← Back to Library
The American Contractor Show

How to Become a Storm Restoration Contractor – Matt Grassmyer – Steve Patrick

πŸ“… July 21, 2020 ⏱️ 39:16 🎀 John Dye, Matt Grassmyer, Steve Patrick

Chapters

Click to jump to section

  • 1:38
    Introducing the insurance-restoration opportunity
  • 4:50
    Meeting Matt Grassmyer and Steve Patrick
  • 6:58
    The weather-data opportunity in your own leads
  • 9:42
    6-9 million homes hit; the space isn't saturated
  • 11:52
    Steve's path from contractor to adjuster to trainer
  • 14:34
    Money grab or legitimate opportunity?
  • 16:18
    Sell restoration exactly like retail (no 'free roof')
  • 17:54
    How hail damages a roof system
  • 20:40
    Insurance as a transfer of risk
  • 23:53
    Run retail and storm as separate divisions
  • 28:36
    Being established when a storm hits your town
  • 33:37
    Competing on value and accurate maps

Speakers

J
John Dye
Host, The American Contractor Show
M
Matt Grassmyer
Hail Trace (forensic weather)
S
Steve Patrick
Level the Playing Field (insurance-claims trainer)

Key Takeaways

✦

The storm-restoration space is a 250-billion-dollar-a-year business, and it's far from saturated: 6-9 million homes were hit by 1-inch-plus hail in 2019, yet only 50-60% of roofs get replaced after a storm.

✦

The best entry point for a GC isn't chasing the big storm; it's mining your own past-customer list against weather data (via a tool like Hail Trace) to find which prior jobs were impacted.

✦

Done right with the correct software and processes, storm restoration can be worked 10-12 months a year instead of being purely storm-season based.

✦

Restoration isn't a 'money grab' or a 'free roof': you sell it exactly like retail, a roof needs repair, replacement, or nothing based on objective standards, not opinion.

✦

Hail compromises the structural integrity of shingles so they no longer perform as designed, and damage can worsen over seasons of heat and rain even if a storm doesn't total a roof immediately.

✦

Insurance is a transfer of risk: the homeowner pays premiums and the insurer accepts the risk under the policy contract, obligating payment for legitimate covered storm damage.

✦

Run retail and storm as separate divisions: retail keeps cash flow steady while storm work requires an entirely different skill set for dealing with adjusters.

✦

Being established in your own town when a storm hits is the best of all worlds (Steve's example: a repeat 2.5M apartment-complex job from an existing, trusting client) if you're trained and staffed to move fast.

✦

Compete on value, not price: Hail Trace's staff of six meteorologists produces more accurate maps, and the most valuable contractors, like the best mappers, aren't the cheapest.

Want the full experience?

Join the Inner Circle for full access to every episode, AI-powered insights, personalized coaching, and a network of industry leaders.

Join Inner Circle β†’

Inner Circle Membership Portal © 2026 Power100. All rights reserved.

power100.io