
$1,148.00 in One Day Working with Plants? You
Betcha!
This article is actually an example of a simple yet,
excellent marketing plan. Pay close
attention to how I went out and found new business at a time of the year when
things are normally slow, and not only did I make $1,148.00, my friend Franky
also made $1,060.00.
Because I chose to keep myself out of the rat race of
landscaping new homes, I went after a market that was more of an impulsive type
market. New home landscaping is almost a
necessity, since new homes don’t have any shrubs or grass. Not only that, many housing developments
actually require people to have their landscaping done within a certain number
of months from the time they move into their new homes. Therefore, when the house is done, people are
anxious to get it landscaped.
Since I wasn’t in that market, and most impulsive gardening
decisions are made in the spring, my business typically slowed down during the
very hot summer months. So one year I
decided to do a little test marketing, to see if I could muster up some work
during the summer.
I decided to do a test mailing to 350 homeowners in an area
where I knew the people could afford landscaping services, but were not
extremely rich. I mailed a letter to
these 350 homes, and the letter basically said I could help them with any
landscaping project that needed done, and because my business was slow during
the summer I could give them a really fair price.
Of the 350 people that received the letter 3 called me. I immediately sold two jobs, and the third
job was still open for discussion. On
one of the first two jobs I made about $350. and on the other I made about
$700. That’s net profit. That’s how much I got to keep. Since the
mailing cost less than $175., my immediate profit on the mailing was $875. Not bad at all considering this was only a
part-time business for me. But don’t
forget about that third caller. I had
not even met this person yet.
The reason he called is because he happened to own a 60-unit
apartment building in the Cleveland area, and he needed some trees or shrubs planted
around the parking lot. The architect
that he had been working with suggested Taxus Hicksi, which is an evergreen
that is easily trimmed and maintained to a certain size. However, all the landscapers he had spoken
with in Cleveland wanted about $44.00 each to install these plants. Although a fair price, that amounted to
$4,664.00 because he needed 106 plants.
He contacted me because he was hoping I could find a less
expensive plant to use. After visiting the job site I realized that Taxus
Hicksi actually was about the best choice for this situation, so I told him I
would see if I could get a better price on the plants. I showed in a wholesale catalog that the
wholesale price was $22.00 per plant, but mentioned that I might be able to
find another source.
I knew that my friend Franky did at one time grow this
particular plant, so I gave him a call.
Turns out he did have 106 plants available, and was anxious to move some
of them, he quoted me $10.00 each, balled in burlap. I called my customer and
told him that I found good plants at a lower price, and that I could actually
deliver and plant them for $22.00 per plant, which is exactly half of what
others had quoted him. He was delighted,
and I did the job. As a matter of fact,
he actually asked me to install some additional plants while I was there.
I hired 3 guys to help me do the job, and we had it done in
one day. After I paid for the plants,
and paid my help, I actually made $1,148.00 on that one-day job. My customer was so happy with the work we did
that he asked me to come back the following week and do about another $700.00
worth of work. I made another $350.00 the
following spring he hired me to re-landscape an older home that he had
purchased, and I made another $600.00.
Remember the $175.00 that I spent to mail those 350
letters? The net profit on that mailing
turned out to be about $2,973.00!!! And
my friend Franky picked up $1,060.00 for the plants I bought from him. Were
these 350 people I selected special? No
they weren’t. Every town in America has
at least 350 people just like them, probably thousands more.
Thanks for reading!
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