Huge Transformations
On this episode of the Huge Transformations Podcast, Sheila Smeltzer sits down with Jonathon Henderson of Pressure Washing Marketing Pros for a practical conversation about what it really takes to grow a home service business from startup mode into a scalable operation. Cutting through the usual marketing fluff, Jonathon explains why most companies between $0 and $500,000 do not actually have a lead problem. They usually have a sales process, admin, or follow-up problem. He breaks down the difference between referral leads and digital leads, why trust has to be built differently with each, and how reviews, CRM systems, boots-on-the-ground marketing, and better lead handling all play a major role in growth. Sheila and Jonathon also dig into how AI is changing search behavior, why website content now needs to be more specific and useful instead of stuffed with keywords, and how companies can stand out in increasingly crowded markets. For exterior cleaning and other home service owners, this episode is a strong reminder that sustainable growth comes from mastering the fundamentals: knowing your market, building trust, creating repeat business, and tightening your internal systems before throwing more money at marketing. Resources: * The Huge Insider newsletter signup [https://thehugeconvention.com/insider] * The Huge Insider podcast downloadable action guide [https://thehugeinsider.com/] * The Huge Mastermind info page [https://www.thehugemastermind.com/interest] * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/groups/hugefoundations] * The Huge Convention [https://thehugeconvention.com/] * Pressure Washing Marketing Pros [https://pwmarketingpros.com/about-us/] * Pressure Washing Marketing Pros free strategy session [https://go.pwmarketingpros.com/schedule] * Pressure Washing Marketing Pros Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/pwmarketingpros/] Transcript: Hello everyone. Welcome to the Huge Transformations podcast. I'm Sid Graef out of Montana. I'm Gabe Torres here in Nashville, Tennessee. And I'm Sheila Smeltzer from North Carolina, we are your hosts and guides through the landscape of growing a successful home service business. We do this by interviewing the best home service business builders in. The industry folks that have already built seven and eight figure businesses and they want to help you succeed. Yep. No fake gurus on this show. Just real life owners that have been in the trenches and can help show you the way to grow profitably. We get insights and truths from successful business builders. And every episode is 100% experience, 0% theory. We are going to dig deep and reveal the good, the bad, and the ugly. Our guests will share with you the pitfalls to avoid and the keys to winning. In short, our guest will show you how to transform your home service business into a masterpiece. Thanks for joining us on the wild. Journey of entrepreneurship. Let's dive in. Hello. Hello, this is Sheila Smelter, your host and contributor for the Huge Transformations podcast. Thank you so much for joining us today. I have a great interview with Jonathan Henderson, pressure Washing marketing pros. He's a seven year digital marketing company and we dive into, really most of our discussion is talking about if we're a company that's trying to scale from zero to 500,000. We do a lot of discussion around this and where we need to focus on marketing and how. He's able to help companies kind of get to the next level. The thing that I love about this conversation with Jonathan today is that it is so incredibly practical, and even though we're talking about marketing and digital marketing and AI and a marketing checklist and current marketing trends, and you know how to close a customer, we're talking about all these things in this, in this show today. But you know, really, if you're a zero to 500 or if you're a. Million to 2 million to $3 million company. It's all the same stuff. It all applies. I learned so much from listening and talking to Jonathan today. Um, this is just really good conversation. He completely speaks our language in the ex exterior cleaning space, and I just, this is so gold. I love it. I am so glad that you're here to join us today. I hope you'll be an active listener, and I thank you so much for listening to the show. Hey everybody. This is Sheila Smeltzer, your host and contributor for the Huge Transformations podcast. Today I have Jonathan Henderson with us. Hey, Jonathan. How you doing, Sheila? I'm doing great, man. How are you? I'm doing good. Thank you for having me on. Yeah. Well, thank you for joining us. We get to dive into marketing today, don't we? Yes, we do. Yes, we do. Uh, tell our listeners who you are, what you do, and, and so we'll get started. Yeah. So my name is Jonathan Henderson, as Sheila alluded to pressure washing Marketing pros. We're a digital marketing agency that exclusively works with exterior cleaning businesses, whether it's pressure washing, gutter cleaning, paper, ceiling, and even Christmas sign installation. So we have over 145 plus clients in the US, Canada. So we've seen, not all, but we've seen a lot of what goes on in the industry. Very cool. So you're, you have a digital marketing company and it, it's not all digital, right? Is that incorrect to say that it's digital? Yeah. So SCA website design ads. Mm-hmm. Okay, great. And your, like your niche is an exterior cleaning? Yes. Cool. Exclusively exterior cleaning only. All right, well we've got the right guy on the show today then. 'cause we've got a lot of listeners that are in the exterior cleaning space. But really a lot of what we talk about would go into other verticals, right? With garage floor coatings or any, any type of home service business. Of course, of course. I have experience in the home service industry. I used to be a part owner of a junk removal company as well, so I kind of know how it is to run a home service business also. Okay. Well, Jonathan, I just wanna start, how did you, how did you, how did you learn what you know, how did you become an expert in the space? Trial and error. Right? That's just probably how everybody is when they say YouTube University trial and error. I first started off. About seven, eight years ago, and I was in the military at the time and I wanted to find a way to supplement my income, kind of make more impact with what I was doing. And so while I was deployed, I just wanted to pick up another skill. 'cause I had so much free time on my hand hand. So I was like, you know what? I'm gonna learn how to run Facebook ads. And so I bought a course that I saw on Facebook and I dove into that, started implementing some of the strategies, cold calling businesses in my local area while I was, you know, deployed with that. So it was like a 12 hour difference, like seven to 12 hour difference. So I'm cold calling those businesses, landing a couple of clients that were restaurants, and I started doing Facebook ads for them. Then after I did Facebook ads with them, I eventually, one, one of my best friends had a digital marketing agency that he was starting at the time, and he was doing more website design, SEO stuff. So I was like, Hey man, can you teach me how to do that? So he taught me how to do that. I started implementing that for local clients. Once I got back from my deployment, I started implementing that for, I had about seven or eight people in my local area. Roofers, plumbers, floral shop. Right? One lawyer too. So I was doing digital marketing for them, and I, a pressure washing guy. He's still a client of ours today. Jesse Meister. Shout out to you. Uh, propel Pressure Cleaning Warner Robins. Right. But, uh, he had hit me up and he said, Hey man, do you, have you ever done any, uh, marketing for pressure washing businesses? I didn't, at the time. I didn't even know what it was. That was around 2000. End of 2018. Beginning of 2019. And I was like. I don't know what pressure washing is, but I know that I can definitely help you out. 'cause there's not as much competition now, you know, now we know eight years later there's way more competition. Right. But, uh, at the time we got him ranked, we said, you know, we did really good for him. And I asked him if there was anybody else that was in his industry or there, if there was anybody else that was in this industry. And there was, and so. I just began, you know, cold calling. I began doing these video audits and uh, that's how I got like the first 15 to 20 clients. And in 20, like in basically beginning of 2020, I just decided to take it full time and uh, start pressure washing marketing pros. So that's how I learned at first. I just bought a bunch of courses, executed it myself, and yeah. So, and I'm assuming, because you and I met in the huge mastermind group, so I'm assuming that when, what was your first huge convention? My first huge convention. Funny enough, my first huge convention was in 2000, which, which one was the one that was in Atlanta? What year was that? Atlanta. That's going back a bit. Yeah. I think that was like 20, was that like 2019 Maybe I can tell you that was, that was, yeah, that was a minute ago. Um, I know that most of them have been, have been in Nashville. There was Atlanta and there was Washington DC at one point too. Mm-hmm. Um, that's going back probably more like 20. 13, 15, something like that. But um, but yeah. So Atlanta was your first show? Atlanta was my first one. I think that was probably right before COVID. 'cause I think in 2021 it was in Nashville, I think in 2021. It may, it may have been in Nashville, but I think my first one was like 2019 maybe. I didn't know anybody in industry just, and I already lived in Georgia, so it was just like a. It was literally just a drive up from there. So it was either 2020, the one in Atlanta? Yeah. 20 20, 20 19. One of those. Okay. That was my first huge convention. Okay. And I've been going every single one, every year. That definitely gets you in the network of exterior cleaners. Yep, it does. Yeah, it definitely does. Okay. So yeah. So if a company came to you and they were, I don't know, exclusively a, I know garage floor coatings are very popular in this group too, but if they did that, would you have services to offer them? I wouldn't necessarily have services to offer them, but just like how we're in the huge mastermind group where we get a lot of value from that. I also am in a different coaching group from my digital marketing agency, right. Exclusively, which we have other partners that are in that same one, like shout out to Drew Larson over, you know, he runs digital marketing agency. That's also in the, in our group too. And so if somebody needed garage doors, I have, I have a good friend, good buddy. Whether it's garage doors, whether it's plumbers, whether it's junk removal, whether. Any home service business you think about, I have somebody that does the same exact thing that we do, but for that particular vertical and niche. Love that. Okay. Awesome. That is great to know. Yeah. I have interviewed Drew Larson on this podcast, so you can go back in the previous episodes and find that. Yeah, yeah. Um, okay. So take me through, um, let's, I'm a company, I'm in pretty much startup mode. I'm between zero and 500,000. Um, what's a, what's a marketing, well, let me ask you this question first. What are the most common struggles you find with the startups in regard to marketing? In regards to marketing. You know, I could probably take that even broader than just saying general, you know, but I will, I will. I will say marketing, but I think it ties to the generality piece too. I think that one of the biggest things is gonna be finding enough time to be able to close, and so. What I find is that once guys hit that 250,000 mark, 300,002, between 250 to 350,000, it gets very difficult for them to scale any type of marketing that they're doing, even if they use our type of marketing. What ends up happening is they're so, they're on the truck a lot, and so they might treat. The referrals that they get, or people that are past customers, they treat those leads the same way that they would treat a Google Ads lead an SEO lead, or even like a cold lead. Right? And so, mm-hmm. I always say the biggest mistake that I see guys make when they're between zero to 500,000 is that they treat every lead the same. And so they, they expect that, so they have the same sales process that they would take a person who's a referral through, or a person that was already a past customer, they, they also take that same sales process to somebody that may have clicked on their Google ad. 'cause that's when a lot of guys start getting comfortable, you know, investing in digital marketing. When they hit like that a hundred to 150,000 a year, they start getting a little bit comfortable. Like, Hey, I might run some Facebook ads and Google ads, but then they might say, these leads are lower quality. You know, these guys aren't closing right now. And it's like, well, yes, because the clients that you're accustomed to were the ones that were referring. You were the ones that were already past customers. And so most of the time when I ask them, how are you getting most of your jobs, 90% of 'em will always say that are in that phase. Like, oh, you know, word of mouth. Word of mouth. Existing client referral. Yeah. Uhhuh, bingo. Right? And so they don't know. So I think the biggest struggle right there is you have to be able to dial in someone of a sales process. And you, and not even a sales process so much, but you have to be able to just have somebody answer the phones and have a different kind of process that you take people that come from maybe a Google ad than somebody that, that found about, found out about you from word of mouth. So kind of in short though, what, what's the overall difference between a existing client referral to mm-hmm. A Google ad in regard to lead and conversion? What, what, what are we doing different? Yeah, perfect question. So if I know if, if I know I'm a past customer, I already have that trust built with you, I have a different intention. I might be looking for quality, I might be looking for trust. And so that's why if I'm a past, if I'm a referral or a past customer, that's why I go back to you. A person that's on a Google ad doesn't know you from anything. They just have a service. They just say, Hey. I need, you know, pressure washing done at my house. And so at that point, what are they gonna do? They're gonna click the ad, they're gonna see you, you might have some good before and after photos, they're gonna give you a call. And if I just pick up that phone call and I quote them over the phone and I just say, well, yeah, it's gonna probably cost you $350. You know we're gonna do X, Y, and z. That person's just not gonna close over the phone. I'm not saying like they could, right? But you're gonna be missing out a big sector of people, right? Maybe only 10% of people that call from a Google ad will one call close, right? But you're gonna miss out on like the 90% of people that you may have to follow up with that you may have to go out and give in-person estimates to that may not know about your brand. Because even your branding and how long you've been in business plays a factor. And so some people might. I always call it omnipresence, but if you're always marketing in different kind of avenues. But I don't, you know, I don't want to go too long on a tangent like that with that stuff, but I would say that those factors play a role in that. And so a lot of the time with Google Ads, just to put it simply, they don't, they don't trust you as much right now. So you have to go ahead and build more of that trust. And so that might be. You might have to have more follow ups, you might have to go ahead and do it in person. So those are different things that a lot of guys, I feel like they just hit that plateau. And of course we know Sheila, you know this too, hiring, right? Yeah. In a service business, no matter what it is, whether it's pressure washing, digital marketing, a restaurant, you always will have the demand. A lot of the time you just don't have the people to execute it. You know? It's much harder to find. So this is awesome. 'cause really what I just heard is the existing client referral. That's what I call it. That's what I, mm-hmm. That's my campaign name for it. My company. Existing client referral. You're right. When those, when those referrals come in, that is somebody sending someone they care about to someone they trust. There's already that trust factor there. Mm-hmm. And that is a very, that is a much easier conversion. But what you're saying is that if they're coming off of a digital lead. Now you have to actually create that trust and you wanna now start to build the relationship. And it is a very personal relationship, especially in home services. Now, don't get me wrong, we have clients that are, can be transactional. Like, Hey, here's my house, here's the door code. Just go in, do what you're gonna do, or whatever it may be. But, um, those, it's, it, 90% of the time it's gonna be somebody that you want to, is gonna greet you at their front door and be there for the service and get to know you while you're there. So really, we wanna build that trust. There's, there's another layer of trust building from the digital lead. Bingo. Bingo. You're right about that. And I think that you said something important there, Sheila. I think the advantages that exterior cleaning businesses have. Then other industries that I was in, like junk removal is that people care about their homes. Number one, people really care about their homes, so you're gonna find more people that aren't as transactional in the exterior cleaning industry because they're like, I want the right company to go ahead and clean my home so people pay a higher ticket price. Now, the industry that I was in with junk removal. Know, when I've talked to my business partners about that stuff, I would always say in junk removal, people are only loyal to, to whoever had their attention, right? Mm-hmm. Because with junk removal, I could get any, it's, it's a low barrier entry, right? I can get anybody to remove the junk. I can have a 4,000 square foot home. Right? Does that change the price of how much? If, if one, if a 1500 square foot home has this amount of junk, like the same amount of junk as a 4,000 square foot home, that's the same price. Right. Doesn't matter how rich that person is. Doesn't matter how big their home is at that point, it's gonna be who's ever loyal to their attention, right? Or who's ever or gonna be loyal to whoever has their attention. So the thing I like about exterior cleaning is that a lot of people care about their home. If they have a 4,000 square foot home, then they're gonna be like, dude, I'm not gonna just have any company come to my property and clean it. Right, number one and number two, you can go out to that property multiple times, right? I can go out there, clean their roof, I can go out there, clean their gutters. I can go out there, clean their driveway, their house, and that doesn't have to be all in one sitting. It can be in multiple sittings. I can do their house, their driveway, their roof in the springtime, and I can clean their gutters and hang their lights in the fall and wintertime. So just hang in on Google for a second. I have so many questions to ask you, by the way, but just hanging on Google for a second. How much weight do Google Reviews play in this process? Because they're with Google reviews when, if they really take the time to go in and scope out your company and they're reading, you know, hundreds of five star Google reviews and customers saying all these very detailed things about their experience with your company, that is actually a way to automate this trust building from the get go, I would assume, right. Yes, of course reviews are one of the most important ranking factors, not only on Google, but just building trust overall. And so I think you hit it on the head, Sheila, about, about building reviews and why that is very important, especially for a company that is brand new. I always say, and I know we'll talk about that here soon, about like AI and how and how like such behaviors are changing as time goes on. But in those reviews, especially for newer companies, like I know for you, your guys' business has a lot of reviews, right? If I'm a new guy on the block and I'm trying to compete with you, Sheila, like it's gonna be very hard for me to do. I, I have to find a way to go ahead and accelerate that process of how I'm gonna be able to generate my reviews, right? And so I believe it's only gonna get harder for newer businesses because just me, I don't know. I don't know if you shared the same sentiment, but I know when I first got in the exterior cleaning industry back in like 2019, 2020 timeframe. There wasn't as many exterior cleaning businesses like there just wasn't nearly as many as we have now. And so now I see significantly more exterior cleaning businesses than I saw six, seven years ago. And so what does that mean? There's gonna be even five to six years from now, there's gonna be even more. And there's already companies that are established that have already been doing exterior cleaning for. 10 years already right now in 2026. So how is the business gonna be coming in in 2028? How they can accelerate that path? Like you said, they're gonna have to get reviews, they're gonna have to build that good foundation. You're speaking my language right there. So, I mean, my testimonial on this is that I'm a 26 year company in my market. Yeah. And when over up until the last 10 years, I maybe had five real competitors. Yeah. And now it's probably 30 like yeah, I do competitive analysis. Like it is insane how much competition I have. It is, it is like when you get there, it's a whole nother bag of issues of how you stay on top, how you remain on top, and then how you differentiate how, like what is it that you can do to rise above? 'cause you know. I don't wanna fight for the, I don't wanna fight. I like, I've, I feel as though I've earned the authority to be able to be the thought leader in my space. Mm-hmm. And so I don't wanna be scrounging for these bottom ticket jobs. Like that is not who we are. Um, don't get me wrong. There's work out there for everybody. And I think that's the beautiful part about it. Every market has work for, there's plenty of work around for everybody, you know? You're right about, and I like really, as competitors, we all need to be really supportive of each other and you know, creating the standard, like, I don't know, I'm sorry I could go off on this for a long time, but I have the standard in my own market and it's like, you know, my hope and dream is that the people coming in, the other companies coming in and starting up. That they are able to actually benefit from kind of the market expectation, the pricing expectation and things like that, that I have created, you know, through a plus PRO services. So, you know, but that's not always the case. But we can, we can move on from this topic. It's just, it's a, it's a real, it's a real thing, a daily, daily conundrum. Um, it is, no, I, I understand that 110%. Yep. So I guess the flip side of being the new guy trying to come in and compete with the established, there's also the established now having to compete with the new companies, right? Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Um, and a lot of it is price, but let's, um, I wanna ask you, staying in the range of a zero to 500,000 uhhuh, like what is the marketing checklist? What, where do I need to be focusing? And then kind of order of importance. Kind of like top five. Okay. No, I, I love that question. So first the thing, the first thing before I go into the marketing checklist about that, so I can answer it the best way I can, is that I would look at the market that you're in. Like there's gonna be different markets that, like if I'm in Joplin, Missouri, I have to look at my market and say, if I'm getting advice from a guy that's in Orlando, Florida about his marketing, those are two separate markets. Are they not? Yeah, one of them is a significantly lower household income. Significantly lower population while Orlando has a significantly higher income, significantly higher population. So first thing that I would tackle if I'm doing any type of marketing, you know, and I have a checklist with that, is I'm tackling who is my customer avatar? What, what does my, and as we talk about in the mastermind, I won't go into it a lot, but like, you have to look at your total addressable market, right? Like who, like how many people can I market to? You know, how many people are my customers? How many people can I go ahead and reasonably capture in this market? If there's only 50,000 households in the area that you're in, you're probably not gonna get off 50,000. Right? But what percentage of those people can you go ahead and actually reasonably attain in that market? And so that's the first thing I think guys missing on is say, well, my friend said that I should be doing this from a marketing. It was like, well, your friends in. Orlando man, and you're, like I said, you're in the middle of nowhere. In, in Arkansas. You guys are gonna have two different ways that you're gonna be marketing. So address that first, you're gonna wanna go ahead and address what your market is, the population, household income, all of that. Second thing that I'll go ahead and look at is I always say you need to have, you don't need to be doing every marketing thing under the sun, but you need to at least try enough. So like the second thing I would say is that I would be trying as much like boots on the ground strategies as I can. And I would give it time to go ahead and test. And what I mean by that is this, is that a lot of guys will say, I sent out edms. And it's like, how many did you send out? Well, I sent out 500. How many times did you do it in one month? I sent it one time. One month. Got no return on it, so I stopped doing it. And it's like you didn't have enough volume in order for you to see if it was actually gonna go ahead and work or not. 'cause for me, for example, when we had our business for junk removal stuff, I'd have to send out at least. Like 5,000 for it to be profitable. If I only send out 500, I have the wrong story about it. So that's why you wanna have that foundation set, especially if you're a zero to 500,000. You wanna have marketing strategies that, that don't necessarily rely on digital per se, because you wanna build a good foundation. 'cause what if you're digital marketing agency can't? What if you just relied on a digital marketing agency like ourselves for your business and then all of a sudden. You're not getting the leads that you need, you're always gonna be at the mercy of that digital marketing agency. So that's why I always say you need to be building up your own lead source boots on the ground marketing. So find ways you need to find all the ways that you need to market, but test out as many as you can possible while you're in that range right there to see what's gonna be most successful for you in your market. That'd be like the second thing I would talk about. Third thing that I'd talk about if you're gonna go digital, um. It'd just be looking at your market in the sense of making sure that you have enough budget to spend. Because if I'm in that sort of 500,000, if I'm at the two 50 to 350,000 range, then I probably have a little excess cash to go ahead and market for Google ads, Facebook ads. I'd look at my market. If I'm at that 100,000, 150,000, I may not. Right? So I think that you need to have a CRM in place as well, because I know Sheila, you're like, John, this is nothing about Google, nothing about, but it's just like. You can't be as successful with digital marketing if you don't have these things in place. Like I, like, I know guys out there that are at $200,000 a year in their pressure washing business, and they don't have a CRM yet. I'm like, what are you? They're like, I'm using QuickBooks man. I'm using QuickBooks for all my, I'm like, you don't have a CRM. They're like, no, I don't have a CRM. And it's like, well, that's why you're losing money on the table because you know you're probably just getting these one time transactions. And so at that point, you wanna make sure that you have those basics down. So I'd say three things, Sheila, right? You wanna make sure you look at your, you wanna make sure you look at your household's market or your market, right? Your demographics, so that you know, yeah, you wanna test out many marketing sources that aren't digital first, so that when you're in a pinch and you know that Sheila, you've been in business over 20 years, there's gonna be times when you, you're in a pinch. I can't just be like, well, I need to just raise my budget on Google Ads or Facebook. Like sometimes you're in a pinch and you're like, I need to get jobs. Now, whether that's door knocking, whether that's yard signs, whether that's something that you put the demand in front of your customer's face. Right, right. You don't, for them to come to you, you put the demand in their face. So that's why we test out strategies like that, which are usually boots on the ground, right? And then just make sure that you have a CRM and these different things in place so that when you do go ahead and you get leads, you're organized, you're not disorganized, and you're able to maximize the leads that you do get. So that's what I would say for guys that are in that range, the things that I just see that they need to go ahead and do. I love that. Um, yeah. You know what, this is the playbook. It's the playbook. Yeah. It, it is the, it is the basics. And um, and you're right, it's very important to create that foundation before we move into the big spend items and things like that. Mm-hmm. You know, I love to, um, like in regards to not digital. Yes. There's EDDM, so every door direct marketing, um, mail marketing, um, you know, don't underestimate the power of a really solid referral program. Bingo. Just like you said, like an existing client referral is free. It's free. Bingo. Exactly. And, and, and it's the most trusted lead you're gonna get. And you're probably gonna have over 50, 50% conversion rate on that existing client referral. So how can you encourage more of those and incentivize your clients? And I had tell you one thing. Jonathan that we've, our referral program has been so simple over the years and existing client referral is our number one marketing campaign source, meaning it's, it's our top performing marketing campaign every time and is because people wanna refer us whenever they do. All we're doing is we're sending them a little thank you card and it says, thank you so much for referring so and so sending someone you care about to someone you trust. It means the world to us. That's it. Yeah. And guess what? They wanna continue to refer just like that. Yeah. And I mean, you know, and we've done it where we give them discounts and things, but you know what, it doesn't feel as good as when they just get that handwritten card. Mm-hmm. And I was talking to Daniel Dixon about this, um, who's, you know, son Jim and whatnot. I interviewed him on this podcast last week. Mm-hmm. And we were talking about like direct mail marketing. Um, which we are definitely getting off the digital right now, but direct mail marketing, how it was used so heavily that everybody was just throwing 'em away, but now we're in a trend that nobody's doing it anymore, so you'd actually be really darn effective by sending a, a mail marketing piece. And if it's the right piece and if it has that personal touch. Um, and so there's so many things out there that we have that we can automate with even direct mail marketing now. And I just think it's so cool. Like I love to watch these, um, like I love to watch things come full circle, right? I mean, yeah. It's really like the trends really do come full circle and it's really fascinating to me, especially over, you know, so many years. Yeah. I think it's timeless. So I love how you kind of laid out your first steps and the marketing checklist. So you talked a little bit about ai. Mm-hmm. Um, and this kind of goes along with like current marketing trends, but how is AI impacting what you do with your clients? That's perfect. So for our clients, I, AI is impacting it because I think that as time goes on, just like you, just like you said earlier, Sheila, like how direct mail, it's all coming full circle, right? I believe that even with ai, it's all coming full circle because guess what the with JI and all of that, if I digitize right, if I digitize how I do edms and different things like that, to where I can say every time in my CRM. I close this customer out. Right. It sends them every, you know, sends the people around them direct mail. Mm-hmm. And so for us, what I'm seeing is I, I'll take this question two ways, right? The first is, how, how does it affect the searcher? Well, it comes full circle. Back then, 25, 30 years ago, people used to look in yellow books. You know what I mean? Like who had the biggest adding yellow books, right? Like they're on the front page. The first page right there, they had like the biggest one. Like you're laughing at that, but like the biggest one right there, right? I'm not that young, you know? I still know that. I still know that time print frame, right? So you'll look at that and you'll be like, all right, then you see that. It's the same thing with Google now With Google. What ends up happening is people just saw, okay, these guys were at the top. That's what I'm seeing. And so with ai, the platform. It's just a recommendation platform at this point, and it's kind of like consultative. So now instead of if I typing in, like give me, I can go to chat GPT, which a lot of our clients is ramping up, like we track our leads, people are using chai, GPT more like 90%, you know, like use chat, GT course perplexity. But like a lot of people using chat GPT to do their searches where they're just like, Hey, give me like, uh, you know, gimme the pricing for house washing in Charleston, South Carolina. And they might have that, and then they, and then they might say, well, gimme companies that are in this price range. So. If you're gonna win with AI in terms of searches, in terms of being able to have customers find you, you have to provide the most context, right? Talk about the equipment that you're using, talk about your unique process of how you may clean a roof, how you clean a driveway, how you clean a house, what type of house siding are you cleaning, right? What type of, are you mainly commercial? Like what kind of commercial jobs can you go ahead and you have a hot water unit? You have a reclamation unit, those are things that will differentiate you. That if you don't say that on your website, when AI platforms are crawling this, then I might say something like, as a customer, the old journey of how I used to go on Google would be pressure washing companies near me. And I'm not saying Google's not going away anytime soon, but what I'm saying is that people would be like, I'm gonna see the reviews, click on it, you know, and I have it there, right? And I have to do my own research. I have to go look at their website, all of that. With ai, it consolidates that process, right? People are all about what? Convenience. So now if I just say pressure washing companies in, you know, this, this area right now, it gives a, it gives a list of those companies. The, the search doesn't stop there. Now I can ask, try GBT. You know, do you know the pricing of these companies? It's gonna give you the pricing and if it, if you're not, if your pricing's not displayed, then you're not gonna get shown. Or it might say, which of these companies could clean a an epay deck? Right? Because we know Epay is like a specialty wood, which one can clean an Epay deck? And if you can clean Epay decks, but you don't say that on your website and you don't say the factors. Any of that, you don't provide context. You're getting left out on that. 'cause now it's like this company mentioned it on their website, they clean EPA decks, right? Yeah. And then let's take it even step further to say like, well, which company would you choose between this one and this one? They might say, well, we would choose this company because they have this many reviews on their website. They talk about how they use this treatment with their EPAY stuff. We didn't hear that from this other company that they do that. You might. And also this other company offers a three year warranty that they had that we saw on their website. We didn't know about these guys, clean epay, but we don't know if they offer a warranty. So I think the safest choice for you would be this company because they have a warranty. This is their process, and they talk about how they specialize in Epay decks. And so the more context you give your customers, the better that you'll win in this new future of ai. 'cause now AI can grab this information at a fingertip. For the customer and our customers. A more informed customer. Now they're not just a kind of customer where they're just like, they're gonna do the research. We're getting smarter and smarter customers now. Right? So that's, you have to go ahead and adjust for that time period. So, am I hearing on this, am I hearing that really the content that you have on your website, so I remember website content was all about keywords. Keywords. Keywords. Keywords. There's like regurgitation of keywords on every single page. Every single page. Over and over and over and over again, right? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, but am I hearing that now with ai, because it is literally crawling all the information that you have on your website, that it is more important for us now to have websites that have really crafted, curated content. That is specific, like, like using proper industry terms and like really using, like being very descriptive about how we are doing things. Is that what I'm hearing? That is what you're hearing. That is what you're hearing because you gotta think about it. Maybe 10 years ago Google's algorithm wasn't as smart. It's just, it's just the truth, right? Yeah. Like so what they did in order for their algorithm to be able to gather context is what they had to go ahead and look at different keywords to be able, and like a different page should be like, okay, we're looking at these different keywords and we can summarize what this page is about. Just like how this chat GPT, you don't think that Google's algorithm has this. Same type of technology that's used on perplexity, Claude, you know, all these different AI platforms that they're not using within their algorithm. And then also, you gotta think this is the dumbest the internet and AI will ever be. So they're only going to gather more and more and more and more context. Mm. And so if you just have a page that has misinformation on there, if you have a page that doesn't talk about industry terms, whatever it is, then you will get left behind. And so that's why I say for a lot of our clients, when I look at their websites, like, dude, you like, you wanna rank in Atlanta, you got 20 reviews and you only got five pages on your website. And it's like, well work off my website. I have right now. It's like, nah, man, I can't, right? Like you just, you don't have enough of the, you know, which we do for our own clients, right? Like we, we'll have like a two hour onboarding with them. I'm not trying to shield any of our service or anything, but I'm saying that like, what I do is that for our clients to get as much context, we'll have a two hour onboarding talk about every single process that they do. Yeah. Roof cleaning. Driveway. Cleaning. House washing. We wanna know the type, we wanna know the process. We wanna know the pricing. We wanna know if you have any discounts, any bundles. We want to know the type of equipment you're using for it. We wanna know how many years you've been in business. We wanna know your unique mechanisms. What makes you different than the other company next door? Right? Because once you differentiate yourself like that, then Google can look with their helpful content update and they say, okay, this actually, this content's better than this one. So do keywords matter as much? No, because Google is much smarter at gathering context. Yeah. You know why I love this, what we're talking about right now, because, and it really does correlate back to the conversation we were having about the new startups and the experienced companies and things like that. Mm-hmm. Like the way that the algorithm is working now and you know, the content needing to be very more authentic and true and not just like that, that, that, that Right. Yeah. To me, that does actually raise professionalism in the industry. Mm-hmm. Because if you wanna show up in the chat, GBT, you know, answer. Right? Yeah. You need to have these things and you need to know what to build and what to say, and you need to actually know your industry and know how you perform the services and how to describe them and, and all of the, you know, ins and outs, it's like, I love that. Yeah, I do see that as a huge benefit of what we're talking about right now, so, mm-hmm. Yeah, that's, that's really cool. I had never thought about that before and I'm really glad that you shared that with us because of course, it's got me thinking about things a lot differently. Yeah. So, okay. So I understand how AI is working as compared to like typical like older Google searches and things like that. Mm-hmm. Um. What are the most successful ways that you have found, let's just stay in that zero to 500,000. Mm-hmm. What are the most successful ways that you have found to help your clients generate leads? The most successful way that I've helped them generate leads is going to, it just really depends, once against you on their market, right? So lemme give you some scenario, lemme give you some scenarios. If I have a client, for example, that is like, Hey man, I'm at the 200, $250,000 range. And a lot of these guys I might say like, Hey man, I've been in business for even six years. You know, I've been in business for six years and I just, I've never done any digital marketing like that. Or I've tried this company and I've used that and let's say they're in Orlando. I'm not gonna tell this guy website, SEO stuff, right? Because he needs leads. Now I'm gonna be like, dude, you need to go ahead and run some Google ads. You know what I mean? Or you need to go ahead and capture demand. You have, you have about a thousand to $2,000 that you can go ahead and spend. And so from us, what we do is we, every client situation's gonna be unique. 'cause like if somebody that was like one of the big, like even for you, like you came to us and you were like, Hey, I'm trying to do this. I might look at your market and say. Well, maybe Google Ads is not the best route for you because you've been in business for 26 years. So for you, you could probably Dom dominate more with your SEO and your online presence even more because you already have that momentum. You already have that domain age. So every client and every business is going to be different, and I think that's what guys have to take into account is that your chapter five is not, is not the same. You know, your. Your chapter five is not somebody else's chapter 18, whatever it is, right? Mm-hmm. So the current place that you're at right now, you may not need to do what somebody else is doing. And so what I tell guys all the time is I just say, you need to once again look at your market and we help guys identify that, you know, like look at your market and we'll be best for you. 'cause if I'm in Drop in Missouri, as I mentioned earlier, before. I may be able to just do website, SEO if I'm at the 150,000 range, because there may only be 10 pressure washing businesses out there. And so I might have a way for me to go ahead and compete to where if I'm running Google Ads, there's only 150,000 people out in that area, Google Ads is not gonna do as well because I have to wait for the demand of people. And so there's different ways that you have to go ahead and look at your market and say. All right, then. What's the best strategy for this client? Or what's the best strategy for my business? Which is why I always say number one thing is look at your demographic. Look at your population. Yeah. Look at your total addressable market, and that's how you're gonna determine what marketing you're gonna be able to go ahead and do for your business. I love that. And, um, the total addressable market thing, did you, did you learn that from the Mastermind or is that something when Dalkey covered that, that you kind of, you already knew about? I kind of already knew about, but we'll say this, but I'll say this. He gave me a, a much better formula for how to calculate that. Yeah. And then it also made us significantly better. Whenever we were, whenever we were going about doing it for our client, looking at their market, it, it made it significantly easier for me to go ahead and understand what we need to do. So, yes, I knew a little bit about it. 'cause I was like, you know, in digital marketing it's like, okay, how many clients can I have? In the pressure washing industry. Right. But the way that he broke it down, I was like, okay, man, this actually, I love the method of how I can go ahead and do this not only for our, you know, business, but also for businesses that we, you know, execute these services for. That's why I think the Mastermind has been such killer for this, personally, me as a digital marketing company, because I get to kind of see what you guys are going through, right? Like, as you know, in the industry. And also I get to learn about like. Different strategies about selling, you know, how to talk about selling, uh, you know, different methods of how you can buy other businesses, right? It doesn't have to just always mean outright buying other business. There's different means which they discuss there, which I was like, that actually makes a lot of sense. So there's a lot of stuff that I've learned that's helped me, you know, enhance my knowledge and help our clients. Um, you know, when it comes to executing marketing or when they just ask us about advice anyway, right. For anything. Yeah, I know I, yes, 100%. And I can imagine that you hear it all if you are kind of interviewing your clients on the level that you described earlier, like you probably, you probably have such a good understanding of the industry above and beyond a lot of us. 'cause you're hearing it from so many different clients, right? Yeah. And if you're asking those questions, I mean, honestly, you could be a very integral. Part of, and, and I never really thought about that angle before that. Yeah. You, you, you probably hear it all. Mm-hmm. You know, you know what all of our struggles are. So what, what are like the top struggles that gimme like some common threads? I'll give you the top three that already know right now. So like from zero to 500,000, there's only two main problems that guys have. Okay? Number one, their admin is messed up. And what I mean by their admin is messed up. They don't have somebody answering the phones. They're the one sending out the invoices. So I always say you need to have that admin advantage when you go to the zero to 500,000. Like if you're gonna get to that, if you to have a million, you need to have the admin. Because you're not gonna be able to go ahead and like be on the trucks, send the invoices, and as much as you say, Hey man, I'd like to do the admin stuff and I'll have the text work, you're still gonna have to sell. You know what I mean? Yeah. And like if you don't have that office admin, when the client complaints, my plans are, my plans died. Like that shouldn't be you as a one that should be addressing that with the, with the customer. That should be your, your lead tech or somebody else that's going on that property and talking with that customer and making things right. But your office manager. Or the person that you have in the office is first taking that, addressing their concerns, scheduling the guys to go out there and do whatever they need to do, not you. Right. So that's the first thing is the admin advantage. Like usually guys do not have that. And that's the biggest struggle that I see that guys have with that number one. Number two is just hiring, 'cause I talk about admin advantage is just hiring, like when it comes to hiring, being able to hire for help. Guys are like, oh, Jonathan, I just lost three of my guys. Like right now. You know? And they go in the busy season with that. They either, they overwork their guys, they don't train their guys enough, they're trying to fire them. They say, I can do it myself. And they just find themselves in this perpetual loop of staying between 200 to $350,000. And they don't ever plateau from that. 'cause if you probably know this sheet, like if you're gonna ever cross 250,000 in yearly revenue, like you cannot, and pressure washing, at least you cannot. I just have not seen a business, and maybe somebody will comment on this podcast and be like, that guy was wrong. But I've just never seen a business where they've done like 400 thou, 300 to 400,000 just themselves. Unless they have a super specialty business. I'm not saying that it can't be done, but I'd say like 98 to 99% of guys are not gonna reach half a million just doing the work themselves. Yep, 100%. There's only so much you can do, and you're right. You have to start to build the team out and it's funny that you say that. My very first hire outside, well, first were technicians. Mm-hmm. Hiring techs to start to get me off the truck. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Um, hiring techs. And then, um, and then my first admin position was just a general admin office manager. She did everything. She did QuickBooks. She wrote the work orders for the day. She answered the phones. She deposited the checks, she paid the bills. She did everything. Um, I miss her dearly, by the way. But anyway, she, she, but she did everything. And then, then as the company started to grow, then that role was divided up into more roles, uhhuh, you know, and that's really how you're building the team out. But also my second, it was text first, hiring technicians first, then it was the admin, and then it was sales. And that was the hardest position for me to let go of was sales. Sales. Yeah. I love, I loved it, but when I sat down and I wrote down how much time I was spending on it, and there's time that I had, I needed to be doing other things. Mm-hmm. It was like a no brainer. The, the writing was on the paper. I needed to hire somebody to do sales. And that was, that was, um, that was a big game changer for me. And I could have never done it. I would've been. I mean, if I didn't have people doing sales for me now, I mean, there's no way we would lose so many leads. I mean. You know, so anyway, um, but yeah, that's, that's kind of the, the kind of the way that I got into building the team out. But you are absolutely perfectly hundred percent right. I think I, I think you said a per, I I think, I think you said, 'cause that's what I was gonna say. The guys that get the 500,000 to a million is usually gonna be like the sales process. Having a sales team in that, in that order, and not necessarily getting more leads. But doing more with the leads you already have, right? Yeah. Conversion. Mm-hmm. Exactly. Extracting more value from them because guys are at 500,000 to a million. The reason why they don't hit seven figures is because they're not extracting enough from their, and they're losing. Not only are they losing leads, but they're also like, um, they're also not converting, you know, the. One time customer that they had into a customer three or four more times, right? So, yeah. Yeah. So, um, such good stuff, Jonathan. I could keep going and going, but I think we need to start to cut it off. Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course. I think there's just been a lot of gold here and you've taught me so much, and I love just having, because I, I'm not gonna lie to you, and I get on the phone and get involved in these marketing calls and I don't. I'm not really involved in this, in my company, but mm-hmm. I do try to pay attention, um, but they speak a language that I don't speak. Mm-hmm. But everything that you and I have talked about today, I completely wanna under 100% understand what you're saying. Mm-hmm. And you've given me, given me a lot of ideas too, but I really appreciate that. Mm-hmm. I, I appreciate you speaking my language as the business owner. Um, of course. So I just wanna give you props for that. I appreciate that. I appreciate that. And, and like I said, I've been in your guys' shoes before running a junk removal, like kind of business with that kind of stuff. So it was, uh, kind of getting it from the ground up and doing, kind of going through those phases. So yeah, I try to take a. What people try to make digital marketing too complex or just anything like too complex. Like if I, if I tried to have you explain window cleaning or pressure washing, you probably do it very easy to me because you know what you're doing. Right, right. Because you can, I can explain it to you easy when somebody starts to sound complex and they're like, well you gotta do, they probably don't know what they're doing. Right. So, yeah. I really appreciate that. Um, oh, and I have just one funny for you 'cause it came up of course. See my hat A plus Pro Services Inc. Yes. Yes. So we, the, the tagline is we are so experienced that our business name came from being first in the Yellow Pages. Oh, okay. Oh, man. Actually, every time, Hey, it's a differentiator. Yeah. Yeah. None of my competitors can go in the room in a b and I group or whatever and say that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh Lord. So anyway, I just thought I'd add that in because I think you called it actually, um, you called it something different. Yellow books. Yellow books. Yellow books. I called it Yellow Books. They, I'm kind aging myself a little bit, you know, like, I, I love that. No, I think it's hilarious. Oh God. So, um, yellow Pages. Yeah. Yellow Pages. I said Yellow books. Yeah. Yellow Pages. Jonathan, thank you so much for being on the podcast today. Mm-hmm. This was an awesome conversation. I could keep talking to you. I hope to have you back on again soon. Yeah, of course. Um, and I look forward to seeing you the next mastermind and all the huge activities next month. Yeah. Next month may. You got it. Yeah. You got it. So, um, everybody, again, thanks to Jonathan Henderson, pressure washing marketing pros, and it's been awesome, Jonathan. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you, Sheila. Hello, my friend. This is Sid. Thank you again so much for taking your time to listen to today's episode. I hope you got some value from it. And listen, anything that was covered, uh, any of the resources, any of the books, any of the tools, anything like that is in the show notes, so it's easy for you to find and check it out. And also, I wanna let you know the mission for the huge convention and for. Podcast is to help our blue collar business owners like you and I to gain financial and time freedom through running a better business. And we do that in four ways. Number one is our free weekly newsletter. It's called a Huge Insider. I hope you subscribe. It is the most valuable newsletter for the home service industry, period. Paid or otherwise. And this one's free. Next is the huge foundation's education platform. That is, we've got over 120 hours of industry specific education and resources for you. And every month we do, uh, a topical webinar and we do question and answer with seven and eight figure business owners. And it's available to you for a $1 trial for seven days. Next, of course, is the huge convention or the huge convention. If you haven't been, you gotta check it out. It's every August this year it's in Nashville, Tennessee. That's August 20th through 22nd and 2025, and it is the largest and number one rated. Trade show and convention for home service business builders. We've got the biggest trade show, so you can check out all the coolest tools and meet the vendors and check out the software to run your business. And it's got, we've got, um, education, world class education and educators and speakers that will teach you how to run a better business. And it's the best networking opportunity that you can have within the home service business. And then lastly, if you wanna pour jet fuel in your business. Check out the Hughes Mastermind now. It's not for everyone. You gotta be at over $750,000 of revenue and you're building toward a million, 5 million, 10 million in the next five years. And it is a network, and a mentorship and a mastermind of your peers, and we help you understand and implement the Freedom operating system. We can go into more detail, but you can get all the information on all four of these programs and how we'll help you advance your business quickly just by going to the huge convention.com. And scroll down, click on the freedom path. Or of course you can find the links here in the show notes. So, sorry, I feel like I'm getting a little bit wordy, but I just wanna let you know of the resources that are available to you to help you accelerate and advance your beautiful, small business. So keep on growing, keep on learning, keep advancing. And if you'd like to show. Go ahead. 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