Episode 1909 β Lessons Learned & More Lessons Learned (Charlie Gindele)
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Key Takeaways
The pivotal shift is going from being a contractor to being a business person who owns a contracting company; many contractors have just created a high-liability job for themselves and must run by the numbers and KPIs.
Marketing is the growth lever: most owners underspend at 4-7%, when you should adjust pricing so the customer pays for marketing and you can spend 12-15% of revenue, backed by a diversified marketing portfolio.
Be the premium provider: Gindele sold Alcoa aluminum roofs at 2-3x competitors and the highest-priced windows (Renewal by Andersen) by educating customers, differentiating, and building value rather than competing on price.
You can't lose a little on every job and make it up in volume; know your gross profit, break-even and overhead, sell at the right price, and if you don't believe it's the right price you won't sell it.
During the 2008-2012 recession he rightsized from $15M down to ~$5M and got to break-even at ~$375K/month, surviving almost entirely on repeat customers and referrals while 35 competitors went out of business.
Culture is all the positive behaviors you encourage and reward minus the negative behaviors you allow and tolerate; find great people, delegate real control, and never require employees to read your mind.
Don't grow a broken business, fix it first or you'll get a larger, more broken business. His 20/20/20 challenge: 20% annual growth, 20% of leads from new sources, and 20% operating profit, sustained three years running.
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