Marketing, Sales, Capacity Planning, and Scaling Home Services with Ismael Valdez
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Ismael attributes NexGen's growth to obsessive focus on marketing and sales, calling the ability to 'make the phones ring' his single greatest business superpower.
Same-day call-outs are a core operational lever: once the board is 90% booked, Ismael only needs to fill the remaining 10% with same-day emergency demand to stay at full capacity.
He reinvests operating profits into commercial real estate, owning roughly seven buildings (10,000-54,000 sq ft) plus nine houses that he leases back, stacking slow but reliable 50% returns alongside the service business.
Leveraging company size with distributors like Daikin and Lennox and finance companies drops significant margin to the bottom line, and the same scale advantage lowers insurance costs.
A disciplined monthly vendor scorecard meeting - the same deck, all the marketing data color-coded green and red - keeps every marketing partner accountable to measurable performance.
Ismael preaches building a personal brand over a company brand, citing that a personal brand is roughly 20x more effective, and he shares nearly everything openly rather than guarding trade secrets.
NexGen is productizing its own smart thermostat and app, already sitting on about $520,000 in paid pre-orders, with voice-to-dispatch functionality that books a technician without a CSR.
The team invests heavily in training via its internal NCU platform - recorded processes, forms, and an employee handbook - to systematize hiring and consistent five-to-six-hour in-home sales visits that produce $20K-$25K tickets.
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