Landscape Tree Selection

I was recently surveying a landscape design.

All Trees Are Beautiful

While I believe almost every tree is beautiful, I believe every tree should be strategically placed. A white pine shouldn’t be placed 5′ from a side of a house and an oak tree shouldn’t be placed under a power line. These are just examples.

A Clean Lawn Care Company Vehicle

As I was surveying the landscaping, I noticed something falling on my white pickup truck which was parked on the driveway.

Now, I’m not a fanatic about keeping my vehicle spotless but I think a clean truck portrays a professional image for a lawn care business. Current customers and potential clients have a better image of a company when company vehicles are kept clean.

Berries Stain Cars

I had not been parked on the driveway more than 20 minutes. When I returned, I noticed my truck was covered in purplish splotches.

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Unwittingly, I had parked under a hackberry tree which was dropping a continuous stream of staining berries on all cars parked on the driveway.

This example serves to reestablish the fact that if you are doing landscape work you should take many factors into account before selecting and placing plants and trees. Improperly placed trees and plants will either die or have to be replaced with more suitable plants by the homeowner.

Landscape Plan

The person who planted the tree (or allowed it to grow) close to a driveway did not plan his landscape design well. A true professional would not have planted a tree so damaging to cars in an area where a much better tree selection could be made.

Start A Lawn Care Business

Planning your lawn care business is similar to planning a landscape job.  If you don’t do it correctly at the beginning the long term effects of poor planning can be detrimental for your business.

For help in starting or expanding your lawn care & landscaping business, visit our home page at: StartALawnCareBusiness.com

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Lawn Care Cleanup for Foreclosed Homes

As hurricane season begins, communities in heavy weather target areas struggle to place lawn care cleanup responsibility for foreclosed homes.

http://www.carolinalive.com/news/news_story.aspx?id=307652

This is good news for lawn care companies who have their businesses registered with their local code administrator and purchasing manager.
Irrespective of your location in the country (in hurricane zones or not) lawns need to be cleaned after severe weather.  If homes are in foreclosure or if vacant property is not cared for by registered property owners, responsibility of cleanup often falls to public works departments.
These departments often do not have available manpower after inclement weather since they are working hard clearing public streets and other prioritized locations.
If you are known to their purchasing managers and are on their list of available lawn care vendors you will often get calls to bid on clean up.  If job costs fall below purchase price thresholds you may be allowed to perform work without completing a bidding process.

The Start A Lawn Care Business guidebook and business toolkit describes how to properly get on local bidding lists and preferred vendor lists.  You can purchase the guidebook by visiting our home page at:

http://www.StartALawnCareBusiness.com

Feel free to contact us to order the business program or purchase it directly from our website.

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Lawn Care Business and High School Economics

It’s 6:00 AM and I just awoke dreaming of yesterdays post on job pricing for your lawn care business and how it relates to a test question I had, many years ago, in high school economics.

I remember the question clearly because I was gunning for a perfect grade and I got the question wrong.  The jist of the question was along the lines of:

“In a capitalistic economy, such as the United States, a business owner can charge whatever price he wants to charge for his goods or services.”

I answered that question “True” since I believed, and still do, that the question was more concerned with political freedom of business owners and not a question on sound economic judgement.  My teacher marked my answer wrong.

Yesterday’s blog posting stated that a business owner must not charge less than jobs cost if he wants to remain profitable and avoid financial hardship.  This is my opinion from a sound economic viability standpoint.

However, harking back to high school economics, I will amend my statement to say that in a polically capitalistic economy lacking price controls a business owner is free to charge whatever he pleases even if it means the eventual failure of his business.

As July 4 approaches, we should be aware of how lucky we are to live under an economic system where we are allowed to thrive in our businesses, or fail with them, without undue political control.

Though I still disagree with my economics teacher’s assessment of my answer, I must give her credit for devising a question that begs examination many years later.

Start A Lawn Care Business

The Start A Lawn Care Business business package is packed with information and business tools to help you start a lawn care business or expand an existing lawn care business.  Visit our site at:  StartALawnCareBusiness.com

Growing your Lawn Care Business

by: Lawn Care Business

Controlled growth and profitability is best for your lawn care and landscaping business.

As a note of caution to new business owners; control grow of your lawn care business and only accept profitable jobs to keep from getting too big too fast.

New lawn care business owners have a tendency to pursue all the business leads that come their way.  Aggressive marketing can bring many new prospective customers.  Another  tendency new lawn care business owners exhibit is dropping their prices to get as many customers as they can.

If you are a new lawn care business that is marketing agressively and underbidding all your jobs, you may quickly find your business in financial difficulty.

From the list of many attributes demonstrated by successful lawn care business owners controlled growth and profitability on every project rank high.

1)  Controlled Growth of the Lawn Care Business

Growing a lawn care business is a careful balance between developing capacity by purchasing the correct equipment and gaining customers to fill that capacity.  Ideally, a lawn care company should gain profitable customers slightly ahead of increasing their company’s capacity.

2) Profitability on Every Job

Successful lawn care business owners know the costs of every job.  Even jobs as small as $25 lawn mowings have associated costs.  Equipment depreciation, gasoline, trimmer line, travel time, and  opportunity costs all have to be calculated.  Successful lawn care business owners will not bid less than the  job’s total revenue.  If costs out strip revenue the job is not profitable and should not be accepted.

Start and Expand your Lawn Care Business

If you want to grow a successful lawn care business, check out our lawn care business material by clicking the “How To Start A Lawn Care Business” link at the top of this page.

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Lawn Care Business Fireworks

A very happy Fourth of July to you from everyone at www.StartALawnCareBusness.com

On a related note, lots of your potential customers are having cookouts this weekend for family and friends. As they are busy prepping food and buying drinks. they don’t have time for worrying about their yard.

It’s a great time to pick up a few extra lawn care customers. Canvas your neighborhood Thursday and Friday to drum up extra business.

Good luck and Happy Fourth!

There is still tons of money to be made this season. Check out our lawn care business program (on sale right now) at StartALawnCareBusiness.com

Distractions of a Lawn Care Business Owner

Business Distractions

As long as I have owned my business, I have struggled against continuous outside distractions.  There is a never-ending supply of non-work activities available to fill every waking hour.  Self-motivation is difficult enough when internal distractions pull me away from my work but when distractions come from outside sources I often fight a difficult struggle to stay focused.

Flexible Time vs. Free Time

One of the reasons I started a lawn care business was to have free time and flexible time.  Free time and flexible time are great benefits.  However, without a time clock or boss marking my work hours, non-productive activities creep into my day to consume my valuable work time.

You may relate to a few of the distractions listed below.

1)  Your time is not respected by family and friends.

Physical labor of a lawn care business is only a small portion of your work life.  Especially during the early days of starting your business and building your customer list you may spend more than half your time developing advertising strategies, handing out lawn care flyers, calling contacts, and giving estimates.  Once your lawn care business has customers you will still spend many hours with office work, maintenance, customer relations, and research & development of the services you offer.  These ‘non-work’ hours are as important as the hours you spend performing physical labor of your business.  Friends and relatives may not understand the importance of these hours and may lure you to “take the afternoon off” since you don’t have lawns to do at that particular time.  It is very enticing to take the afternoon off when friends call you on their way to the lake.

Resist the temptation of neglecting non-mowing duties just to spend a fun afternoon with family and friends.  Let them know how important your work is and ask them to respect the fact you are trying to build your business.

2)  Need a friend?  Buy a truck.

People with trucks always have plenty of friends.  Lawn care business owners are lucky that we get to purchase nice trucks and big equipment trailers.  Once you have hauling capacity you will notice a steady stream of people needing couches moved or loads of lumber delivered from the hardware store.  They appreciate your help but they fail to realize the amount of time consumed.

By all means help friends and relatives when they truly need assistance but offer your help sparingly to prevent your flexible schedule being taken advantage of.

3)  Facebook, Twitter, Texting, CNN, CNBC, Talk Radio, The Latest Movie, Sleeping-In, Staying Out Late, Long Lunches, etc, etc.

Distractions come in all forms.  There are an infinite number of distractions which can completely consume your day.  Force those distractions to respect your time by setting goals, developing a work schedule, and forcing yourself to respect your own time and the demands of your growing business.

Defend Your Hours

I am not ungrateful for my friends and family members (and for Facebook and Talk Radio).  I relish my ability to spend free time with them.  I also know they are not purposely consuming the time I should be spending on my business.

It is up to me (and you) to steadfastly defend the work hours needed to reach our goals of building a successful business.

Are You Succeeding With Your Lawn Care Business?

If you are not making the money you know you should be earning, our lawn care business guidebook can help you get on the right track.

Visit our website:  www.StartALawnCareBusiness.com
Start A Lawn Care Business

Bikini Lawn Care

Bikini Lawn Care

Several times each year we get questions from business owners wanting to start a Bikini Lawn Care business.  The most famous of all bikini lawn care companies was Tiger Time Lawn Care out of Memphis, Tennessee.  Tiger Time found world wide fame in 2007 when a local television news station reported on one of his bikini’d workers mowing a residential lawn.  Afterward, hundreds of television news stations, newspapers, radio shows, and blogs scurried to find more information about Tiger Time Bikini Lawn Care.

Bikini Lawn Care: Long Term Success?

We have not kept track of Tiger Time Lawn Care but we can tell you that out of the dozen or more lawn care companies we know about that have taken the bikini lawn care route none of them have found long term success solely offering bikini services.

Problems Offering Bikini Lawn Care

There are inherent problems offering bikini lawn care:

1)  Even when properly attired, lawn care workers face dangers on the job.  Lawn mowers are loud and weedeaters sling rocks and debris.  Protective clothing is essential.  Headware, safety goggles, hearing protection, work gloves, long pants, and work boots help protect lawn care workers.  A bikini doesn’t seem so erotic once it is covered up with layers of protective clothing.

2)  While lawn care companies thrive on repeat (weekly) customers, bikini lawn care customers only hire companies for one time services such as Father’s Day, a birthday celebration, retirement party, etc.   A bikini lawn care company needs a roster of hundreds of customers hiring them once or twice per year instead of only 40 to 50 customers needed for a typical lawn care company.

3)  If you have read the Start A Lawn Care Business Training Manuals you know that community respect is the cornerstone of many lawn care businesses.  You have a relationship with your customers.  If you do good work for them they will recommend you to their friends, relatives, and business associates.  Lawn care companies need to be taken seriously by their clients.  This is how larger contracts come about.  If you offer bikini lawn care, you really have to consider if you will garner the respect you desire for your business.

Bikini Lawn Care may sound like a great idea to generate quick cash and publicity but before you don your bikini or hire a cadre of scantly clad lawn babes consider whether or not it will lend to long-term success of your lawn care business.

Lawn Care Business Program

For more information on how to operate a successful lawn care business, visit our home page: StartALawnCareBusiness.com

Lawn Care Advertising: To Tree or Not To Tree

Have you ever seen obnoxious advertising that turns you away from a company and years later the memory of that advertising still leaves a bad taste in your mouth and you won’t do business with them because of an advertisement you saw years earlier?

On the opposite side, does GOOD advertising have as much a long-term impact?

Two advertisements involving trees.  One good.  One bad.

I came across two forms of advertising signs this week.  Neither of them deal with lawn care but they both have something in common.  Trees.  Both advertisements make use of trees outside their buildings.  One of the advertisements is an obnoxious banner hung lengthwise down a tree’s trunk.  The other advertisement is a positive and tastefully designed sign which incorporates trees on the business’ property.

Advertising sign #1

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As you can see from this photograph, a financial services company strapped a white banner to a tree in hopes of luring customers into their business.   This banner is a distraction, it’s ugly, and it is completely out of place hung from an otherwise very attractive tree in a residential-type neighborhood.

Advertising sign #2

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The second sign is for a health wellness center.  The company has named itself “The Wellness Tree” and it incorporates a beautiful shade tree just outside the front door.

The sign includes a wrought iron rendering of this tree.

IMGP4761_1

The Wellness Tree honors the trees on their property and invites clients to enjoy their beauty and shade.  The other company degrades their trees by hanging ugly banners from them.

As silly as this may sound, I will forever remember the gaudy banner hung by the financial services company.  It will always be a deterrent to my doing business with them.

As you design your lawn care company’s advertising, consider the aesthetic of your placements and how they fit in with their surrounding landscapes.

If you are just starting your lawn care business and you want to know more about marketing to your customers, our Lawn Care Business program offers a large marketing guide to help with your advertising.

Visit our home page to learn more: www. StartALawnCareBusiness.com

100 Door Knocks: A Free Lawn Care Business Marketing Campaign.

Free Advertising for your Lawn Care Business

Far too often new lawn care business owners are lulled into a false sense of imminent success.  Afterall, how hard can it be to start a lawn care business?  Tack up a few flyers on telephone poles and hang a few door hangers.   Put an advertisement in the news paper and distribute 1000 business cards you designed yourself at Office Depot. Develop a website and pay someone to make a really cool logo.

Before getting started in the lawn care business, you have to ask yourself:  How much do you really know about your customers, their needs, and their willingness to pay?

Before you go to all the expense of starting your business and before you pay one penny toward marketing, take $50 of your start-up capital and buy yourself a new pair of shoes.  With those shoes, start walking.  Pound the pavement of your local neighborhoods and knock on doors.

Forget the sales pitch.  Forget the flyers.  Forget the door hangers and business cards.  Forget trying to gain even a single customer.  You are on a learning mission.  Don’t try to make any sales at all at this point.  Let them talk while you listen.

Some people won’t talk to you but many WILL.  They will tell you about weeds in their flower beds and mulch that has been bleached by the sun which needs to be replaced.   A young couple will be working overtime and not have the energy to mow their grass and an elderly gentleman won’t be able to clean his gutters like he once did.

When potential clients see you are trying to learn and not pressuring them into a mowing contract they will be more willing to talk with you.

Be tenacious. Set your goal at 100 doors and don’t stop until you have knocked on all 100  (not 70 or 80…..100). If rude customers close doors in your face just smile and walk to the next door. If you knock on 30 doors and everybody refuses to speak with you just smile and start knocking on #31.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t gain a single customer. By the end of the day you will know infinitely more than when you started. You will have a “feel” for your potential clients and you won’t have to guess what lawn care and landscaping  services to offer.

At the end of your day compile your notes.  Group similar comments and requested services.  What are most people looking for in a lawn care company?  What did they dislike about their last company?  How much are they willing to pay?  How often are they willing to have their work performed?

Grouping your comments will help you define a core set of services to offer potential customers.  Drawing a graph of prices customers are willing to pay will help you maximize your profit potential.

When you have finished your research, visit those same 100 doors, knock on them, and thank the people for helping you decide to start your own business.  Then, ask if you can give them an estimate.

This type of marketing is free and potential clients respond to it much more readily than flyers or door hangers especially from a new company like yours. For a new lawn care company, face-to-face advertising is the best marketing tool available…and it’s free.

If you decide to use this free marketing strategy, let us know results from your “100 Door Knocks” campaign.

For much more information on starting your own lawn care business, visit our website by clicking on “HOME” at the top of this page.

Quarterly Tax Payments Due 6/15

If you are a small lawn care business owner who makes quarterly estimated tax payments, don’t forget that your payment should be postmarked no later than 6/15.

Make Estimated Quarterly Tax Payments On Time

Making appropriate estimated tax payments greatly reduces your chances of surprises when the fiscal end-of-year tax due date comes around.

Lawn care business owners (especially new business owners) are often surprised at tax time when they calculate how much tax is owed for the entire year. 

Making quarterly payments helps take the sting out of a huge bill at the end of the year. 

Quarterly tax payments has a few unintended beneficial consequence too:

1)  They force business owners to keep their books up-to-date.
2)  They help small business owners keep tabs on how well they are doing through the year.  If goals are not being met, business owners can step up their game.

Here is an IRS publication which explains quarterly estimated tax payments:

 http://www.irs.gov/publications/p505/ch02.html

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