare. And this was a whole other animal because this is like high
pressure. You have 90 minutes to close someone who's not in the market for a timeshare.
So for a year and a half, I went and learned how to sell timeshare.
Came back to Yes and was there for about another year before the addiction was so severe.
It was all that mattered to me.
I mean, my numbers were in the toilet.
My marriage was in the toilet.
I was a horrible kid.
And you had one kid at this point?
I had two at the time.
Two at the time. Yeah. Yeah. We decided to make the move. Plan was probably to go out
there and get some rehab and then come back. My wife just wasn't working, but became a waitress
at the time to just make ends meet, moved in with her parents. I moved into my mom's basement until
I could get into that program. About halfway through the program, Amelia, my wife, came to visit and loved what she saw
and wanted me to finish the program, despite the fact that it was several more months.
So she moved the kids into my mom's basement in Pennsylvania to wait for me.
So you've got a wife and two kids at the time in the basement of a townhouse, unfinished,
and my mom just doing
whatever she could to make it work. So I finished the program, got out of there, went and met Matt
Buckwalter and Larry Rohr, who Larry was the owner of the Benjamin Franklin one-hour Mr. Sparky in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. At that time, they were about five mil a year. Me getting into a truck kind of helped change that
for them. I think we did six million the next year. And then they asked me to take over as
operations manager for the plumbing department. So I did that for probably three years,
maybe four years. And then they asked me to take over the Mr. Sparky as well.
So Aaron Buckwalter and I shared responsibilities of operations for Mr. Sparky,
where I took over all the training of the technicians and he took over like the actual
operational stuff. And we blew that one up pretty significantly to, well, in January of 2022,
they removed all operations stuff from me and made me vice president of sales of the one hour Ben Franklin, Mr. Sparky. So in 2014, when Aaron and I kind of took over, we were at a little over
6 million this year, they're tracking just shy of 40 million. And that was me, Aaron, Nate Minnick,
my co-host on waste no day. And, uh, Mikerick, who's our call center, built our call center, which is a phenomenal call center out there.
So, yeah.
And most of what I did when I'm in my element was train people to sell while raising their Google reviews, not lowering them.
Yeah, I'm curious.
I got a good question that I've been thinking a lot about.
So, this is
the hardest part. You went to this plumber that was basically a technician, had his entrepreneurial
seizure. And all these guys say the same thing. They're 90% of the industry, but it's, it's
changing now. He's getting in there, seeing that we're valuable. We're awesome. We're essential.
We're good people. We work our asses
off. It's 118 degrees outside. My guys are all working. This show is putting the word out there.
I mean, people are hearing this show. I hear it all over the place on the East Coast.
People are hearing shows like this one and going, I want what he's talking about.
This is the mindset though, is why do these guys continue to say, I don't take advantage
of customers that I don't sell things people don't need when they don't really take care of their employees?
This is the biggest question I've always had is why are they driving used trucks?
Why don't they have formal training?
Why aren't they allowed to have a billboard?
Why can't they take their people on vacation?
Why don't they have a PTO?
Why don't they have a 401k?
Why don't they have insurance?
Why don't they recognize people in meetings each week? And then they complain that you're taking advantage of the
client. They, uh, they quote unquote care so much for that client. Meanwhile, they haven't spoken
to a client in two and a half years, but they care so much for the client. I'll say this on our show.
I don't, I don't want to call people out on your show necessarily, but you can always cut it out.
I'm sure if we're calling out of the
mindset, what I feel to call out of my, I don't, I don't feel like they care about their client.
I've worked for so many of these guys over the years. They hate their clients. They hate their
employees. They hate their coworkers. They're just scared. Like they don't want to raise their
price to where it needs to be. They're also very, they tend to be very controlling, very self-centered.
They're the top guy in the company and they never hire anybody that's even going to dispute
anything that they, they don't want to hire anybody better than them.
And they say, I can't find any great people.
Number one, you can't afford them.
Never.
Two, why would I come work for you?
What's in it for me?
They say, well, I took all the chances.
You took all the chances.
You're making 150 grand a year.
Your business makes zero.
Yeah.
How many people do you have making here making more than 150 grand
dozens 50 100 yeah and that's even cool when you see a business owner of a small trade organization
making 150 because most of the time they don't they're not making six figures it's one of those
things where i've realized now of where people could take me.
And the greatest,
I've had a few really good people in the last two years,
I think Jim,
Dan Miller,
moving a couple of people around.
It's like all of a sudden you hire for your weaknesses,
put me in a position to do what I do best.
10 X is better than two X.
It's a great book.
And I just feel like the mindset is so
broken of we don't deserve to make money. We're blue collar. It's almost like they were imprinted
with blue collar is not allowed to make money. We only fix problems. We run seven calls per day.
We don't get to know the customer. We don't get to build a really great relationship and give a
great experience. And there are still bad companies that oversell and do take advantage.
Very, very, very small percentage. But if that's what you focus on, that's what you're going to
find. Well, I got to be very careful here because I always tell people raise your prices. But when
I say raise your prices, that doesn't mean just raise your prices. It means pay your people more,
drive better trucks, advertise different, raise the experience level,
start really training on what they need to know. Because if anybody listens to me,
you got these haters all over TikTok. For some reason, Instagram doesn't have the haters.
TikTok has people living in their parents' basements and all they do is spend four hours on TikTok and they go, I would never pay a plumber that much. Well, you don't own a house,
first of all, and you'll never own a house with your mindset.
I've had so many times where I thought I was getting a good deal.
My last house, I got a good deal on a roof.
Good deal on an HVAC unit.
Good deal.
Until two years later, I replaced them.
The good deals weren't so good deals.
And I've learned firsthand what it's like.
Why do people that don't have any money buy a new iPhone?
They've got Jordans
and they rent a Mercedes. That's the biggest question I always ask. They say, I don't,
I don't pay a lot of money for stuff. Have you ever looked, you got a Rolex,
but you still live at your mom's house. It drives me nuts. You know, who's worse than that client,
the quote unquote client, who's never going to use you because they don't even own a home in
their, in their mom's basement. The majority of the hate in our industries, particularly in HVAC, I think more than any
of the other ones, is other HVAC people. So if you go on any of these like HVAC for life or
Facebook groups, and you say, here's what one hour heating and air charges for a contactor,
what are these guys going to say? They're going to say that's outrageous.
The part only costs $20.
You're charging $250?
Yeah, a capacitor or anything.
But the same one.
So I did the math to have some arguments
on some debates on Facebook with these guys
on a Monster Energy drink,
because every one of those guys does nothing
but drink Monsters and smoke all day,
and a Big Mac.
And the Big Mac was actually
the worst one. A Big Mac markup on material and quote unquote labor is 600%. So they're going six
times their material. Pizza. Pizza costs a buck 50. But these guys buy it nonstop. Oh yeah. They
don't look at anything else. They don't figure out how much, this is one thing that I think every
company needs to see. What is the burden cost to get a truck out there? What's the time you're paying the guy the gas, the wear and tear?
How much did it cost the marketing?
How much did it cost for the call center, the HVAC unit that you have keeping your call center cool?
The software.
Like, all these costs that no one ever thinks about.
They don't even think about that.
Yeah, so McDonald's is allowed to mark up their meat product 600%, right?
6X.
And what do they, do they bring it to your house?
No, you got to go wait in line and it's a shitty line.
When you give it to your kids in the backseat,
does someone run out of the McDonald's
and clean your backseat up for you?
No.
Do they take the trash at least out of your vehicle?
No.
Nothing.
They don't vacuum up.
Nothing.
But what do we do?
We send a fully stocked truck
to a house to do all those things for them. And then do we leave, do you leave springs and coils
and oil all over the garage floor? We've got a blower. We blow out, we put the stickers up. We
actually got some spray to clean up after ourselves to make the garage door cleaner than when we
walked in. We clean everything up ourselves. And then if something goes wrong.
Who's on the line? If you have diarrhea from your Big Mac, do they send an employee out to help you
out? No, you're done. That's it. But if you have an issue with that garage door making too much
noise, what do you do? I'm back out there the same day. They're getting cut in front of line.
Warranties come first. Yeah. So you take care of it. But we should be called criminals if we mark
our stuff up six
times. Well, the mindset, it goes back to the mindset issue of, I don't deserve it. Something
that happened. Maybe they weren't close with their dad. Maybe their mom didn't love them enough,
but they don't deserve number one for themselves to be successful. But number two, they artificially
are holding people down. They literally say, I'm the owner of this business. Why would you make
more than me? Why would you make more than 60 grand? You're an effing plumber.
You're just a garage door guy.
Well, why is that the case?
Why wouldn't you want somebody to succeed?
You want to be known for somebody that kept somebody in an apartment that never gave them
the freedom to pick their kids private school.
They never were able to go winter shopping for their kids.
Like, would you look in the mirror every day with this mindset and say, I'm really glad no one's making more than 60 grand a year. I can't afford insurance.
And they wonder why this labor market, I can't find good people that, you know, we've got lines
of people waiting to come work for us. And our clients are happy because we offer apples to
apples. We sell oranges, you know, that, and it's so easy in my industry. And it's easy. And a lot
of them, HVAC is the one that's getting smart. It got smart. I it's so easy in my industry and it's easy in a lot of them. HVAC is
the one that's getting smart. It got smart, I think in 1990 with Frank Blau and George Brazil,
but it's good that we're talking about this because I like your perspective.
I figured out HVAC because I looked for all the guys with private jets. And then I started
studying HVAC. It's very, very simple. They got private jets, but it's. If somebody comes up with anything else and they got a private jet,
it's okay,
but it can't happen in home service.
It's amazing.
But the tides are churning.
And I think people are starting to listen to what we're saying and putting
out there.
And I think people are like,
maybe I was wrong.
Maybe that is true.
Maybe everybody around me should succeed too.
Yeah.
And they,
and they really are.
It really is happening.
If you look at like the reviews of your show, the reviews of our show, Waste No Day, the reviews of like Crist it's like, I read a new one this
morning, one of these reviews that gets sent, and I'm just like, my heart starts racing because you
see it with your employees nonstop, right? And since I've been training the selling in the
Lancaster, you know, we're in Amish country with no real severe weather at any time of the year.
But in Amish country, we have number one and number three highest producing Mr. Sparky techs in the nation.
We have the number one one-hour service tech in the nation.
And we have two or three top, one top five and two top ten plumbers all across the nation.
All in a Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Amish country HVAC plumbing and electrical business.
Simply because they're all bought
into this mindset of one. The main thing being every person we see deserves the right to hear
about every product we have. Now, does that mean they go through our price book and list every
single thing we offer? No, but when you sit down and have a conversation with someone and you get
a feeling for, or what you should be doing is getting a feeling for what products we offer
that they would benefit from, right? That they would really enjoy as a family.
And then giving them the opportunity to say yes or no to it, which is by far the biggest thing
missing in- They don't ask. A lot of people don't ask.
They don't show them anything. They get there for the toilet, stopped up, they plunge the toilet, auger the toilet, and they
roll out versus getting the needs, you know, the Tom Hopkins formula for needs, N-E-A-D-S.
What do they have now? What do they enjoy about what they have now? What would they alter,
if anything? Who's the decision makers? And what's the solution, solution the needs formula so they figure out what they
have now what would you change if you could change anything or my famous slash infamous question i
used to ask so if i would go on a on a fof we would call them at yes yes plumbing you know we
would hit plumbing maintenances twice a year because we had so few customers so we just go
out twice a year and and tune up the water heater So we'd just go out twice a year and tune up the
water heater and check the plumbing system. F'd out flushes is what we call them because you'd
have six badass dudes like Mike Bissell and Brent Buckley type guys out there before you.
There'd be nothing to do. So I would get out and I designed a question that would give me the
opportunity to get one more thing. So it could be a husband and wife, really work the best on the wife.
If it was like a high D disc profile or a strong like A type personality,
I'd probably skip this question.
But if you're sitting there with your coffee cup,
or if we have nothing but an ink pen in between us, I would say,
well, I'm all wrapped up here.
But I do have one more question before I take off. If this pen was a magic wand and all you had to do was go poof and your plumbing
system would be perfect, what would change? And before they would answer, because they would
automatically go, well, I would go, you got to use the wand. Or if they had like a coffee cup
sitting there, I would go, do me a favor. There's a genie in your coffee cup. You just rub the side of it and this purple
Robin Williams is going to pop out and you get to make one wish. And that wish is going to grant
you a perfect plumbing system in every way, shape, and form. What would you wish for? And if they go
to answer, I'd go, you got to rub the coffee cup. And what would
happen was, and this is just out of desperation, we get no hourly. I just, I have no idea what else
to show these people. So I'm just going to put the weight on them to have me show something.
I would ask one of these questions and then the answer would oftentimes be something that I never
thought of. Something that is either irritating to the wife who's home with the system
all day or to the husband that has one thing that bothers them, which is 90% of the things,
the answers I would get were things that bothered somebody. It was rarely like, I want this to
upgrade. But oftentimes it would be something cool, like adding a shower head to the shower
that's already there. Or like get the stuff hotter, quicker or what I could come up with.
That was a big one.
Yeah.
Also the wife would say oftentimes in plumbers,
if you're listening,
this is a big one.
The wife would say,
when I turn the faucet on in the morning,
I swear I smell pool water.
She gets a gust of chlorine because as it,
as it sits there and at the end of that faucet overnight,
it builds and builds and builds.
And when you first turn the faucet on in the morning, you get hit with that chlorine.
Yes.
Yeah.
And that's chemical.
They want that out of there.
So.
So it's interesting.
I was at this event.
I don't know if it was Pantheon and I'm on this bus and I'm sitting next to this guy and he's in South Florida, Tampa area, I think.
And he's like, dude, he's like, my average air conditioning sales, 45 grand. And I said, how's that possible? He goes, well, number one, I only market to these
houses. He goes, I'm not in the whole area. I'm specifically in multi-unit homes. Number two is
he goes, my famous thing I do is I get the wife and we walk around and he goes, one of the biggest things that, and I don't know much about HVAC,
but he said, when you're getting ready,
and these are pretty wealthy people,
when you're getting ready and you jump out of the shower and you're doing
your makeup,
does it get really musty and humid in here where it's like spreading your
makeup? Because you're returned and don't quote me on this,
but he's like, your return's in the wrong spot.
This place is going to be really humid until we fix the piping.
I don't know, the vents and the return in the right spots.
And he's like, once I have her and I found the need, and almost every time, it's Florida, it's humid.
Your makeup's going to spread.
He goes, but I can keep it way drier by the system we use.
And he goes, it's such a big need.
It's such a big deal.
Bree gets ready for an hour some days.
Yeah.
And she's got her in her closet.
Like if you were solving that pain, they would gladly do it.
And these people have money because they were marketing to the affluent.
And that's just one small thing.
I'm curious.
You've trained how many techs do you think?
Hundreds now.
Hundreds of techs. I've got a list that I made up on attributions of a great tech.
I'm going to name a few things.
I don't want you to name a few things.
You know, I don't look for people with skills.
I look for people that smile.
I look for people that are just, they tell a great story.
They're smiling.
They're confident.
They're optimistic.
They're people I want to get to know.
I look for people that actually don't mind writing down a plan and holding themselves
accountable. I look for people that love to practice mind writing down a plan and holding themselves accountable.
I look for people that love to practice.
They've been good at something, whether that's sports, whether that's karate, whether that's
playing the trumpet, farming's great.
And I look for their tone and I'm like, this is a guy I'd hang out with.
This is a gal that I'd absolutely do business with.
Like, that's someone I find as a busboy, an Amazon guy,, like I'm going to not only get their information,
but I'm going to almost beg them to give me an opportunity to work with them to just get them
out one day. And I feel like most people, they're not actively recruiting, but my guys don't take
no for an answer. They're like, they assume the sell. They say, here's what we're going to do
today to make everything all better. But what would you say you've got? You just went over
some of the top guys in the country
are in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, because we could all make great people. We know we're not born
and it's just how much time do you have? So if you were to get a great canvas, what would some
of these things be? So our rule was hire for charisma, train technical, but Aaron Buckwalter
and I did for the longest time. We were kind of shared operations management
of the three departments before we switched roles there. And we had one rule when we get into that
conference room to interview someone. And we interviewed everyone together, top down part
runners, CSRs, no matter what they had to go through us first. The rule was if we get into
that conference room, sorry, we would be in there first. If the person comes in
and the energy drops as a result of them coming in, we're done. If it stayed the same, we'd have
a conversation. But if the energy rose, now we're like you and I, we're just having fun. We're
talking about goals. We're making jokes. If the energy went up, we're probably hiring that person.
We didn't really look for a whole lot of other things,
but it's eye contact, it's smile, it's care about your appearance.
You don't have to be dressed necessarily correctly. Like there's no uniform you need in the interview,
but you have to give a crap about how you look.
Like this is...
Yeah, did you have a haircut?
Did you at least respect yourself enough?
This is an interview.
Yeah.
I mean, you don't need fancy clothes, but did you, did you at least attempt to look good? It was, uh, so I had this
question. I asked if you came in with long hair, a big beard or piercings in the face. It's tough,
man, because typically when you walk in like that, my hope is already down a little bit.
But if you walked in and sat down, one of the first questions I would ask was,
assuming this goes anywhere, not saying it will, not saying you'll want to be here necessarily, but assuming this goes somewhere, how married to the facial hair are you?
And if real quick, they said, you know, I'm trying to get this thing down to my knees,
that interview is done, you know? But if they said, not nearly as married as I am to a good
income and a solid career, but like, yeah, buddy, like that's what you want to hear, you know?
So mostly what we're looking for is like, I just had a conversation. I had an Uber, Uber dropped
me off just now from a house we're staying at in Glendale until our home closes on Friday.
And I love this guy. He's renovates homes as like his kind of side hustle
and then just does Uber when he's slow. Put him onto my show, put him onto your show,
told him he's got to take some steps, you know, and these shows would get him on the right track.
But what did I see? Great eye contact, hopped out of the vehicle to say what's up. Didn't like,
you know, just make me grab the door handle and get in, which some do. Big smile when I got in, shook my hand, wanted to make sure
he had the first name right. Shook my hand with eye contact. These are the things you look for.
A little bit of confidence, not all the confidence in the world, because I feel like typically,
and maybe not in a hundred percent of cases, but in, in 100% of cases, but in a large majority of cases, your most successful people
have been through some stuff. They're humbly confident. They've not had the easiest life
in most cases. Hopefully one good parent, at least, but majority of my highest producers
I've trained, including myself, had it pretty rough in the beginning, have had to go through
some things. So you might have low confidence in the beginning, but you're looking at somebody
that you go, I can work with that. You know, they can be molded because I was molded. I was a piece
of crap when I got to yes. And I had very few qualities. Yeah, but it also, I guess it goes to
the point where you went and you sold timeshares for a year and a half. You went to how many
different places? I think Tom Hopkins is the man,
but my biggest thing is now at the point in my career,
I did this for 17 years.
The first seven to 10 years,
I could hire people and work with them for years.
Now I don't have the luxury.
I've got big goals.
I'm not saying I don't give people opportunity.
I'm just saying that if you want to change your perception of yourself,
go work at Starbucks and then come back to me once you believe in yourself.
Cause I always say,
when I start my orientation,
you'll believe in me because I care about you.
I love you guys.
Like I'll do anything to make sure you're successful.
You'll have new trucks.
You'll have the best tools.
You'll have the best trainers.
You'll have the market acceleration technician training.
You'll have a great market manager.
One thing I can't do is give you, I can't look in the mirror
for you and say, I believe in me because I believe in myself. I believe when I walk in a room,
I'm a badass. I have the best self-perception of myself. And that's hard. It's hard to change that.
Man, I firmly believe when it comes to you sitting in a conference room interviewing someone, in most cases, you're probably seeing the absolute best version of that person sitting
across from you because you bring it out in people. Your energy is electric. Your confidence
is contagious. You know, I feel more confident around you. I feel like, you know, we're going
out to dinner tonight with the sales boss and our wives, Jonathan Wistman. And I'm like, you know, we're going out to dinner tonight with the, uh, with the sales boss and our wives, uh, Jonathan Wisman. And I'm like, you know, candidly, I'm like, man, talking to my wife,
we just made a big move. We were getting, you know, two thirds of the house and one eighth of
the property for twice the price of where we live currently. And like financially, this is a big
step for us and times are tight, but I'm like, babe, I want to buy these guys dinner.
I don't want to chance one of these guys feeling like picking up the tab tonight.
We didn't end there.
Don't worry.
But I'm like, just in Tommy's case alone, and I'm a huge fan of the sales boss.
That book was revolutionary to me.
I had no idea you knew him personally.
I just told him because they requested to come on Waste No
Day. And I said, are you kidding me? Like, I love the sales boss and I loved his episode of your
show. And I said, I'll be in Arizona next week. Why don't we get together and talk about the
episode? And he said, or his assistant said, yeah, we'll see if we can get Tommy to join.
I'm like, get the, of course, Tommy knows him, you know? but what I was saying to her was like,
you know, Tommy in particular has done so much for me confidence wise, career wise, with very little personal influence on anything that's happened in my life. But like
listening to your show religiously weekly, I always say it's the one I listened to. I actually
listened to two religiously. It's this one and the Wizard of Ads podcast,
but it's only six minutes a week.
So it's pretty easy to listen to.
You know, I'm a paralysis by analysis guy.
I grew up in Southwest Detroit.
I went to a Detroit public high school.
I grew up in a place where the nail that sticks out gets hammered, flat out, 100%.
And I grew up looking a certain way
that I already stood out everywhere I went in Detroit.
So I was trying as hard as possible not to any more than I already did.
But you and your show and your energy really inspire me to just take action, man, to like
believe in myself more.
And you're a Michigan boy like I am, you know.
So I think your energy promotes people having more self-confidence. So the people
you're seeing are probably completely different people and much better people than a two garage
door across the street that probably interviewed them before you. You know, it's interesting
because I could do so much, but what I've learned is when you have accountability at work, and I'm
a big piece of that, but you need the accountability at home.
And you just said you've been talking to your wife.
You guys made a big move.
You talked about dinner tonight.
I've got a gal, Leslie, one of my top guy's wives,
that says, Eric, don't come home until you sell a garage door.
We're going on pinnacle trip.
We are going to earn this trip.
We are going to earn equity in the business.
We are going to do this. When they have that at home. So you want to know a little secret.
You get a player, take their wife, take their husband out, find out how much they respect each
other because if they're not having a great time together and they just, there's like this
contempt and this is unhealthy relationship. How's someone going to go? And you can just
see their bickering.
You can just see they're mad at each other all the time.
You can just see the marriage is not really going anywhere.
If you're not happy at home,
it's hard to come off and turn that off.
One of my guys says, zip it up when you leave.
But when they're very good with each other
and they bought it and the wife's bought it,
all those bad days, those hard days,
those Saturdays they got to pick up,
maybe a late job,
all of a sudden it's easy
because they're working on a goal.
They understand what they're working towards.
Even their kids are involved.
I think you have to have that.
Yeah.
And when you have that and you've got a great ride along and the team that's
going to train and do the ride alongs that trainers believe you help pick
them.
So it's not Tommy Mello decided this.
Therefore he's granted in.
If I meet somebody and I love them,
they will have a better chance of making it,
but everyone's gotta be bought in.
Hey guys, I hope you're enjoying this podcast interview.
Before we go ahead, I wanna let you know
about the next Freedom Event that's gonna blow your mind.
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that helped me grow my garage door business
to over 200 million in revenue.
But at the Freedom Event,
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by giving you access to the people who actually helped me turn these ideas and systems and processes into reality.
These experts help me build an amazing culture in my company and recruit A-plus players that I have
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elevate your business, make sure to get tickets to the freedom event.com freedom event.com.
That's freedom event.com. And I hope to see you in Orlando. Now let's get back to the interview.
And that's the other thing you have to like, you don't have years to invest in people anymore
with this role shift that I'm making at a different company. I'm actually
going from vice president of sales of a 130 person team to something significantly smaller,
just a restructured version of what I do now. I'll actually have a little more time for one-on-ones,
but you don't have to have that at your size because the team that you've put in place now
is just micro versions of you all the way down the line. And everyone that person comes in contact with is getting
little pieces of you instilled in them so that what used to be two and a half years
to get someone somewhere should now be like three to six months.
Well, I look at this. One thing I've really examined over the years is I kind of watch
how people gather. What I noticed one day is this, my cousin, who's definitely not listening to this show,
so no worries, but he was working in Kansas City. And then I had another manager in Dallas and they
called each other every day and complained. And they also sat in the back of the room.
They also rolled their eyes whenever anybody talked. And those guys couldn't attract great
talent. You walk in their place, the A1 there, there was pizza left out from two weeks
ago. None of the chairs were tucked in. They didn't have the A1 core values anywhere. I mean,
literally Jonathan Wissman went to Kansas and said, this is disgusting. You'd be ashamed.
This was never how you'd run. I've been to everywhere that you've been to and it looks
extravagant. Like if a toilet's running too long, if a fan blade's dirty, I'm looking at it.
And this is not who you are. And I've noticed that with technicians, CSRs, dispatchers,
there's certain people that kind of, they gather together and there's other people that gather
together. They don't drink as much. They're focused. They got their eye on the ball. Their
families know. They become very great fishermen and they always talk to each other about the good.
And it's a mindset thing.
Like, listen, get your head out of the gutter.
You're going to a tune-up.
They called you for a tune-up for something.
Who cares?
The CSR didn't do a perfect job.
Who cares?
Control what you can control.
That's what I tell people.
Don't worry about things out of your control.
Focus on the things you can control.
You know, someone says, I don't get as many leads.
All these business owners I deal with.
What's your booking rate? Well, I'm not really sure.
What's your conversion rate?
What's your average ticket?
How much are your people promoting you?
Do you have self-generated leads that you pay them on?
Like, these are all things you can control,
but you're bitching about the marketing company
because the last few years we were spoiled.
If you didn't make money the last few years,
you shouldn't be in business.
Yeah.
Period. You're
probably not by now. Yeah. Jocko Willink has a great saying, and we have his trainers on his
echelon front leadership trainers on off in that and on waste no day, really just working our way
to getting Jocko on. But his saying is one word, whatever the complaint is that you just said,
he answers with good. So, you know, that's exactly what my guy says.
Hey, your alarm didn't go off or you're tired when you wake up.
Good.
You know, the weights, you don't feel like doing it.
Good.
You know, you don't want to get in the ice plunge.
Good.
All this stuff is good.
If you don't have the calls, good.
You have more time to spend with each client.
Yeah, you get three reviews.
You get five reviews.
You get to know the neighbors while you're there. You got plenty of time. You. You get three reviews. You get five reviews. You, you,
you make it to know the neighbors while you're there.
You got plenty of time.
You go to a BNI meeting on the way home.
You learn how to close.
Imagine such a thing.
Well,
I will say,
I will say this.
And I've been in this shoes.
If you got one call a day for five days in a row,
that's your everything.
You're almost like guarding it.
You're like,
I don't want to,
I don't want to lose. Like I gotta like really be careful because this is my,
I need to feed my family with this one call. So it's my job to make sure you got three calls.
We're on 40 markets. It's just capacity planning is a pain in the ass, but I take that very
personal. That's my number one goal is to drive leads just to make sure guys have somewhere to go,
make sure they do. And I'll send somebody to Denver,
send somebody all over the country
to make sure they're willing to do that.
Because, and then my biggest secret sauce
that I never talk about on podcasts,
finally, is I'm going to go buy a small company.
If I don't have enough leads, I'm buying lead sources.
You know how hard it is to make Google rank
and do everything.
All I do is buy two lead sources there.
Somebody that's running nine calls per day.
I can pay them way more than they're worth.
I'm buying lead sources.
The best thing I tell my market managers to do
is go find a couple of small companies
that are getting 20 leads a day
because of stickers or because of past customers
or because they're good on Nextdoor or Yelp or whatever.
That's good, man.
It's a lot cheaper than trying to figure Google out.
I think we're good at a lot of things.
And my big push yesterday,
we partnered with CoreTech and I said, guys, we're going good at a lot of things. And my big push yesterday, you know, we partnered with Core Tech
and I said, guys,
we're going to spend a lot of money
over the next six months.
I picked five markets.
We're going to blast the branding.
We're going to be on every TV commercial.
You're going to see 60 billboards.
You're going to see us on radio bus stops.
You're going to see our trucks.
We're going to be at every single event.
And I said, this is going to bury us
for EBITDA for the first six months. And they have a lot of faith in me. And they said, is this what you want to do? I said, this is going to bury us for EBITDA for the first six months.
And they have a lot of faith in me. And they said, is this what you want to do? I said, yeah.
It's not a one-year plan. It's not a one-year plan. So I really love the conversation. This
is so important because everybody always asks me, how do you get such great people?
What other things? So I've got maintenance techs, right? The guys that go run the service agreements.
You guys have that.
What's the different personality between someone going and running those and working on turnovers
than maybe a top guy running a 10-year-old unit?
So we have in Lancaster at the Mr. Sparky in particular, Logan Altlin is the highest
producing electrician in all of Mr. Sparky, right? He only
runs demand calls. Right. Struggles with a maintenance call. Jamie Mellinger is the third
highest producing Sparky in the country. He's been first two years by the last four or five.
He only runs maintenance calls. And this is so interesting because I want to know,
you got to explain this.
So we did a great objections episode with the two of those guys where we actually covered this and then just did objections for,
I don't know,
an hour and a half.
But what is that?
What is the name of that podcast?
It's waste no day,
but waste no day.
Let me say it one more time.
Waste.
But what is that episode?
Starring Brian Bird.
That's objections.
I think it's just called objections with Jamie and Logan.
It's pretty phenomenal. Well, that's, that's a must listen to for those out there. But guess what?
All of A1 technicians and starters are going to be listening to that. I've already done two.
This is what I do. More downloads, baby. Yeah. So Jamie is, and I was a maintenance guy. Now,
if there's a water heater leaking everywhere and it flooded out the HVAC unit and there's water all over the house, obviously that's the call anyone wants in a plumbing truck.
Outside of that, give me a maintenance call 100% of the time.
I crushed maintenance calls.
And the way Jamie sees it is their guard is a little lower.
There's not a lot of heavy stress in the home already, you know, so people are relaxed.
They see him as just coming in and checking the system out. And if he doesn't find anything that
needs to be done and just offers a few minor upgrades that they would just enjoy having,
he gets out of their hair, no harm, no foul, no money spent. But more times than not,
he finds some things that either need to be done or he thinks they'll really enjoy
more about their electrical system.
And since their guard isn't already up
and their hands aren't in front of their face
and they don't feel all defensive,
they're never getting estimates.
They're taking that work right there
because Sparky's their company
and Jamie is their technician and that's that.
So he feels like I felt in a truck,
you don't have to overcome the already existing stress. You don't
have to overcome the fact that they're getting two more estimates out because they already knew
they had a problem. Logan, on the other hand, who struggles with maintenance calls, he thrives on
that stress. I mean, he's such an empathetic guy. As soon as he walks in the home and you have no
power and half your house and the salmon that you and your
grandfather caught in Alaska a year and a half ago that's in the deep freezer is getting ready
to start thawing. And oh my gosh, if that happens, you know, and like he feels your pain deeply
and works with you to overcome whatever the pain source is. He builds such a friend on that stress
that he can literally sell anything he wants. He sells water treatment all the is. He builds such a friend on that stress that he can literally sell anything
he wants. He sells water treatment all the time. He sells HVAC equipment all the time.
He just gets in there and makes it happen. It's really two different personalities. Jamie's very,
very process driven. Jamie uses my sales system literally to the letter. And every time I want
to try something new, funny about Jamie, every time I want to try something new in the sales process, I haven't run a call in
almost a decade, right? So I'm not going out in the field and trying these processes out.
I'll call Jamie and I'll say, next time you get this objection, try this rebuttal. Now,
word for word, boom. And he'll write it down. And next time he does, and the next time he gets that
objection, he'll try the rebuttal and he'll call me from that call and say here's what they said he'll literally try
it word for word anything i come up with so he's very process driven whereas logan on the other
hand is all people he feels everything you feel parroted back to you builds a relationship like
you cannot believe he has people crying with him i think he cries with them too, like all the time.
So it's, yeah, it's two completely different personality types.
You know, it's interesting.
I have the same guy that I just use,
I've used for the last eight years.
And I'm like, listen, I got this idea.
And one day I wrote down the top part.
I could put a lot of frivolous things
like surge protector, deco hardware.
I thought of everything, oversized bottom rubber.
It comes with thicker hinges.
And I said, see if you can get $3,200 for this.
This was years and years ago.
He's like, boss, I sold two of them today.
And then I sat around.
I said, a week later, I said, see if you can get $5,000 for that.
Started slanging them.
And I was like, because I just, I wrote down, it was like 20 things that came in this package.
It was everything I could think of.
And I'm like, when I looked at the pricing, I was like, we're not really making as much as I thought on this.
And now that, that package is like eight grand.
And still.
And then now that I've got economies of scale, I went back to my vendors and I said, guys, do you want my business?
Because I've got choices and I need you guys.
And I said, here's where I need to be.
And I said, how much of my business do you want? Well, I got a text message on Friday that said,
we're going to be your biggest partner. And those are the type of people that they want our business
because they see us scaling and they say, we don't get in now and do something. So I didn't let them
give us their best price. I told them where I needed to be.
And I don't know what Chris Voss would say about that,
but in a negotiation, I think if I walked up to you.
His number one thing he would say in a successful negotiation,
both parties win.
Oh, absolutely.
Both parties got to win.
And I said, hey, give us the biggest things you guys make money on.
And I want to know that.
I want to know your one-year, three-year, five-year plan.
And I want you to come in and spiff us on the things you make the most money on.
Get my guys in that behavior of selling that stuff.
And I used to buy and sell a lot of cars.
And let's pretend me and you are buying and selling a car right now.
You got a car listed at $95 a quart.
And you're selling it for $5,000.
I don't know.
$5,000.
Low miles.
And I say, Brian, what's the lowest you'll take?
And you go, you know, $4,500.
If I offer you $3,000,
you're insulted. But if I
walked up to you, Brian, and I said, Brian,
CB joints. CB joints.
Gone.
The tires need to be replaced.
I need to do this, this, this, and this.
The max I could possibly give you, and by the way, I'm buying this literally, and I'm going to use
emotion. I'm going to say, I'm barely making ends meet. This is so me and my, I get to get my
daughter to school. This is like, this is very important for our family. I got cash right now.
I can give you 2,500. If you need work around the house,
I'll help you.
I just,
I want you to feel my empathetic to me.
I want you to feel emotion and I want to give you a decent offer and let you
know what I need to do to make it safe for my family.
You'd probably take that.
Yeah.
And even if you wouldn't,
what I wouldn't feel was screw this guy.
He's wasting my time.
Versus if you offered me 500 more at three grand, I'd go screw this guy. He's wasting my time. Versus if you offered me 500 more at three grand,
I'd go screw this guy. He's wasting my time, roll my eyes, walk away. But if you offered me 500 less
than that, the way you did it, this conversation is not over. Even if I can't take 2,500.
My dad called me earlier and he's like, it's good buddy, John. He's doing some work,
handyman work at a guy's house. And the guy's like, I'm donating this van to charity.
And he goes, well, I don't have a really good vehicle to drive to work at all.
He goes, why don't I be your charity?
And I'll come do whatever you need at the house anytime.
He's like, I'm just trying to make ends meet.
The guy's 72 years old.
So, I mean, what would the charity have got a couple of grand for a guy that's going to come now and be available?
And those are the things just asking and being empathetic and saying, listen, this is, I learned this from Josh from Parker and sons, Josh Kelly.
As he says, you know how we made it so easy that anybody could do it is Brian, here's what you need to do.
This from my house, I would say, this is what you should do.
This is good at working.
This is what you should do.
And if you were my mom and I would say this this is what you should do. This will get it working. This is what you should do. And if you were my mom, and I would say this, my mom worked three jobs when my mom
and dad got a divorce when I was seven. My mom was a server, a bartender, and she also was a
real estate agent. She'd go knocking on doors. For a sale by owner, she was there knocking on
their door. She was on high heels all day. I love my mother more than anything. This is what I would
do for mom. You know how powerful, then shut up. And it does everything, but it's simple that any technician could do it.
You need to do, here's what you should do. And if you were my mom and then look at them and say,
my mom is everything or say your grandpa, say whoever took care of you, that you look out for,
that you would really, and I always ask my guys, would you really fix this story for your grandpa?
You must be a really shitty grandson. You're going to fix this piece of shit.
You know what I mean?
That's really what I feel.
And if you make it so simple and they could practice,
and it's so hard for people to do stuff in front of me.
So I stay away.
But as long as I could do it in front of the trainer,
because I get that some people in front of me,
they feel like,
well,
is he going to criticize?
I don't care.
Just keep practicing.
If you can't do it in front of your family,
that's what role play is for.
Role play,
role play,
role play.
Get humiliated here.
So you never get it in the client's house.
Tom Hopkins was the ace of it.
He goes, repeat after me exactly like me.
This is not a prepayment.
Word for word.
Prepayment penalty?
No, it's a prepayment privilege.
Because you got the privilege to pay it out for them.
In 05, when I was, you know, in 04, I knocked on my first door as this quote unquote selling plumber for Ken.
I had knocked on hundreds of doors over the years as a plumber, but this is the first time as you
know, my palms were sweaty. I had a huge knot in my stomach. I'm like, I'm expected to sell
on top of be a plumber. And I was a complete train wreck knocking on that door.
It was a Moen 1222 cartridge in a tub that wouldn't shut off all the way. And I did not
get the sale. It's just a $200, $200 job. And I missed my very first call for Ken out at yes.
But the very next year, I don't know, seven, eight months later, went out to Tom Hopkins
bootcamp for the first time. And I was on stage, actually posted a picture of it on,
on Facebook here recently of me and Tom on stage role playing something in front of, I don't know what it was, 2,000 people or whatever he had at those boot camps.
Like, you want to talk about humiliating.
And Tom, you know, Tom, he didn't humiliate anyone.
He's actually been on Waste No Day as well.
But he didn't humiliate you, but he corrected you and you went back again.
But doing it in front of that crowd.
Let me tell you, when I went back to do it in front of John and Sally at their kitchen table,
you know how much easier it was than the week before? I went out to this boot camp to do it in front of all these hundreds or thousands of people or whatever. The role play, in my opinion,
is popular and as much as we know it's necessary at the higher level of
organizations and in the industries, I still know for a fact, because I talk to business owners all
day, every day now, uh, reaching out for advice and whatnot, because of the show, when you want
help with your sales, the first thing I say is like, first question I ask is how's the role play
going? And so it's twofold. One, you have to be role
playing. Two, you got to be role playing stuff that actually works. It's always horrible when
someone says we're doing role playing. And I say, well, what are you role playing in terms of asking
for the business? And you hear something like, so do you want it? And you're like, that's no,
you're role playing the wrong thing. So it's not practice doesn't make perfect, right? As Lombardi
would say, perfect practice makes perfect. So yeah, role-playing it is supposed to be humiliating,
right? It's supposed to take you out of comfort zones. It's supposed to like,
it's supposed to make you kick down walls of anxiety that are keeping you from actually
getting up in front of your peers and doing it. When you master doing something
back and forth, like between you and me in front of a bunch of judgmental technicians that all know
how it's supposed to go and they're quietly or loudly making fun of you for doing it wrong.
When you get it right in front of that group and you go to do it, it's nothing. I'm telling you,
it's nothing to do it in front of the client after that. So role play, role play in front of Tommy if you have the opportunity.
Like you've never had a better chance to grow than role playing it in front of someone who's
probably going to call you out for every mistake you make and hopefully embarrass you.
Because when you realize that you're not going to die from a little embarrassment,
you're actually going to get stronger, then you've accomplished something.
You're on your way to being great. Oh, I love this. You know, Xavier and Giuseppe have been
really like thinking about ways to get great content. And I'm like, you guys just want me
to show up to houses when they're doing an estimate? Yes. Because when I show up there,
that'd be great. But I was like, listen, do you think you could out beat any of your sales guys?
And I'm like, I don't necessarily think I could beat every single salesperson, but I guarantee you one thing.
I'm going to make sure they're raving fans. I'm going to make sure I got the neighbor's names,
HOA presence names. I'm getting the reviews. I'm going to make sure that I left them in a position
to become an ambassador of our brand. And when I'll show up, I'll just say, listen,
you know, the reason why we have a two-tier system
is so you could call your manager
and that you're talking to someone of power
that can make decisions.
My guys are not allowed to give more than 5% off of a deal.
They got to call it in.
And we keep an eye on our discounts.
We learned a lot of that from your podcast.
It's just, why are you discounting your service?
Do you not believe in it? Like, do you not, I pay more for everything. If there's two things
on Amazon and one's $10 more, I'm paying for the more expensive books. I'm like,
what's wrong with this other one? Like, yeah. Why can they afford to give money off on this one?
It's just like, literally I got one of my dad, my dad, one of those motors that you put together
real slowly. And like one was 500, one was was 200 it looked like the identical one about the 500 one i guess someone was made just that thing still runs
i go over to his house and we play that all the time yeah so discounting is that you know there
are cheat codes in sales i believe the strongest one we have is gratitude and i'd love to spend
five minutes on it in the way that I
train it. But gratitude is literally a cheat code really to life. Forget about selling, but life in
general. But another one is discounting. When you offer something and you have interest and you just
drop the price by 20% and say, hey, if you want to do it right now, we'll do it for this. That is a
cheat code. People who are horrible at sales find great
success with that discounting. The problem is it is a race to closing the business's doors
because you train your clients to expect it. You train your people to offer it. If you allow
discounting, you are training people to use it. If you discount as a tech, you're training your
client to never pay. Roy H. Williams said this,
when you establish yourself as a company that discounts, you establish your client to say,
never pay that company full price because they will do it for less.
You know, when you're operating in businesses that are, you know, hopefully around 20%
net profit, and you start thinking about the fact that you're giving someone 15% off, you're giving 75%
of the company's money away in one job for what reason? I mean, what's the reason? Because nobody
can eat revenue, right? You don't keep revenue. Revenue just pays the bills. Profit is the only
thing the company makes. So imagine giving away 75% of your paycheck because that's what you're doing to the company,
to the team when you give a 15% discount on 20% net profit.
That's ridiculous.
And I understand.
We're going to spend, this is going to be one of two because we're going to have something
in 10 minutes, but here's what I'm going to do.
I am going to figure out a way to hire you to come in to this class.
There's only about 10 guys for the next class.
But if I could break you for three hours, because I'm always wanting to train the trainer.
And if there's gold, you know, I got a meeting in September with all my managers in the whole hiring.
And my biggest complaint is I'm like, is this somebody you'd want at your grandma's house?
Or if your wife was at home with your,
your 17 year old daughter,
is this a guy you want coming in?
Yeah.
It looks,
they're not everything,
but just the whole demeanor.
And my biggest thing is I want to hire aces.
Can you imagine if you had all a plus players,
what would happen if you had all of uh
jamie's and logan's i can't even well you guys would be at 100 million i sure wouldn't want to
manage that team but you know eight players are a little offense guys i love you guys but you know
you guys are a headache the prima donnas they all get like that needy i mean i was a i was a high
producer i was needy man all top producers dale stills was needy, man. All top producers. Dale Stills was needy.
He wanted it set up so perfectly.
You know, Dale and I were together for a few hours the other night,
and he says, you know, Tommy, I closed higher than anybody
because I demanded perfection if I was going to take their call.
He goes, but we didn't sell as much as we could
because I literally made it so good that if I didn't have the five green lights
and it wasn't perfect, I didn't want the call.
So I said, go back there and get it.
And if they didn't get it, I didn't take the call.
Because that's why I had, you know, I think he did $12 million in a year.
That's when he got his reflex.
There's a, you said, images or appearances and everything.
For first impression, appearance is literally everything.
It's the only thing a client has to go off of. And in 2013, there was a Journal of Behavioral Ecology did a
survey with 100 men and 100 women where they just simply asked every person to draw a picture of a
criminal. 100% drew a man.
Of course, because we're going to do the crime, you know.
I would draw a man for sure.
82% of both total combined, 82% drew facial hair on that man.
Only 18% drew somebody with no facial hair.
Now, I don't know what the numbers are anymore.
I know back in the early 2000s.
I want that survey.
I'll get it to you, buddy. yeah the point being like I believe we're at a point where facial hair is more
acceptable now than it ever was before you will not see me with facial hair because my mentor Lance
back in the day if I came in with with two days worth of stubble and I couldn't grow much facial
hair anyway but I'd still get that stubble. He would take my first call, give it to someone else and make me go, go shave. Now,
a lot of people would love to have that time off in the morning, but that wasn't me, bro. I was in
my in-laws apartment sleeping above my brother-in-law and my pregnant wife was on the couch.
Like I needed work. So when he sent me home to go shave and I missed my first call, I missed money.
So it's drilled into me.
I'll never have facial hair and consider myself a professional.
But yeah, just look at that survey.
Like that's a, that's something that tells you something.
82% of people.
I love what you said.
I love it.
Hey, Brian.
So I close out.
Like I said, we're going to do a 2.0 in the next month because I love this stuff.
And there's so much more.
And I'm going to talk to you a few times about it.
We'll get ready for it because there's a lot of things I think we could do.
I wouldn't even mind getting a little bit of you questioning a little bit of Jamie and Logan.
But yeah, if someone wants to reach out to you, Brian, obviously, Waste No Day.
You can listen to the podcast.
It's a wealth of knowledge.
Lots of great people are on there. WasteNoDay.com has some contact info for me. If you just find me
on Facebook, Brian Burton, Waste No Day, shoot me a Facebook message. At some point, I respond to
every message. I will get back to you. So as we close out, would you mind? I'm not a big poetry
guy. Okay. But you know, the times that most small business
owners are having in the trades right now. I mean, the last three years were big money makers,
a relative ease of doing so. I mean, it's not easy, but it's the easiest it's probably ever been.
This year has not been that, as you know, I'm sure you talk to enough trade people.
Most businesses are struggling to put calls on the board, particularly in HVAC for
some reason. It seems to be the hardest hit one. A lot of layoffs are happening in companies where
you wouldn't think that would be happening, but the big name companies. And I just wanted to,
I wanted to read my favorite poem. I'm not a big poetry guy, but this one's a, I feel it's an
encouraging word. And whenever I'm struggling, I go back to this poem and it's
written by a fellow Michigander, Douglas Malick, who also grew up in Michigan, although he was
born in like 1887 or something. So we didn't get to know him, but it's a, it's an encouraging word
for going through some stuff. And if you're a business owner or manager, or even a tech,
and you don't have calls right now, you're going through some stuff. And if you're a business owner or manager or even a tech and you don't have
calls right now, you're going through some stuff. I mean, regardless of whose fault it is or how you
can make it better, like your world sucks right now. And I get it. So would you mind if I close
this out? All right, here we go. The tree that never had to fight for sun and sky and air and
light, but stood out in the open plain and always got its share of rain,
never became a forest king, but lived and died a scrubby thing, the man who never had to toil
to gain and farm his patch of soil, who never had to win his share of sun and sky and light and air, never became a manly man, but lived and died as he began.
Good timber does not grow with ease. The stronger wind, the stronger trees. The further sky,
the greater length. The more the storm, the more the strength. By sun and cold, by rain and snow, in trees and men, good timbers grow.
Where thickest lies the forest growth, we find the patriarchs of both.
And they hold counsel with the stars, whose broken branches show their scars.
Of many winds and of much strife, this is the common law of life.
Ha ha ha ha.
Yeah.
Douglas Malick.
Oh, good times grow weak men.
That's a fact.
Yeah.
So, listen, Brian, we talked a lot about a lot of great stuff.
I love that poem because I think about all the strife I've been through in my life.
And I think about my parents and how much they've cried about things that have happened to me. And I say, mom, dad, it's 3%. The 97 has been good. It's made me stronger.
And I look at everything half, if the cup is empty, I still think there's a drop in there.
It's full. So great poem. Is there anything you want to close out with? The poem was amazing,
but it's just a message to the, uh to the audience here that we didn't cover.
That's how I wanted to go out, buddy. All right. Well, listen, we're going to do it again.
I'm going to have you work with our trainers just one day. We'll make it worth your time.
Oh, I would say a book, a book that I... Yeah, give me the three books. I was going to ask that.
I don't believe most books I would say I've heard mentioned on here before,
but one book in particular, I don't think I heard mentioned on here before.
He was a guest on the show. He works with the Black Swan Group, Chris Voss's company. It's
called Ego Authority Failure by Derek Gaunt. Derek was the commander of the hostage negotiations
task force, I believe, Washington DC for like 25 years.
And it's a book on leadership and how ego is the ultimate crusher of souls. And it's such a,
such a good leadership book. But I mean, if I left with a message, I'm buying that with four,
two leaders, I presume. Yeah. If I left with a message, it would be like, man, for leaders,
like forget yourself, encourage your people, stop with all the disciplinary and stuff,
breaking people and crushing people's spirit. I want to see more encouragement and more light
and more appreciation in the trades. Great job, Ryan. I really appreciate it.
Looking forward to dinner tonight. Awesome. Can't wait. All right, guys, hopefully you implement some of this stuff.
Lots of good knowledge dropped and we'll catch you on the next episode.
And PS,
the biggest compliment I could ever receive for what we do here.
We don't sell ads.
We don't really do any of that stuff.
This is not a money grab,
but if you let us know how we're doing on the reviews,
it would mean a lot to me.
It means a lot to Brian.
When you do it with waste note day, it's just take a the reviews. It would mean a lot to me. It means a lot to Brian when you do it with Waste No Day.
It just takes a few minutes.
It doesn't take long, but it makes the biggest difference in the world
if you just let us know how we're doing like this and share it on Facebook.
Really appreciate it.
You guys have a 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,
head over to elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast
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Thanks again for listening
and we'll catch up with you next time on the podcast. you