The Home Service Expert Podcast - The Power of Mindset in Entrepreneurship with Ryan Lee
Episode Date: September 1, 2025In this conversation, Tommy Mello and Ryan Lee discuss the essential elements of business success, including the importance of mindset, pricing strategies, and building a strong team. They explore the... challenges of partnerships, the significance of intentional living, and the need for effective marketing strategies. The discussion emphasizes learning from mistakes, the role of systems in business, and the impact of leadership on company culture. They also touch on financial strategies for sustainable growth and the importance of continuous learning and networking in the business landscape. 00:00 Setting the Stage for Success 03:03 Intentional Living and Business Growth 05:51 The Importance of Mindset in Business 08:58 Navigating Partnerships and Family in Business 12:06 The Power of Pricing and Value 14:49 Building a Winning Team and Culture 17:45 Marketing Strategies for Growth 20:36 Learning from Mistakes and Failures 23:32 The Role of Systems and Processes 26:31 The Impact of Leadership on Business 29:51 Financial Strategies for Sustainable Growth 32:37 The Importance of Continuous Learning 35:24 Building Relationships and Networking 38:27 The Future of Business and Innovation 41:28 Final Thoughts and Key Takeaways
Transcript
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You have to charge enough to act like the company that you want to be instead of the business you are today.
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 ask the team to take notes for you.
Just text, note, N-O-T-E-S, to 888-526-1-2-99.
That's 888-5-26-1299, 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 elevate and win.com for slash podcast to get your copy.
Now let's go back into the interview.
Welcome back to the home service expert today.
I got my man Ryan Lee in the house.
He's an expert at sales and business.
He's based out of Lehigh, Utah.
He's a business coach.
Ryan Lee is an entrepreneur from Salt Lake City, Utah, and has started and grown several
multimillion dollar businesses.
He has personally sold over $15 million.
products and services over his career.
He is the founder of Landscape Lighting Secrets, a coaching company dedicated to helping outdoor
lighting, professional scale, profitable businesses with confidence.
He was also the president of majestic outdoor lighting.
After showing his landscaping lighting business in 2019 when he was doing 200K plus a month,
Ryan founded the world's first coaching program dedicated to the landscape lighting industry.
He's discovered that most contractors struggle now with their technical
skills, but with pricing, sales, and mindset required to grow.
Ryan, it's great to have you on, brother.
Looking forward to the conversation, man.
You know, I was telling you, I don't know what it's like to not have a pack
schedule.
And I'm talking some six in the morning.
My parents came over for dinner after a marketing meeting last night.
I got my mom to stay an extra two hours.
But it's not always business.
Sometimes it's a fun.
I got to go to Chicago Sunday, lots of meetings, meeting with Chamberlain.
Some of it's church stuff, some of it's call your buddy.
I mean, it's got to make it on my schedule.
So when I say I'm burning the candle, I just got a lot going on.
And a lot of it's fun stuff.
And still, you got to get on a plane, show up.
And I'm not a planner.
I don't go to these trips and like have an agenda from soup to nuts.
Actually, when I went to Idaho for nine days, part of me is like, I love Lake Life.
Part of me is like, I got to get back into my habits and back into the grind.
But what's been going on with you, man?
Where have you been for the audience?
What do you love doing today and where are you going?
Yeah, I mean, I hear what you're saying.
I look at like my last month, for example.
And the last month was busy, you know, like super busy.
I had, I went to an event to speak and help train some people.
Then I went on a week long family vacation.
We rented a boat, went up to Island Park, Idaho, had a blast.
And then that's when you start kind of missing work again.
Like, do I feel guilty?
Do I need to go?
Do I need to be somewhere?
Then I went and spoke at another event.
And then now I got like my to do list, which is like starting to take over.
So I'm busy as well.
But the thing that I've I've done in the last, I'd say the last 12 to 18 months is I've gotten a lot more intentional.
I'm learning to say no.
I'm learning to just do like, like I'm making the rules to my game.
I used to try to like fit everyone in, fit everything and like, okay, well, I can do that.
I can do that.
But I don't know.
I think I'm carving my own, my own path now.
I'm finding my own things that make me happy and what works for my family, what works for my businesses.
I, I'm engaged.
We're getting married January 1st of 2027.
And I said, hey, can I work a lot until that date?
Because we're going to be pushing for kids.
And by the way, when I'm not working.
Hey, real quick, can I work a lot?
Before I propose, can I work?
can I work a lot until January 2027?
She knows there's a lot of things in motion that should have a date before then
and a lot of different business affairs.
And that doesn't mean we're not doing a bunch of fun stuff.
And, you know, when you're building places and building teams, it's just, it's front-loaded.
And I do need to learn to say no more.
That's a really good skill.
But a lot of people are like, man, he works a lot.
But I'm like, dude, here's the deal.
We're going to do $325 million this year.
And I spent a full day last weekend,
literally from morning to night whiteboarding
on how to get to 30% to the bottom line.
We're 26.5%.
And I came up with 10 ways to do it.
And in my mind, there's no way we're not going to hit 30%.
And there's no way we cannot hit 400 million next year.
So you do the math, it's a pretty good outcome.
And I feel like we're just getting started.
like this is a brand new business.
Like I feel like,
people are like, man, what does it feel like?
I'm like, it feels like we got a lot of work to do
because we're just getting started,
even though it's been two decades.
We've created a new business every quarter.
And that's what makes it fun for me.
And, but now I can say that if I leave for a year,
nothing falls apart.
They don't need me anymore,
which is exactly where I want to be.
So now I'm just the gas pedal.
Now I'm going, okay, how do we do this?
How do we do this?
How do we get more efficient?
How do we, how do we lower the turnover rate?
how do we do that? Then what are the other industry? So I'm going to come in the last 10 years
of my life is going to be initiated by the end of next year of when we start adding garage
flooring, front doors, garage storage, mini splits, water treatment, windows. And so a lot of the
work I've been doing hasn't even paid off yet of being on these stages and this podcast and
everything else. But it's all about to come to fruition and I've already manifested everything. So
people say, why do you keep going?
I love it.
I'm like, why does Tiger Woods keep golfing?
It's because of what I love.
Some people like watching others play football, like the NFL.
Some people love, and by the way, when you have a family, I completely get that,
spend a time with kids.
But for me, my superpower is, man, I love business.
If a kid comes up to me nine years old and says, I'm thinking about a hot dog stand,
I'm like, dude, let's talk.
You know what I mean?
That's fun for me.
Yeah.
Well, I got to tell you this.
So when I started my lighting business, I was partners with my brother.
And we didn't have a plan.
We didn't have a vision.
We didn't know what EOS was.
We didn't know about entrepreneurship, anything.
It was our first business.
I mean, we had done small things before, but this was like our first formal business.
And there came a time, I actually, a friend of mine gave me the book traction.
He must have seen how chaotic my life was.
He came over and he hand delivered the book traction.
He's like, I think you'd really like this.
And I didn't know, it was kind of an insult at the time.
You know, I think you should really read this.
And I read the book and it literally transformed me overnight.
And I actually got sad because during one of the chapters, he talks about how it's going to change everything.
In fact, you might lose people along the way.
You might even lose partners.
And I knew when I read that line that I was going to have to break up with my brother.
Because we were at this point where we had grown, we were making some money, but we didn't have organization.
We didn't have cohesiveness.
And we were both visionaries.
he wanted to go left to the lake and we were wake surfing every week and i wanted to go
right and i'm like wake surfing's fun i could do it once a month but like i want to go build an
empire yeah like i have these bigger dreams and he's going dude you work too much like this is
insane like we could be done working by noon and wake surfing and i'm like dude you don't work enough
like are you kidding me like then so i learned that like he's not wrong like that's what he wants
and i'm not wrong this is what i want so we literally
I wouldn't say we decided.
I decided that we were going to break up because he was like, this is great.
Ryan knows how to run a business.
He's like McGiver.
He's like street smart.
He can figure anything out from a technical standpoint, but he's not the business guy.
So actually he ended up buying me out because like I couldn't live my dream.
I couldn't I couldn't go work as many hours as I wanted to.
I couldn't do this because again, like he's going left.
I'm going right, which means actually we go straight down the middle and no one's happy.
Right.
And so that's the hardest thing, man.
I'm in charge.
Well, partnerships.
We literally were just, we're just arguing over about who's right and what's right.
And I'm like, no one's right.
I can't prove him wrong.
He wants to do what he wants to do.
And that was tough.
What I tell people, if you're going to engage family or friends, you got to have a prenuptial agreement.
And you got to have every best friend and person that's worked for me never worked directly for me.
They were never my direct report.
And now I'm going to make people make a video
When I partner with them,
why do you want to get in business with me?
What are your responsibilities?
I'm going to make a video back
and we're going to use that as the North Star.
And I'm going to have a way to unregle it.
If, hey, if ever there's animosity
and we want to maintain this relationship,
which we should do,
this is what you're responsible for.
This is what I'm responsible for.
We agree this is the plan.
And these things take time.
They might take six months.
They might take three months to put together.
But understanding what KPI's, there is someone responsible.
It's not two people.
There must only be one.
Revenue growth, EBIT of growth, KPIs, call center booking rate, conversion rate, average ticket.
And maybe there's a lot of things, negotiation with vendors.
Are we going to lease the vehicles, the fleet department?
There's all these things.
But we're going to agree that you're the decision maker here.
And so now I'm invested in a lot of businesses.
And the coolest thing is there's not a business that I've invested in that hasn't 5xed.
And it's just simple.
The game of business is not that.
But here's the deal.
I'm not doing car washes and out of my scope anymore.
Like I had the obviously the Christmas light business, but I'm staying in my own lane.
Now that I know home service so well, it's the perfect industry to be in.
I understand arbitrage.
I understand how to do the deals.
I've got great relationship with the vendors.
where is the best use of my time?
And just like you said, where's the best use of my time?
You started saying no.
And it's very hard for entrepreneurs to do.
Why did you decide 18 months ago?
Because Dan Martel coaches me and he's like,
I got to fire you as a client.
He goes, you're my last client.
And he goes, this is a $500,000 watch.
And if I work a full week, that's a billion dollars a year.
He goes, are you going to pay me $500,000 an hour?
and I just smiled he goes I didn't think so he goes so you're my last client he goes now
everything's going to be dedicated to these two things and by four months from now it's going to
be this one thing and he goes I'm just at a phase of my life where you know I'm not going to
say yes to anything and me for me that's tough people call me all the time like dude can you
speak at this event don't care what it costs to get you and I'm like that's I don't make my money
speaking but if it's near me if it's convenient I enjoy it but
You know, how did you learn to say no?
Well, I wouldn't say I've learned.
I'm learning.
For me, it's this whole process of life.
I mean, dude, kids will change.
Kids change everything for me.
And to be honest, so I grew up single mother and I wanted my goal in life was just to be the dad I didn't have.
Right.
And so I have kids and I'm starting this business and everything.
This was, you know, years ago.
And my wife actually called me out one day.
He goes, you always talk about how you do this for us and you want to be this dad you didn't have.
Where the hell are you?
Like, I'm drowning over here.
We have four kids now.
You don't make enough money to provide a nanny.
You know, like, I don't have help here.
And you're out doing nighttime demos at night doing lighting.
Yeah, we have a house.
We have money.
We can go on vacation.
But like, I need you.
That was a huge wake up call.
So we went to therapy.
We went to everything.
I learned a lot through that process.
Then what happened when I sold my business, we moved from Texas back to Utah.
I launched landscape lighting secrets and I was very intentional on what I was doing but also I was like well no one knows who I am I have to get my name out there so here I am going to events speaking meeting new people getting uncomfortable and it started I started to feel exactly how I did like six seven eight years prior where I was like oh I know what this feels like like this is me I'm addicted to business it's a foreign addiction and I feel like I'm back I fell off the wagon like I'm not a good day.
dad anymore. I'm not husband anymore. Like, I knew it. I had felt those feelings before.
And to be honest, like, you mean, you know, you watch what you're doing. And that's like for me.
I'm like, yeah, I want to do that. Like Tommy can do it. Like I can do it. I want to do that. And I started
to realize like, wait a minute. Like Tommy's dream is not my dream. Right. At least it doesn't be.
Right. And so I'm like, well, well, he's doing that. Like, why am I not doing that? And that's
when I realize like, wait, that's not my dream. Like, yeah, I don't think I want to become a billionaire. Like,
There's a lot of stuff that comes with that.
That I'm not prepared today right now in my situation to handle.
So I just changed my goals.
I stopped kind of living off other people's dreams and I came up with my own.
The book, Thinking Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill, he talks about your definite chief aim.
I wrote down my definite chief aim and my billionaire status because right now I don't, like,
I don't want to become a billionaire, but I thought how could I become a billionaire but have other people
involved so my goal now is how i want to do i just want to help a thousand bit lighting business owners i
want to help a thousand people earn a million dollars or more with their lighting business and it just
so happens that a thousand times a million is a billion so i can become a billionaire but by just
helping other people become millionaires no it's it's good that you i change i just changed my
perspective you've coached a lot of people and how much is mindset how much is strategy how
much as just, I think it's mostly the owners of the bottleneck and they don't have the ability
to focus. And when you're small, you say yes all the time and you should say yes because you don't
have enough money. And it's quite equity. But you've coached, tell me some of the smaller ones to
the bigger ones and the challenges with each level up. Yeah, I mean, to answer your question,
it's 100% mindset. Most of us know what, like most of us have been to a conference. We've listened to a
podcast. Like, we have enough information. We have more information now than we're taking advantage
of. I'm not going to say we all know everything. We're always learning, but like most people
have already, they already know they already know they should like follow up with their sales
appointments. They know they should work on their closing rate. Like, they know the information,
but they make excuses. They, oh, well, not in this economy. You know, how many times we hear that?
Well, no, you can't charge those prices in my market. And what's ironic about this whole thing,
is I used to say the exact same stuff.
So when they say those things, I'm like, dude, I know exactly how you feel.
That's not just a line.
Like, I literally know exactly how they feel because I used to make up the same excuses
and I know how to wiggle my way out of accountability.
None of us really want accountability.
We hire a coach because we say we want it, but accountability sucks.
Like, it hurts.
I know you're big into fitness now.
Like, it hurts to build muscle.
It hurts to get up early.
It hurts to stay consistent.
Like, after a while, yeah.
yeah it feels good but not at first and that's the hardest part so the it doesn't matter if they're
doing you know 200 grand a year or they're already doing a million or two million dollars a year the
hardest part is changing from the circumstance you're currently at because we're we're humans
and by nature humans are we see comfort i mean you think about why we've survived and why we're
the the best on the earth of all the species and everything like when it's hot outside we just
find shade like we will build an air conditioning system right when it's cold we figure out how to get
heat when we're hungry we just go kill something and eat it like we're we're always trying to
become average and an entrepreneur business owner has to fight against that like if you're just
going to stay comfortable you can't become the tommy mellow of your industry like that those are
two different things and so it's by human nature we want to be comfortable
yet then we set this goal to say okay i want to grow by a million dollars or five million dollars
Well, something's going to have to change.
Your decision process is going to change.
You're going to have to, like, invest in marketing that might not work.
You're going to have to start hanging around different friends.
You're going to have to maybe break up with someone.
You might maybe have to fire your operations manager or hire your first one.
Like, that's scary.
That's uncomfortable.
And most human beings, all human beings, don't want to do that naturally.
Like, you have to get out of your own way.
Yeah, you're right.
I mean, I'll tell you, the pivotal things for me is the ability.
ability to attract talent that's been where you want to go and make them sprint at the same speed.
My COO, every time he's in front of somebody, they go, what is your main goal, Luke?
He goes, to make Tommy's dreams come true.
And it's funny that he says that.
One day, we were in Denver two weeks ago, I go, it's always interesting, Luke, when you say that.
And he goes, well, here's a little secret.
We have the same dream.
And I love that.
I love that.
And, you know, here's the deal that I've started to realize is a lot of my team doesn't care who gets the credit.
They're very happy being part of this ecosystem that's just, we're building our own road as we go.
And, you know, it's really easy to look over at the bathroom refitter companies and the leaf fitter companies doing over a billion that I know.
And I always got to pinch myself and say, look, that's not us.
We're not a home improvement company.
that it is, like, the things that I'm working on are going to open the door to so much
revenue and unlock so much wealth for the people I work with, my coworkers.
But the real deal is I'm having a lot of fun doing it, and I don't think a lot of people
are having fun in their business anymore.
I come in here, I do orientation, I'm on a podcast with you right now.
I've got some leadership meetings.
I don't do inventory.
I don't log into payroll.
I don't do, you know, example is accounts receivable.
I don't talk to lawyers.
I do, you know, I talk to my suppliers all the time.
I talk to, I'm right now, I'm the CMO of the company, but that's where I live.
So I built this nest in my business.
It's all what I love to do.
So coming into work is easy.
And obviously there's some things I had to do early on that I hated.
And that's the first person I hired.
And I was smart about it.
And I got really lucky with the right people.
And I've had a top grade.
I've had five CFOs.
And now this one's absolutely phenomenal.
but do you know what I mean like when you see people at business I watch them go through emails for
two hours and I watched them not live by their schedule and I watch them dreaming and then they
invest in real estate they take all the money out of their account and they go after they're like
you got to always have a side hustle bro and I'm like no the hustler had to die for the leader
to be born in my case I love that I love it and you know like learning to replace yourself is so hard
Because right now, yeah, of course, like, I want to come work for Tommy Mello.
Like, you've done such a good job building your brand, building your movement, right?
You have, you don't even have a business, I feel like.
You have a movement.
Like, people want to be part of it.
Like, you've sold the dream.
Like, you've done that.
So it's like, you probably can't even screw it up at this point.
You've done such a good job doing that.
Whereas you take a smaller company, it's like, you know, I'm the owner and I got like two installers.
it's hard to build a dream at that point.
You know, it's hard to be like, guys, we're going to do something special here.
Like, and it's harder to recruit because you might not even have a brand.
You might not, a lot of these guys start out of storage units, you know, they might not even have a facility.
And so it's hard.
I remember one time, I learned this the hard way because I used to think, well, I can't afford.
How am I going to, I can't afford an admin.
I can't afford a shop space.
Like, there's no money.
How do these companies do it?
I would see big companies.
I would see big companies.
Like, how do they do it?
And this one experience changed my thought process.
So I don't ask how much something costs anymore instead of saying, oh, how much is it?
I'm like, how much is it costing me to not have this?
Yeah.
And so the reason I learned this, I was literally, we had two installers.
I became the maintenance guy.
And at first there was no maintenance.
You put in lights, they work.
Well, then someone calls and says, hey, I got a light out.
So I'm like, well, who's going to do that?
I sold enough jobs where our guys are busy doing installs.
So now I'm the office manager and now I'm our head service.
tech, right? Minutry, changing a light bulb, miss a call. This was totally normal. Call the lady
back about an hour later. Super nice lady in Dallas. And she's like, oh, hey, thanks for calling
back. We're good. We've got a lighting company coming out tomorrow. I think we'll just go with
them. And I'm like, what do you mean you'll just go with them? Like, I'll come out and meet with you
and give you a proposal. It's a free quote. It's not going to cost you anything. No, we're good.
You know, they answered their phone. And I couldn't even get mad at her because she was so nice.
She was the nicest lady ever. At the time, this was early on in our business. Our average job was
five thousand dollars so i got to go home and i told my wife i just lost five freaking
thousand dollars because i couldn't answer a phone call and then i started doing the math
what about that other person i called like she answered her phone what about the other people
i called back that never even answered took me a day or two or three to get a hold of them whatever
and i started doing the math five 10 15 20 easily 60 70 000 in just the past few months
that i missed out on opportunity and it was that day i literally i was get okay we're doing this we
We started looking for a shop space and we put out an ad for an admin and I found out
real quickly how much money we were losing not having an admin, not having a shop space.
Because now someone was actually running the business.
Someone was present. Someone was doing follow-ups. Everyone thinks they can't afford an admin.
And it's like there's so many tasks that they can do that they want to do and they're better at
than you. And you think no one wants to do this stuff. They're out there.
And that buys back your time so that you can go out and do more sales. So you can have
can actually spend time working on your business, I learned that the hard way. And I hope people
will learn from my mistake. And most don't. Most people follow the exact same trajectory that I did
and they put it off, they put it off. And then when they finally listen to me, they always,
man, I wish I would have listened to you a year ago, two years ago. I'm like, well, yeah,
I know, that's why I was telling you. Well, the problem is, is an admin takes coaching and they're
going to make mistakes and they're going to screw up. And you kind of got to move two steps back
to take 10 steps forward.
You know, Dan Martel convinced me to hire a chef and a driver and a house manager.
And I was like, I'm super humble.
I don't want people to look at me like that.
He's like, dude, you're an idiot.
He's like, how much can you get done in that 10 hours a week?
And you could be super healthy.
And like, you're looking out of the wrong lens.
And so what I've learned is you've really got to be working on the systems.
Like my EA, phenomenal.
She's hiring an EA next week.
Her EA is going to be sending, I built a top 100 list of vendors, of clients, of people
I want to get to know that we're going to, just a top 100 list.
And if I unlock the potential of these 100 individuals, my life, the fun in my life,
the wealth, the body grows 20 times.
And so I highly advise building a top 100 listers.
You just start with the top 10 of who you want to get to know.
And it's not like you're reaching out, calling them all the time.
It's just top of mind awareness, building a relationship,
liking their stuff on social media, and really giving, being a great friend,
being a great listener.
You know, you reminded me of one day I was in the call center,
and this was about eight years ago.
And it was an Oklahoma call.
And the call center girl goes, who was it?
Oh, man.
Anna, she goes, man, I wish you were in here, Tommy.
She goes, I heard you're the best of booking calls.
She goes, I just lost one in Oklahoma because the guy.
guy couldn't get out there right away. I go, let me call the technician. He goes, dude, I can be
out there in 45 minutes. I'll finish up here. I'll do you the favor. It's a little bit later at
night. We could quote her an emergency fee. So I call the lady back and I go, hey, it's Tommy
I'm the founder of A1 garage door service. I just want to let you know. We could be at your house
in less than an hour. She's like, oh, Tommy. She's nicest lady just like you had. She goes,
I'm so sorry. She goes, I've already called another company. And I go completely understand.
Do you mind me if I ask you the name of the company?
It was like ABC garage stores, whatever.
And I go, great company.
They do great work.
Do you mind if I ask you what they're charging to come out?
She's like, they were only charged in $99.
And I said, well, listen, if I could weigh that $99 and I get my guy there in less than an hour,
would you do business with us?
She goes, Tommy, I love your energy and you're just trying to earn my business.
But she goes, unfortunately, I just, I've already booked with them.
I'm going to keep it.
I go, well, you just gave me the name.
So I'm just going to call them and cancel for you.
And my guy, I'll be there in 45 minutes.
And she starts laughing.
And she goes, damn, you're persistent.
She goes, let me call you right back.
And I'm sitting there.
The whole call center staring at me.
I pick up the phone.
I go, hey, there, Ms. Smith.
She goes, I canceled them.
You got the job.
And I got to tell you, I felt like a billion bucks.
That moment, I was like, I was like, I backed myself up.
But you remind me of that because I don't call them.
what was that cancel the appointment for you because i got the name and i'm like i'll just i understand
that there's like people don't want to do that so i was like let me remove the obstacle in your way
let me handle that for you this is a i'm a white glove red carpet service for this i we're going
to take care of you technician calls me up it goes this lady's happy as hell man this is going to be
a home run and he did a great job i by the way one thing i'll tell you is i started focusing on the top
20% of my people and building them instead of the bottom 20%.
I started to see how far can I take these guys.
So every night I make two phone calls.
I'm in three different things.
I'm in lace.a.i.
I'm in service tight and power BI.
And I call two technicians and I dare them to try something new.
And I work with them.
And I ask them what's going on out there?
Try this, do this.
Let's work on this together.
And man, what I realized is the ceiling expands dramatically and shows everyone else
that it's possible. And plus it's feeding me. Like I'm talking to people that are optimistic dreamers
that want to go further. Most people are like, man, they're winning. Leave them alone. I'm like,
let's see how far we could bring these guys. I don't know if you've ever experienced most companies
are like, how do I bring the bottom up? I'm like, how do I bring the top up? Well, I love it that
you even said that because I don't think most companies are even worried about the bottom 20%. Most
companies are so busy just trying to keep the wills from falling off like are they actually calling
anyone on a nightly basis are they actually training anyone on a weekly basis like most aren't even
doing that so i think number one it starts with being intentional on you know like your people are your
people um i learned this from dan plata he's one of our coaches he's got his he's got his own business
as well but dan taught me this because i'm so focused on sales i'm so focused on the client and helping
you know like let's make sure we're charging a premium price and getting high quality
quality leads and closing deals like that's that's my expertise and so i'm like the lifetime value the
client all this stuff well he goes how much is a how much is a lifetime value of a team member
and i was like wow that's huge because like let's say you have like a million dollar revenue
business and you got you know five team members well you're for for that year just just that 12 months
they're worth 200 000 in revenue to you 200 000 over 12 month period that's how how much
they're worth, right? Well, an average landscape lighting client, like an average job is like
$10,000 and then, you know, they might do their like backyard later and maybe their lakehouse
and they might refer someone to you. So like the average lifetime value, let's just say on a high
end for landscape lighting is $100,000. That's the lifetime value. Whereas the annual value of a
team member is $200,000. So why are we not giving more attention? Why are we not training?
why are we not doing those check-ins?
And most people aren't.
Most people are just worried about the client and they forget about the team.
They forget about the team that's actually making this dream possible.
So I love it.
I actually have never focused on the top, like you said.
I think I probably fall to the bottom where I'm like, man, what can we do to get these guys more motivated, right?
But I love the fact that you're taking the time to one-on-one, like, hey, I'm going to call these guys and spend a few minutes with them.
And you can rotate that through so you can actually talk to everybody over a great.
of a month or a quarter. And the deal is it fills up my tank, man. It fills up my tank. They
talk about the big wins. I started interestingly enough, well, I was just going to mention the
law of the lid is you grow your top people. The lid grows and the company grows, especially when
you're doing it to yourself, self-love. But I started a zero line. I called my C-O up. I'm like,
dude, I used to be the zero-line guy. Everyone had to call me. This is like 2012. And I'm like,
I think we need to do it again. He goes, I like the idea. Give me.
a month. I'm going to put systems around it. You check off everything. And I made a lot of
changes, but he systematized it. And we started this thing up about a month ago. And 52% conversion
average ticket of 843. And even my top guys are like, do I have to call this line? I'm like,
you especially have to call because everyone's going to follow your lead. And they didn't believe
in it at first. And I trained them exactly how to close. And there's something about the
psychology of calling, hey, listen, let me call my boss and see what I could do for you.
And so we call the guy, Dean's the best closer. He's worked for me for 14 years.
He goes, hey, how are you? And we know what's going on in the garage. We have a little
debrief called. Then they call in front of the customer on speaker phone and they go, hey,
Ms. Jones, how are you today? My name's Dean. I'm sitting here at the office and we're here
trying to earn your business. And I want to tell you something about the individual in your garage.
His name's Tommy. Tommy's one of the best dads I know.
And they know all these things, right?
Great dad, great husband, great player.
Like, he's the MVP of this company.
You should be, feel lucky to have them in your garage.
So we brag about the technician.
Then we brag about the company, why we work here, why this investment makes sense.
And then I always add things to the ticket.
You know, the bottom rubber's failing.
That's why all the bugs are coming in.
Let us fix everything right instead of discounting it.
Because usually it's a money thing.
I mean, 99% of the time they're just like, well, I'm not sure.
So what if we were able to do this, this, this, this?
Normally that would be 1,200.
If I got you down to 900, would that make sense?
I'm giving you $300 off, but actually I added to the ticket.
And for the first time in the last two years, our budgeted conversion rate is over budget.
And we're saving hundreds of thousands of dollars a week.
And we're just, this is a pilot program that's only going to get better.
Yeah, now you can raise the lid.
I know when I, one of the positions I was scared to, I mean, I started building my business.
that we had an admin and then it was like okay i was the sales guy and most most entrepreneurs when
they start their business they they do the sales and then i was like well man no one's gonna be
able to sell as good to me like i'm the owner and then people and then what's what's crazy is
i used to believe the lie the lie is the homeowners are back well we just like why'd you go with
us well we like you you're the owner it's cool at your hands on and so you start to believe
that like because you're the owner that's what got you the deal right and the strategy that you
just mentioned works worked out was was genius because that's what we did
So I would tell him, like, if someone wants a deal, you can't, you don't have the authority to give a deal.
Like, you gave them your best price and you can tell them that because that is your best price.
Now, if they want to work something out, you can tell them, you got to call me.
I got to call the big boss man.
Let me see what we can do for you.
We want to earn your business.
And they appreciate that because I've had people at my house where I need a repair, I need something done.
And I'm like, I'll tell you what, you know, if you can knock off 500 bucks, knock off 1,000, I'll do it.
And I'm not doing it because I don't have the money.
I'm not asking for a deal because I'm like, well, if not, my kids got to eat ramen and we got to wash the diapers out in the sink.
Like, I'm just asking for a deal because I like to negotiate, right?
And I actually get turned off when they're like, yeah, we could do that for you.
I'm like, what, you were just going to rip me off?
Like, are you serious?
Like, you can't just knock off $500, $1,000.
Like, you need to help people work for it.
Like, that when you, when they call the guy at the office and they do all that, like they're working for it.
So they feel like they've earned it.
right so the number one answer should be like i'm sorry i can't do that for you all right we want
to earn your business but i've led with my best price i personally can't do anything for you now
maybe there's something that we can do but yeah when people just immediately drop their price that's
you cannot lower your prices like that that's disingenuous and here's one thing i say
i'll say listen if we're really going to do this for this this is not something we typically do
but in return, I need something from you.
I need you to go on.
Are you a part of Yelp?
Do you have a Gmail account?
And are you on next door?
So if we do this, do we agree that you'll do this for me?
Because your time is worth money.
So if you're willing to do this for me and take the time,
I will then in return be able to do this at this investment for you.
I love it.
We do the same thing.
If we do this, we need a five-star review.
We need a video testimonial.
we need you to post on your next door or local Facebook group how awesome we are we'll get you
a picture before and after pictures if you can post those let us put out a yard sign then i think we can
put this toward our marketing budget i like that a lot of money from the local facebook groups is that
has that worked out well it probably does great in lighting uh it's uh for me there's no there's no
such thing as a home run or a grand slam with landscape lighting i call it the marketing mix and you got
to be everywhere you got to you got it you got to have your branding out there you got to do all that
you do all these small things like put the yard sign out put the door hanger out get everyone to post
on next door then yes it does very well but if someone just does one next door post or a facebook
group post then no you're just you're not going to get much traction out of it but when you're
constantly the go-to name coming up in these groups and you're constantly constantly seeing your brand
then yes it all works very very well together let me let me run an idea
by you that I just came up within my head
for landscape lighting.
So what if you had somebody
during Christmas
and you went through affluent neighborhoods
and you just looked at
top of the line lighting and you wrote
down the address and their whole job
was four hours a night. They just looked for
knockout lighting. And then you ran
that against the list and I could buy this
data that I could see that they donated $10,000
I know how much of their house they paid off. I know their
credit card rating. So you filter that
list. Wouldn't you
have one of the most affluent avatars possible,
especially if you gave it to them
and said this permanent lighting is going to save you this much over time
and this is how much it costs per month.
And now you could have Fourth of July,
you could have Valentine's Day,
you could do some cool stuff for Thanksgiving
and obviously Christmas.
Like, I like to have a rifle
rather than a shotgun.
And I don't know, I agree with you.
You've got to be everywhere on the approach.
But have you learned anything
that allows you to be more?
of a little of a rifle with a scope approach or not yeah absolutely so i've never done that what you're
talking about um i think it's i i think it would work it's just a matter of like where where does
that fit in the in terms of priority like do you want to do that or something else or can you do
both like can can you be can you do all these things so my rifle versus shotgun approach is
actually through our referral partner system so like to what you talked about like not only just
going to the nice neighborhood like where hey these are all two million dollar homes but which
ones actually paid for professional holiday lighting that obviously you know is a sub
sub market of that nice neighborhood well what we do with the referral partner network is similar
to like your you know dream 100 list you're talking about is like who's the ideal client like
who is actually going to pay for professionally designed and installed landscape lighting well
when you think about it it's typically people who
have a custom home.
It's usually someone who lives in a million or $2 million home and up.
It's typically someone who invests in a home audio system, like AV, right, home automation.
Someone who hires an interior designer.
Like poor people don't hire interior designers.
Poor people don't hire AV companies.
They don't even know what they are, right?
Artificial turf in certain areas.
Artificial turf in some areas is not as good.
But those trades alone, high-end realtors, they already have a relationship with,
your ideal client. And so what we do is we approach them and we say, hey, listen, we get asked
from time to time. In fact, well, we actually go back even one step. We go to our existing clients.
Let's say I just finished up a job. Nice homeowner. We have a good relationship. They're loving
what we do because we just turned on the lights. We change their life. They're like, man, this is
amazing. We love you guys. Hey, would you mind helping us grow our business? No, absolutely. What is
it? All we want to do is get introduced. Your living room looks like it deserves to be on the cover.
of interior designer magazine like who does your interior design it's phenomenal who did your pool like
we want to connect with these people then we call those people hey mrs smith referred us she thought
it would be a good idea if we connected i'd love to be able to refer you in fact we get asked from
time to time if we know a good pool builder if we know a good a b company we'd love to be able to
refer you when can we meet i'd love to come over next tuesday thursday at your office
launch wherever job site i want to get to know you and see how best to be able to refer you that
right there is a, a rifle strategy that brings in high ticket jobs. You're not giving quotes.
These people don't want three, four people coming over in their property. They just want
trusted people. So you're going right to the front of the line. They really, they don't care
how much it is. They just want to know when you can do it. You know, this is something where
it's exactly like you said is, I've made this note now a dozen times. I know exactly who to call.
I know exactly how to run these.
And the problem is, this is one that I need to own and do myself.
And it's a ruthlessly prioritizes where I'm living in life right now.
And I'm like, man, I'm like, and we've got, I think there's 263 projects on the board.
And it's my project managers knows the North Star, what's going to get us to where we want to go the fastest.
And what I've learned is saying no, and I see money everywhere.
And instead of just launching it, I develop a system that's scalable.
Because I can make this work in Phoenix like this.
But how do I make a system and be able to train somebody and have checks and balances in place
where the ROI is massive?
And I'll give you an example.
Like, we don't do many splits in the garage.
But I bought a pool table for $10,000 for my dad.
And his happens to be in the house, but a lot of people use their garage.
just like the exercise equipment.
Like if I had those and we could do a mini split,
I can negotiate that in every market.
Mini split in an insulated door and we redo your flooring.
Now I don't do two out of those three,
but I could get this wholesale price
because they don't have to market or do sales commission or anything.
I'm selling it for you.
And man, I can bang out hundreds of those a month per market.
It's just systematizing it.
Now I've got to rely on their work, though.
Now I need to know that you're going to show up
and before we collect and there's a lot of coordination.
And these things sound so easy for a vision.
The problem is the integrator is going, well, what about this, this, this, and this.
What happens if they screw up?
What happens if the floor pills they're calling us?
There's a lot of things that go on, right?
So I start whiteboarding and thinking about all the different things that could go wrong.
And there's obviously a lot of things that could go wrong.
But it's getting great partners that do what they say they're going to do that fulfill the project and they care about the client.
And there's a whole unlock there.
There's a massive opportunity.
And it's interesting that you made that work.
Yeah, it takes, the hardest part is getting started because you have to prioritize it.
Like, you could go and drive around and get the addresses and do all that and build a list.
You could go do this.
I mean, we have, we have so many things to, you know, captivate our attention.
So it's just, it's a matter of like, there was a time where I learned how to time block.
And I was like, I would go from like technician,
to now I'm the salesperson, to now I'm the whatever maintenance.
And I just let everyone dictate my schedule.
But then everybody came at time around, I'm only going to run sales appointments on Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
I'm only going to do these activities at this day and time.
And so I think if you want to launch an initiative like that, it literally is getting
intentional to say, all right, the next six Tuesdays from like one to four, the only thing
I'm doing is locking myself in this room.
I'm telling my girlfriend, my spouse, my whoever, like I'm not available.
I'm literally putting my phone on, do not disturb.
like no one's allowed to get a hold of me unless like someone is dying like do not knock on
this door do not call me and I'm going to do this thing when you get serious like that it actually
is pretty easy that's how I launched landscape lighting secrets like I people are like how'd you
do that I'm like it didn't take that long it took me like three weeks but I was locked in this room
for like 14 hours a day and then I'd come out and like get a drink and yell at my kids for being too
loud because I'm like I'm trying to record in here like what's going on you know well like it takes
that much focus and that much that much yeah yeah so you've seen all these P&Ls man and I agree
raise your prices what I've noticed which is really weird for me is I'm either loved in my industry
and people are like man follow that guy's lead he'll share everything or I'm despised how could somebody
charge that much even though they don't know I have an option for clients that's less than anybody
I have an option that's way better, just like if you buy tires on your car, get a roof or decide you want a Jaguar instead of a Honda.
You know, but there's a lot of stuff on social media that actually charging the right price to make a profit is despise.
Why everybody in there is making a living working out of their house, they say, man, that guy takes advantage of people, little old ladies, and I hear, and they don't know me, they never met me.
They don't know behind the scenes.
They don't know.
It's amazing that losers just, they have so much time to complain.
I never once talked about any other company.
Like internally, yeah, we have some conversation,
but I don't feel any better going and it doesn't make you look any better.
Why are those people, where do you think they're coming from to just sit there and just
being at the top has consequences?
And I know people are like, man, that company, man, they drive their breath.
brand new trucks and their polished training and they show up and then they they wham-ban they
sell stuff people don't need. I'm like, yeah, we sell stuff people don't need all the time because
they wanted it. Nobody needs full-time lighting in their home. They wanted it.
Well, it's both. I might fight you on that one, but I think I do know why the haters are haters.
And this is why it's hard for someone to elevate outside of like where your current circumstance is.
as soon as you start elevating and as soon as you start doing something that's different outside of your
regular circle like your friends your family they'll despise you too because you're not who you used to be
you used to not be so money driven you used to not be this you know yeah I know I know I used to not be like
that right and it's much easier in my opinion I think this is how they feel psychologically
it's much easier for them to reach out and pull back if they can hold you back that's that's less
effort than them actually ascending themselves. I think it's just way easier to talk trash and try
to pull you back because that's like, dude, I can just send out some texts and hopefully get in your
head and whatever. Like if I can just hold you back, then you're not going to go as far away from
me. So now I'm not as uncomfortable going, what's wrong with me? Like, why am I not? Why am I not doing
the stuff that Tommy's talking about, right? Because that's uncomfortable. So it's just easier for them
to hold you back than them elevate themselves. I always tell my guys, man, you're going to have to change
your circle that somebody in Vegas two years ago said I feel like you're in a time machine bro
how are you elevating so quickly I'm like well every time I'm at the top of this mountain I see
another mountain that's higher and I just go down to base camp and say who could go to this
mountain to the top way quicker because you've been through this mountain success leaves clues
and I'm like but I just I don't care of people say no I'm not afraid of rejection what I
always say is when your when your dad or uncle or grandpa used to tell you I wish I knew them
what I know now all they were saying is be comfortable in your own skin and don't be afraid of
rejection. If someone says, no, don't hate yourself. It's just the way you feel about
yourself. I got rid of that a long time ago. Like, look, I'm going to ask the best,
the best. I'm going to come with a point of being super humble and what's in it for them and how do
I help them. And I always talk about these people on stages and they go, this guy's a doer.
I'm going to continue to feed him. And that's it. That's the, that's the biggest secret for me
is somebody's out there either a book, a speaker, a consultant that'll just guide me quicker
to the top. So I always work with at least three to four consultants.
You know, there was an activity that helped me with pricing because if I'm being honest,
like I, growing up, I thought like you were, you know, I'm in Utah. This is a very religious
community. And growing up, I thought that if you bought a boat, you were kind of a bad person
because why wouldn't you donate that money to charity? No one said that. Like, no one,
said that in church, but that's what I felt, right? It's just this, this culture that exists.
And so you open your business and you're like, you start feeling guilty. Like, well, I got some
extra money, whatever. Should I charge that old lady, whatever? I'll just give her a deal.
Well, there became a time in my business where I was like, damn it, dude, I cannot figure this out.
Like, I'm selling a lot of lights and I'm collecting a lot of cash, but there is none left at the
end. And then these other guys, there's so much bigger. And how do these companies do it?
And I realized, I don't remember why I had this epiphany, but I had this epiphany that
sounds so simple now. But you have to start, you have to charge enough to act like the company
that you want to be instead of the business you are today. And so all I did was I took out
a spreadsheet. I started putting all my expenses down. And someone probably asked me the question,
I didn't know the answer. Like, what's your daily overhead or something like that, right?
What does it cost you? What's your burden rate? I'm like, I don't know what that is.
So I made a spreadsheet.
I just started putting all my expenses.
This one was monthly times it by 12.
This one's quarterly times it by four.
This one happens once.
That's one time.
But all my expenses, what's it going to cost me to wake up?
And it was like, I can't remember what the total number was.
But then I divided by the number of working days because we don't have 365 days to work.
And there was rain days.
And there was days where like we didn't sell a job.
There's PTO days.
There's drive time.
There's a lot of factors.
Yep.
Yes.
And I realize our total number of working days.
days was like 220 to only 220 working days at the time like and in some markets it's actually
even less than that if you're installing outdoor lighting in like Wisconsin you don't have
220 days to work the ground freezes right so I did the number the number was $2,500 a day
that it cost me that time at the moment this wasn't even about my dream business and I wasn't
even paying myself that much I mean I think I was paying myself like 60 80 grand a year at the
time. But of course, I wanted to make more than that. Of course, I wanted to hire more people.
So this is what changed everything. I plugged in the numbers of what it was going to cost to
hire another salesperson. What was going to cost to hire an ops manager? What it was going
to cost to get two more trucks to wrap them, to do all this stuff? I've got a, I've got equipment
replacement costs. Yeah, I only drill today, but what's going to cost when the guy drops it out of
a tree tomorrow? You know, what are these things? And I calculated what my dream business would cost.
And it almost doubled. I mean, it was like not quite double, but it was like,
$3,500, $4,000 a day to operate that business.
Now all of a sudden I didn't feel guilty.
I was like, yeah, I have to charge these prices because I can't, I can't, I'll never
be able to afford to grow into the person and the company I need to be able to afford
if I'm not charging these prices. And it helped me at least from a, I guess, you know,
again, before I would be like, well, what am I going to do with all this extra money?
I feel guilty. I'll just give it away, right? But now I realize, oh, I need this
to be able to afford to grow into the business I need. It made, it made sense logically.
lead to me at that point. That's a really impactful thing. It's a break-even calculator. Very few people
know how to do that. A good CFO would do that in a heartbeat. But most people are going to
bookkeepers, a fractional bookkeeper at best. They don't have any really knowledge of pricing and
conversion rates and follow-up systems. And so I think that's the biggest mistake that I had is once
I got the FP&A team, the right control or the right CFO, all of a sudden, and here's the deal,
Ryan. I used to go into rooms and say, dude, I'm doing $120 million. And that was my mentality.
I literally look at people and be like, dude, I'm the revenue king. And when the conversation changed,
when everything changed for me is when I only brought up EBITA. When you walk in and you got
pride about revenue, that's a mistake. If I ever fell below 10%, I focused on raising the bottom.
And what I learned with private equity is you could do both. You could raise revenue and
profit, and I thought that was impossible. That's like getting more muscular and getting ripped at the
same time. How could you do that? And then I realized it works. How do you feel about, so I'm a big
profit guy. That's that's really all that matters. But I've also learned that there's different
phases where there's times where you want to be like, yeah, I'm making 30%. But there's growth phases
where you're like, you know, I'm going to reinvest this back into growth. And how do you feel like,
are you okay making 10% 5% maybe even nothing for a year because you've reinvested that back
into people you're not going to want to show that to private equity that year but if it's part of
a bigger plan to make less money on paper so that you can invest in your growth how do you feel
about well here's what I would tell you number one let's say I wanted to take market share
of a market let's say for example we expanded into Atlanta and I want to take market share
what they'd want to see, what my CFO would want to see is, are we budgeting correctly?
If we're going to spend 20% in this market, what does that mean after a month, three,
months, six, month, nine, month, 12?
I'm not going to do that in every market.
I got to have some type of a system and an expected result instead of spraying and praying
and guessing.
Number two is when you get the right CFO, they understand that when I do a greenfield
market, the first 18 months are adbacks.
So although my profit or EBITA percentage went down
At the end of the year when we add it back, it's still very healthy
So understanding the financial side of things and how this mechanisms work
And for me, I'm like, I mean, we got 52 brand new guys here this month, 50 coming in next month, 50 coming in the month after
You know how expensive it is a trainer guy getting a brand new vehicle from
Have an apartment for them
And then I learned years ago that KFC is opening a store every 11
hours. And all of a sudden, my North Star changed and I'm like, how do I open a market every 11
hours? And all of a sudden, you start dreaming way bigger and you start saying, how, instead of saying,
can I open up, can I, can I open up a market a year? You say, how do I open up one every 11 hours? And it
starts changing the way you think way outside of the box. But yeah, there are investments into the
company, but I don't believe that your bottom line needs to shrink ever below 20% now.
I mean, for me, I'm going to dump a fortune into marketing in 2027.
But I've already got a way to get it all back because if I saw one mini split,
every 20 doors I go into, that pays to get me to the 20%,
which obviously shrinks because revenue goes up.
But I've got to find a way to continue to stay Uber profitable.
Because when you get invested with private equity,
they got a report to the school municipality funds of all these teachers that invested in.
and they want to know what the health is of their, the company they invested.
And so I believe I was just like what you said five years ago,
got to invest in growth this year.
And then I realized, and there's no money left over,
which actually lowers your taxes and a CPA would tell you that,
but that's a big mistake.
Healthy money.
I mean, right now we've got $50 million in our account,
which is the most we've ever had.
We're buying a company paying straight out of the account.
I mean, literally like, I feel so confident.
And it's like, man, I didn't know there was a better way
until I invited them in and they told me.
So.
That's so cool.
Well, that's, this is actually one of the reasons why I'm such a stickler on pricing
is because, yeah, I, I do think that there's times where you're going to make a little bit
less, a little bit more, whatever.
But like, here's what's cool about pricing.
You get to apply leverage.
And let's just say that you spent some money on advertising and hadn't got quite your
return yet.
So now your, your net's down to 10%.
Well, there's.
there's a real easy way to get back up to that 20 points.
And it literally, you can double your profit with just a 10% price increase.
Because that 10% price increase, that's just magic.
Like you don't have to hire me, you don't have to hire Tommy.
You don't have to spend any more money on growth.
You're not going to buy another truck.
You literally are just going to do a small 10% price increase.
It goes straight to the bottom line.
And so you just doubled your profits in one tiny move.
As long as it doesn't hurt conversion.
aren't going to notice well that's that leads me to like that's when you need to dial in your
sales process you know and we have a system for that to make sure that not only if it hurt your
conversion rate then obviously you're you could potentially make less profit but you can actually
afford you can afford to lose up to like 20% of your clients with a 10% price increase
and make the exact same amount of money right imagine that so now you get 20% of your day back
your week back, which is Fridays.
So if you want to make the exact same of money and just take Fridays off, go ahead.
You can do that.
We've created a line that we're testing in one market where you've got to call into the data
integrity team, which makes sure we're getting this massive checklist.
Do they got a mini split?
Do they got their floors done?
How does their front door look?
We're also looking for our sticker placement.
We're making sure we weighed the door.
The forms are all filled out correctly.
And the last thing is we want to talk to the client to make sure you had a great experience
with Ryan. We gave you five out of five service. And we want, because here's the deal. I want the
client to tell me, no, I feel like I spent way too much money. It's going to go over to Vincent's
team. Vincent's going to figure out how to make that client happy, even if it means giving a discount,
adding parts, whatever it is. Maybe we dragged grease through their carpet. We'll get them
free carpet cleaning. We'll pay for a company to come. Whatever it is, we're going to make you a
raving fan before we leave. And then we get the review and we verify the review there. And we're
actually writing the review based on the experience and texting it to them. And we're not going to
leave until we get that review. And so some of these things, and there's a lot of operational
things that go into this. But it's crazy because, number one, what's happening? A one-star review is
prevented. Number two, conversion rates go up. Number three, the AI bots and the reputation
stay flawless. I mean, people are like, how would you even get started with that system?
And that's where we win is we take the time, we test, we break it a hundred times.
And by the time you're thinking about it, we're already deployed in every market.
And that's just this huge.
And let's say it costs 15, I had to pay 15 full-time people 75 grand a year.
The deal is, if I just teach these people to say one thing, how about a surge protector
and a Deco hardware kit for an extra 80 bucks?
But we'll do it for 50 because we're already there.
and that makes me $30 profit per house, a 90% conversion rate.
$30 on $25,000 jobs is $750,000 profit.
$750,000, yeah.
A month.
So I always figure out a way to pay for that stuff.
And then I ensure, guess what?
I can pay a piece of that to every one of these data integrity teams.
Say, hey, Ms. Jones, by the way, as a valued client, you spent more than $1,000,
We like to do this for 30 bucks or 40 bucks.
It's normally 100.
And they might make $5 on each one.
So these things build checks and balances.
The system's being inspected.
And I'm just, dude, I could sit here on this podcast because you're really easy to talk to.
You've got a lot of experience.
I just, this stuff just gets me going, man.
Like, I literally look at my business and I'm like, sometimes I pinched myself and say how proud I am.
But most of the time I'm like, there's just cash sitting in every corner.
I asked my top technician.
I said, what if I just gave you jobs of other technicians that are no longer here that just didn't really offer the client to everything?
And he said to me two nights ago, I took him to Stake 44, he goes, I will run only those jobs.
Just give me only those jobs.
My database has 1.7 million people in it.
If we get good at isolating the jobs that have real potential, I could keep 100 guys busy.
I've already predicted I could add $7 million a month, just.
with my database.
That's insane.
And it's just another thing where they go, great, Tommy's got another idea.
I'm like, well, let me just test it myself.
Why don't I just call customers?
And what I try to do is say, look, this has got validity.
Let's work.
Let's put it somewhere on the priority list.
And I ask, who could I hire as a 1099 project base to get this going where I don't
interfere with my team?
Because my team's already maxed out.
So if I say, man, I can hire a consultant to come in here, build this program.
do the heavy lifting, and now it's incorporated.
And I think that most people do not have the bandwidth.
So you've got to say, can I go on upward?
Can I go on fiber?
Can I hire a consultant?
I got a consultant coming on for $40,000 a month next month.
And it's a fart in the win for what I think they're going to be able to do.
I got a million questions, but I got to wrap up here too.
If I gave you 100 leads a day, could you close them?
That's one of my questions is like, do you have the system?
systems to be able to handle the booking, the conversion rate.
I mean, how do you build for capacity?
I don't think most companies are going to build.
Like most landscape lighting companies are not going to build
handle 100, you know, 100 leads.
I don't know if it's a good thing or a bad thing,
but the thing I love about the landscape lighting industry,
it's a bunch of young hustlers.
They're trying to figure it out.
They're artists.
You know, they didn't get into landscape lighting.
because they're good at business they're good at landscape lighting they're good at design they
they love it like they truly truly love it they have so much passion there um and so there's not a lot of
big businesses i mean the the the largest landscape lighting company in the country separate
from a franchise there's franchises with you know 50 70 locations whatever but the largest
one is probably five 10 million dollars you know there's not this massive company so they don't
have the infrastructure they definitely don't have the infrastructure for it so um they're they're
worried less about like what am i going to do with this hundred leads they're worried more about
how am i going to get a hundred leads this month this quarter you know what i mean so i don't know
if i'm the best person to ask that question but for me i would say well yeah you just need to
reverse engineer the problem you need to say well how many how many how many phone calls is that
going to be going to be going to need like who's going to be able to handle this are we going
can be able to do we have enough technicians like how many can how many lights can we install in a day
and everyone's capacity is different i've got clients that you know johnny can do like 25 30 grand in a
day i've got other clients that struggle to do 10 000 in revenue a day so it just depends on your
market depends on your training it depends on your pricing some people are literally double the
price of others so obviously their capacity is going to appear higher um so there's a lot a lot to it
it, but I think it's just reverse engineer the actual problem and figure out the solution.
You know, I'll tell you something about Johnny and I'll tell you something about every business
I get involved in is they're not ready for what I have to say. A lot of times I need to let them
fail. And it sounds like I'm neglecting them. But what I've realized is I'm invested in a floor
company and these guys, they're doing really well. They're doing over a million a month,
month 10 but they don't they still haven't made enough mistakes i want them coming to me begging me
that everything i tell them so i let them kind of not fail but i let them fall forward and yeah i've
just johnny was one of those guys that was like and i didn't have all the answers in that industry
but i told me needed double prices we did we lost 40% of the clients we got 120% revenue
but johnny was dealing with a lot and he was building like the hiring processes and i'm like
record every time you go do a light and he's so he's
started doing some of the stuff, but I think now when I get into business, they're like,
we're going to listen to you because I bring evidence. I bring facts. I do the FP and A team
and I work through these problems. Before I just was more speculative, like, here's what we need
to do based on what I see. Now I'm like, this is what needs to happen. And if they do what I tell
them to do and they start hiring talent that's beyond them, the company just grows, grows,
gross, gross, gross, gross. I mean, and I'm very proud of Johnny. I know they're both taking
home over a half a million a year. They're building enterprise value. And they, and I got to tell
you, Johnny's the happiest he's ever been. And Brit is amazing. And their, their relationship is
never better. They love each other. They spend a lot of time going on vacations. And they've got a
great business. But that took years to get to and it took a lot of failure. And so I love seeing
who Johnny became. They're great people. Yeah. I know. I do too. And to your point,
I think the, I can't remember the exact phrase, but it's like the teacher will appear when
the student's ready or something. And that's when I start licking my chops too. Because people
will join our program and I'm like, I'm so excited like the initial phone call. I'm talking to
I'm like, man, you are ready. Like this stuff you're talking about, we can help you with. And
then all of a little bit more resistant. They're like, well, I don't know if I can do that.
And I'm like, no, like this isn't like my opinion at this point. This is science. Again, I have like data.
like this is what you need to do and they're just still a little resistant and they do have to get
to that point where it's like all right like I'm open just tell me what to do I'll do anything
those are always our most successful client I see this all the time on Facebook and I happen to know
almost everybody in A Czech plumbing electrical I know almost every consultant out there I don't know
the lighting industry as well but do you ever go on social media LinkedIn Facebook Instagram
and you might see a guru of your space that you know is going to
gone bankrupt. You see somebody that they're just, they're saying, they're, they're, they're driving
around in a nice car. You know they're leasing their house. And they might have a Rolex. And everybody's
kind of following them. And I kind of keep my mouth shut. There's a, like, Ishmael will call out
everybody. But what are your thoughts when you see that? And you know that there's great people
that are going to these people for advice. And you know the backstory. You know, you might have looked at
their deal where they said, yeah, we're doing 10 million a year, but they're bringing home 40,000.
I mean, is that, is that prevalent in your space? And do you see that?
It's, well, let me, let me say this. And I joke around. I tell people, guys, I don't know if
you know this, but I'm the host of the number one landscape lighting podcast in the world.
And then like, wow, I'm like, no, I'm not that big of a douche. It's the only landscape
lighting podcast in the world. So I'm number one of one. There's not, there's not a lot of people doing
this in my space. So, like, I'll approach people and they're like, what's a coach? Like,
you're a scam. Like, they just don't know that. Right. So where I do see that happening,
it isn't so much with people trying to be gurus or anything like that. I see it where people just
in general are giving bad, bad advice in these Facebook groups. They'll go on and someone will ask a really
good question and they'll say, this is what you need to do. And I'm like, hold on. I think we should
have something like present your resume. Present where you're coming from because that is just
terrible advice. Like, if you want to stay small and be a one-man operation the rest of your life
and never make money and never have financial freedom and never have time freedom,
that's probably decent advice. But like, that's not the right answer. So it's sad when I see that.
And probably there's like 50% of the responses out there are just bad, bad advice. They have no
idea. Like, man, thanks so much. I appreciate that. I'm like, I want to DM them and say,
don't listen to that dude. Like, that's terrible. That's going to put you in a bad spot. And I don't,
I don't do that. I don't have time for that. But I do see people giving bad advice.
And it is what it is, which it drives me to like constantly put out good content.
Like I do my podcast. I do daily stuff on social me. I'm like, okay, the only way I can
really fight back is just make sure people do have access to really good advice.
I get in these groups and I'll be like out of the, out of the top 500 companies in the world,
$498 of them leased to own their vehicles.
Amazon leases to own,
Red Cross leases to own,
largest companies leased to own.
And when you really can unpack that,
you understand how much depreciation,
the employee morale,
the image of the brand in the community,
and just the fact of the total investment
into repairs is far less
than owning them and driving them to the wheels fall off.
And you always get people that are like,
I own all my stuff.
They're paid outright.
And then you look at their fleet and they just have no idea what they're talking about.
They're listening to their CPA.
I just had a podcast I did last week about fleets and why it makes sense and what to ask your
CFO and your controller and your CPA about.
And it just is a better thing to do this.
It costs way less.
And you turn in the vehicle before it hits 100,000 miles or less than five years.
But you own it at the end so you get all the depreciation.
And there's so many people that just don't get it.
Because you know what I used to do?
I used to buy $2,000 Dakotas and wrap.
them. And I had two full-time mechanics. And I thought I was like, man, you're an idiot. You're
paying $1,500 a month for this lease. I'm buying a vehicle outright. It looks great because
I wrapped it and detailed it. And then I realized, man, I'm doing transmissions and engines.
My guys are breaking down. I'm missing capacity. But the client sees that it's the 2002
Dodge Dakota. And now we come, and I couldn't hold the parts correctly. And I go to Harbor
freight to buy the roof rack thinking I'm getting the best deal. I used to wait for those
coupons that come out, get 30% off of the cheapest price already. And now I'm like, man,
I was focused on all the wrong things. Yeah, I had advice from a company. It was a client who
owned a big leasing company. And, you know, I like to, I like to be reciprocal. I hey,
you're doing business with us. Let's do business with you. And that's when I learned about leasing.
I didn't know. I would try to buy the cheap stuff too. But yeah, so many advantages from a tax
standpoint, financial. But also, it just feels good for like your team member to be driving around in a
nice vehicle that's well-kept and well-wrapped in your clients. So good. What is some of the books
that you've read recently that have just changed the way you look at life or business?
Well, you know, buyback your time was huge for me. And that's been, I guess, you know,
18 months or something like that since I've read that. But I review a lot of books. I think
some of the ones that just come to my mind that have really had a huge impact, the very first one
I had the biggest impact was a mentor of mine.
He's the owner of Garden Light, a manufacturing, lighting manufacturing company.
And it was one day he was asking me about my sales process and asking me that.
I'm like, I have no idea.
What do you mean?
I don't have answers to your questions.
And it kind of made me mad because I thought I knew what I was doing.
And it felt, I felt bad, right?
But he goes, have you done E-Mith?
And he hands me these CDs.
They were on CD.
I think I have them right here in my desk, five CDs.
And I'm listening to them in my truck as I'm driving around growing my lighting business.
this. And I, I, that was, you know, I know you've talked about E myth and Michael Garber and stuff
like that, but that changed by thinking. I knew at that, it gave me freedom to be okay that,
like, I don't have to be an awesome manager. Like, I can be an entrepreneur. I can hire an
awesome manager. You know, I thought being an entrepreneur was like, you have to be a good technician.
You have to be a good manager. You have to be good at everything. That gave me so much power and
freedom to be who I want. So E myth, then I came across traction. I already told you that. My, my buddy
and delivered the book traction to me and then buy back your time is good be your future self
by Benjamin Hardy basically anything he puts out as gold but be your future self out a huge
impact I've got my libraries I buy 15 20 books a week two of them come in the mail from somebody
and unfortunately my shelf is full of a lot of unread books now there was one time where I'd
read most of them on my shelves but I just way too much um
Yeah, well, listen, we had a great podcast here.
I really enjoy your time.
Maybe we didn't talk about something.
I'll leave you the last opportunity to tell the audience,
maybe anything, final thoughts on your mind.
No, check out the podcast, Lighting for Profits.
If you guys do want to bolt on a high ticket, awesome industry,
check out Landscape Lighting.
I've got Lighting Academy that can help you get started with design and install all that.
But, you know, more than anything,
my message to people is just like my favorite quote of all time is from Henry Ford and he says
whether you think you can or think you can't you're right and it is all about that guys if you believe
that you can't and you're like I don't know Tommy's just I can't do that then you can't like you
can't like you're totally right if you believe you can you can if you believe you can't and I did
my own little variation to that is believing that you can is way more profitable than believing
that you can't. So I'll leave you with that.
I love it. Thank you so much, brother.
Appreciate you, dude. That was a lot of fun. Thanks again for having me on.
Really appreciate it.
All right. Now, everybody listening, go leave me a review.
Thanks, buddy.
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 to help me transfer my team from stealing the toilet paper
to a group of 700 plus employees rowing in the same direction,
head over to elevate and win.com for 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.
