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March 19, 2014 at 9:49 a.m.

Lefty1

Mike, I miss Tom's exspecially when he was living under the bridge. Richard Kallar was probably the only person who could compete with you for length posts.LOL

March 19, 2014 at 9:37 a.m.

Mike H

While I defended Vicky's right to do what she wanted with her site, I said it then, and still feel, Richard Kaller's banning was a travesty.

I don't know who this mystery guy is... I'm kinda dense like that... but I sure miss my ol' friend Tom Hay. When it comes to impromptu originality, I don't know that it could be anyone else. ???

March 19, 2014 at 9:18 a.m.

Lefty1

Chuck, I meant doing work for other contractors. I always did the work I sold.

March 19, 2014 at 9:09 a.m.

Chuck2

Lefty: "Chuck you are doing what I have posted. 1 man or 2 guys partnering up can make a good living. I built a reputation that took me above the going rate, but could still do the going rate and make good money. Subing and building a repair business is the way to go. Eventually if you want you just do repairs. This is all doable."

Did you mean subbing from other roofing companies or selling roofs and sub-contracting them out?

March 19, 2014 at 7:21 a.m.

GKRFG1

"Those were two forces of nature clashing."

I'm with you there. :)

Those were some great days at the coffee shop.

March 19, 2014 at 12:46 a.m.

egg

Gerry, "THe" guy you are referring to, at least in my humble opinion, had a mind so fast, so sharp, so clever, and so impromptu original that to constrain it within the confines of the well-rehearsed program Kaller had developed would have been tantamount to suicide. Those were two forces of nature clashing.

Kaller had some good ones. "I can take the criticism; my back is so full of arrows I look like a pincushion."

"The first thing is to get the right people on the bus. The second is to get them all in the right seats."

"If you want to keep them, you have to have something to offer the meat-eaters."

March 18, 2014 at 8:42 p.m.

Lefty1

GKRFG, 10% of the people buy because of price, 90% of the people buy because of value {precieved or real}.

Yet 90% of contractors sell on price trying to get 10% of the customers. !0% of the contractors sell on value to the 90%. They have the pick of work because they go after the biggest pool of customers.

The 90% will buy on price if it looks like that is the only thing to make a decision on.

That was hard to digest. But once I took the risk and tried it, things changed.

March 18, 2014 at 8:30 p.m.

Lefty1

Andy, I looked at Bob's website to see what I could learn. The thing that I will always remember is that he had a phone number for every municipality that he worked in. That impressed me. That was a big phone bill to do that. I could not imagine paying a bill like that.

I am doing that with websites instead of phone numbers. I have a gutter cleaning site for most towns around me. Same with siding repairs,roof repairs, hail damage, and insulation. So I have 2 sites that come up on the first page of google for the town. As soon as a site gives me a lead and a sale I buy a couple more.

Just went and priced out an insulation job from one of these sites. They will let me know about the insulation job $2100. I have a $300 siding repair to do even if they do not go with the insulation. Pays for the domain name, hosting and gets my sign in the neighborhood. I will also make a couple of dollars on the repair.

March 18, 2014 at 3:38 p.m.

GKRFG1

I too thought Mr. Kaller (RIP) was a great addition to the site. I went to a few seminars put on by CertainTeed and had a hard believing what he would charge, I am not comfortable with that selling style but I sure learned a lot from him. There were a couple of posters back then that seemed to be threatened by him somehow and it used to make me so mad at some of the stuff that was directed against him. Not going to say who THe worst one was. B)

March 18, 2014 at 3:11 p.m.

andy

Lefty, I remember those posts from Kaller and Bob . . . a lot of wisdom there . . .

Years ago our local distributor partnered with a shingle manufacturer to bring Richard Kaller in for a day long seminar on selling. I can't think of very many of us in that meeting who were receptive to the idea that selling at the "going rate" was selling at the "going broke rate". We just could not wrap our minds around the numbers he was getting for his services.

Time, experience and necessity have changed my thinking . . .

My dad has always said that the most efficient business model for our trade is the owner and a helper. At age 60, I don't see subbing in my future . . . but the repair thing is working out pretty sweet. Getting very particular about the type of project and who we work for. Hitting the sweet spot.

March 18, 2014 at 1:43 p.m.

Lefty1

MikeH, Thank You, The reason I made the posts in this thread were for the lurkers. There had to be a couple of guys who where reading intently.

I remember when Richard Kaller was posting here and everyone was attacking him. I read everyone of his posts, gleaning alot of good information from them. I wished I had the money and the courage to join his network at the time. The time and struggles I could have saved. Bob I think he was from Chicago, he was a member of Kallar's mentoring program. He never posted much about how he done things. I wished he would have, he took alot of knowledge with him. I remember thinking that took courage to keep posting, under all the criticism.

March 18, 2014 at 1:31 p.m.

Lefty1

Chuck you are doing what I have posted. 1 man or 2 guys partnering up can make a good living. I built a reputation that took me above the going rate, but could still do the going rate and make good money. Subing and building a repair business is the way to go. Eventually if you want you just do repairs. This is all doable.

My business needs more money to operate then the going rate. I have never understood not having work. The only time I did not work was when I did not want to work. I actually grow the most when others are complaining about not having work.

March 18, 2014 at 8:21 a.m.

Chuck2

And when that guy who's sub-contracting for $45 sq. tears off around the chimney and discovers that it needs new flashing but the sales person didn't note that on the paperwork and/or the insurance company refused to pay for it combined with the fact they will not pay him anything extra to do it. ( It's included in the per sq. price the ad says ) almost every single time he will "choose" to not reflash it and the chimney will be a problem down the road for the homeowner. Not to mention the fact he has to "complete the job in one day" and it will take half the day to flash the chimney for free.

March 18, 2014 at 8:05 a.m.

andy

Mike H.,"Whether to do it right or wrong still comes down to a personal choice of the person doing the job." as usual, dead on the money . . . I've long ago moved past any concern about quoting at "market" rates. There have been times when circumstances have influenced the pricing on my services. The challenge is that no matter the price quoted, I am compelled to use best practices and good materials, sometimes to financial detriment.

March 17, 2014 at 11:58 p.m.

Mike H

It is a young man's game, for sure. The "eggs" of this world are a rare breed.

Lurkers here are lucky to have Lefty and Egg, lest they think the task before them may be hopeless.

I love what egg said about gold hatchets and titanium ladders, or visa versa, maybe it was hatchet ladders and gold titanium???, cuz that's the very reason I fight those contractor licensing laws. The gooberment should not be able to stifle initiative.

I think it was Wuck, that disagreed with me about quality being a personal decision in the residential market. BULL!!! The prices may encourage it, but it doesn't dictate poor quality. Whether to do it right or wrong still comes down to a personal choice of the person doing the job.

Money, and the love of it, is at the root of poor quality, but it is NOT the cause. I could choose to do crappy work every day, but I want to step down from this rat race, I want it to be something my children can be proud of and something that's worth paying me for. Otherwise they'd be stupid to do anything other than hit the roof with a truck and a ladder.


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