CENTRAL FEATURES
EasyPro Plans to Grow
by Suz Trusty
A business program with preset goals
| Photos Courtesy of Easypro Property Services, LLC. |
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| Lawn mowing is just one of the services DJ Carroll’s EasyPro Property Services provides. |
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Picking your markets and
planning your growth are essential to growing a business according to DJ
Carroll, owner/operator of EasyPro Property Services, LLC of Carrollton,
Ky. This 20-year-old entrepreneur is passionate about business, and that
shows in every aspect of his young and growing company.
He started mowing lawns as a senior in high school.
During his first summer, he only offered lawn maintenance, but quickly
added landscaping to better serve his existing clients and reach new ones.
Already looking to expand his range of services, he picked up pressure
washing, operating it as a separate business called Scrappy’s Power
Wash, and then expanded into roof cleaning, again as a separate business,
EasyPro Roof Cleaning.
Seeing the potential synergy of these services, he
brought them all together under the name EasyPro Property Services, filing
for his LLC in September 2008. He says, “Putting everything together
gives me the opportunity to market additional services to each client. I
added snow removal this past winter to make it a year-round operation.
I’m at our lawn care properties every week for most of the year. If I
notice pest damage, overgrown shrubbery, fading mulch, black streaks on the
roof, mildew on the siding or stained concrete, I can talk to the property
owner about it on a more personal level and recommend our other services or
vice versa. Multiple services give me an ‘in’ with my current
clients, which helps decrease customer acquisition costs.”
He targeted high-end residential accounts from the
beginning, including condos, homeowner associations and apartment
complexes, as well as single-family homes. These now make up 80 percent of
the business. He also works with commercial accounts and municipalities,
broadening his overall client base.
He’s essentially a one-person operation, though
he has access to experienced mower operators through a local temp agency
when he needs them. “I’ve worked with several different
individuals through the agency that do the level of work that fits my
standards. I can request them by name, and usually at least one will be
available. That gives me the flexibility I need at this point. The agency
deals with the payroll and workers’ comp issues, so I have a set cost
per hour.”
Carroll plans ahead to maintain flexibility where
it’s most beneficial to overall growth. Mowing can be shifted by a
day or two when necessary, so he’s established a relatively full
schedule of clients. Snow removal has a much shorter time frame, so he
limits those preset clients to the number of sites he can clear effectively
before the start of a normal workday. “If I have additional time for
snow removal, all I need to do is drive through uncleared areas,” he
says. “Potential clients can easily spot the phone number on my
truck. We can set up the details and negotiate the costs in minutes.
Obviously, it’s a supply and demand issue, with those in snow-packed
situations willing to pay a higher rate for immediate service.”
He’s built a network of companies that supply
specialty services, such a tree removal and excavation, and he’s
willing to subcontract segments of a large project when necessary.
“I’d rather subcontract than turn away work if we can work
together to cover it effectively, but if a project is more than we can
handle or beyond the scope of our services, like exterior painting,
I’m honest with my customers and usually can recommend a
qualified company.”
Along with all this, he’s studying business
management full-time at Jefferson Community College in Carrollton. He crams
12 credit hours of classes into one full day, plus an additional evening.
“Knowledge is power,” say Carroll. “I’m willing to
invest whatever time it takes to learn everything I need to know to operate
my business successfully.”
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| A roof before
cleaning services ...
and after. |
Visibility
Carrollton is a small town with a population just
under 4,000. There are only a few competitors in either the lawn care or
cleaning services within the town or the other small towns nearby, but
larger markets are accessible since Carrollton lies halfway between
Cincinnati and Louisville, and just 20 minutes from Oldham County, the
richest county in Kentucky and in the top 100 nationwide. Obviously, the
competition is greater in those areas.
“Everything is marketing, and marketing is
everything,” he says. “I’m using the Internet to be
accessible to potential clients 24/7.” He’s his own Web site
developer (www.easypropropertyservices.com), continually updating the look
and content to make it more appealing and customer friendly.
He’s developed a second Web site (www.cheappowerwashing.com)
specifically for the Louisville market. It has a different look and style,
with more focus on value. It names EasyPro as the service provider, and all
links go directly to the company’s primary Web site.
He uses other marketing tools, too, including direct
mail targeted to specific neighborhoods. Carroll says, “I track each
of these mailings and follow up with a postcard two to three weeks later
for those that haven’t responded. I’ll send a second postcard
two or three weeks later. Those not responding are filed for follow up the
next year, after I’ve established a track record for service in that
neighborhood.”
He also places door hangers at the houses to the left
and right of each residential client, and on the three homes directly
across the street. He keeps printed brochures for each of the services in
his truck, along with business cards. “You never know when an
opportunity will pop up,” he says. “I noticed the dirty
concrete at the restaurant where I stopped for lunch after servicing a
client in Louisville. I asked to see the manager; introduced myself; told
him what I’d noticed; and asked for his business. That’s now a
contract client, scheduled for cleaning on a 30-day cycle,
year-round.”
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| EasyPro Property Services provides concrete cleaning for commercial properties, such as
Rally’s, as well as residential sites. |
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| A close-up view of concrete cleaning. |
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Computerization
Carroll computerizes wherever he can. Requests for
quotes come via e-mail from the Web sites, and he has the basics for each
estimate packet for his services on his desktop computer and on the tablet
PC that travels nearly everywhere with him. When meeting with a client, he
can pull up an estimate form, and customize it for that property.
Understanding that cash flow is the lifeline for a
small business, he uses QuickBooks for his accounting. Established client
invoices are prepared for e-mailing or mailing.
He uses Realtime Landscaping software for
computer-generated designs, along with an estimate for landscape services.
The size of the project determines the terms of the payment. It may include
prepayment for the materials with the balance due once the project is
completed; more involved projects may be set up on a three-payment basis,
or as monthly payments.
Working the plan
EasyPro Property Services is built on three basic
principles: quality, professionalism and customer service—before,
during and after the sale. Carroll has a plan for growth in 2009, 2010 and
beyond, with a definite benchmark to hit by the time he turns 30. “If
you don’t set goals, there’s no real push for you to achieve
something and to measure that achievement,” he notes.
Part of that growth includes investment in the future.
If net income is $100,000, he’ll operate on $60,000 and invest
$40,000. He says, “The total EasyPro package gives me a balance of
high volume, low price with the basic mowing and lawn care services, as
well as low volume, high price with the specialized services. The income
from mowing and other lawn care services covers the overall job costs and
operating expenses for the company, allowing me to invest the profits from
the specialized services back into the business.”
Carroll says, “If you let people know you can
supply the services they need; treat them right when you earn the
opportunity to serve them; and operate your business efficiently and
effectively, your company—and your profits—will grow.”
Suz Trusty is a partner in Trusty & Associates, a
communications and market research firm in Council Bluffs, Iowa. She has
been involved in the green industry for over 40 years.