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He Did $10M at 22, Sold the Company, and Came Back Smarter — Eric Smith of PAC Exteriors

39 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio He Did $10M at 22, Sold the Company, and Came Back Smarter — Eric Smith of PAC Exteriors

Descripción

Eric Smith built a roofing company from scratch at 22, scaled it to nearly $10M in a single year, sold it, and walked away from the industry entirely. Then life — and a partnership with the right guy — pulled him back in. But this time, he's doing it completely differently. Eric is the co-founder of PAC Exteriors, a Colorado-based roofing company taking a disciplined retail-first approach in a market where everyone else is chasing hail. Instead of following the storm restoration playbook, PAC is carving out a niche in the Colorado mountains — complex projects, high-value homeowners, and a business model built to last beyond the next big hailstorm. In this episode, Eric breaks down why he walked away from $8M in potential storm revenue to protect his brand identity, how retail cashflow changes everything, and what it actually means to build a company you'd want to sell — even if you never do.

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15 episodios

episode He Did $10M at 22, Sold the Company, and Came Back Smarter — Eric Smith of PAC Exteriors artwork

He Did $10M at 22, Sold the Company, and Came Back Smarter — Eric Smith of PAC Exteriors

Eric Smith built a roofing company from scratch at 22, scaled it to nearly $10M in a single year, sold it, and walked away from the industry entirely. Then life — and a partnership with the right guy — pulled him back in. But this time, he's doing it completely differently. Eric is the co-founder of PAC Exteriors, a Colorado-based roofing company taking a disciplined retail-first approach in a market where everyone else is chasing hail. Instead of following the storm restoration playbook, PAC is carving out a niche in the Colorado mountains — complex projects, high-value homeowners, and a business model built to last beyond the next big hailstorm. In this episode, Eric breaks down why he walked away from $8M in potential storm revenue to protect his brand identity, how retail cashflow changes everything, and what it actually means to build a company you'd want to sell — even if you never do.

Ayer39 min
episode Why Angie's Leads Are a "Sucker's Bet" (and What 25-Year Roofing Marketer Carm Taglia Does Instead) artwork

Why Angie's Leads Are a "Sucker's Bet" (and What 25-Year Roofing Marketer Carm Taglia Does Instead)

Carm Taglia spent 25 years marketing every kind of business before niching down to roofers - and he has zero patience for the way most contractors are still buying leads in 2026. In this episode he breaks down why renting leads from Angie's List is "a sucker's bet," why Google is de-indexing thin contractor websites by the thousand, and what AI search is actually rewarding right now (hint: it's not what your old SEO guy is selling you). We get into: * The real math on Angie's leads vs owned marketing (and why he calls it "washing money") * Why the BBB and Reddit are suddenly two of the most trusted sources in AI search * The 40-60% of roofing calls that never get answered, and what that's actually costing you * Why a roofer in Atlanta just won a 6-figure commercial bid by being first to send the quote * How to grill a marketing agency before you hand them a check * The one thing every roofer should install in the next 30 days Carm runs Roofing Rev Marketing. He also got the seed money for his first agency by winning Fear Factor. Twice. You'll want to hear that part.

14 de may de 202649 min
episode How Joe Dominiak Thinks About Franchise Growth After 25 Years of Fixing Broken Brands artwork

How Joe Dominiak Thinks About Franchise Growth After 25 Years of Fixing Broken Brands

Joe Dominiak has spent 25 years fixing broken franchise systems across some of the biggest brands in the country. Now he's not fixing anything. He's scaling a machine. As VP of Franchise Operations at Superior Fence & Rail, the fastest growing fencing franchise in America, Joe breaks down what actually separates winning franchise systems from the ones that quietly fall apart. We get into how SFR selects franchisees instead of hiring them, why reputation score trumps revenue as the number one metric, what a $1 billion brand looks like from the inside, and why the company that owns the data owns the market. If you own a franchise, want to own one, or just want to understand how elite operators think, this one is for you.

23 de abr de 202652 min
episode How Two Brothers Turned A Side Job Into a Multi-Million Dollar Company artwork

How Two Brothers Turned A Side Job Into a Multi-Million Dollar Company

George interviews brothers Roberto and Eric of ACE Construction, a Sugar Land, Texas roofing and construction company serving the greater Houston area. They share how they started as subcontractors in their mid-20s about seven years ago and launched ACE roughly two and a half years ago, emphasizing learning the job from the ground up. They discuss competing in Texas’s low-barrier market by focusing on insurance, Google ratings, brand positioning, and a retail-first strategy in a region with fewer major storms. The conversation covers their lead generation mix (referrals, door hangers, Google PPC and LSA), role division between operations/technical expertise and marketing/outreach, nurturing commercial and multifamily relationships through small repairs and maintenance, hiring and training a project manager, and retaining loyal crews by paying well, improving safety, and using better materials to reduce callbacks. They close with advice to study marketing and start now.

28 de feb de 202641 min