Forum Discussion
I am a one-man operation right now currently running Tri State Exterior Cleaning and Paint, so I know exactly how fast things can pile up. Being the technician, secretary, and salesman all at once means the trick isn’t working more hours—it’s protecting your focus while on a jobsite.
Here is how I keep the machine running smoothly:
1. Batch Your Communication
Answering the phone while equipment is running ruins your efficiency and makes you sound rushed.
- How I handle it: I set 2 or 3 dedicated windows a day to reply to messages (e.g., morning, lunch, and end of day).
- Setting Expectations: My voicemail and text auto-responder say: "Hey, this is Travis. I’m currently on a jobsite giving a property my full attention. Leave a message, and I will call you back during my next office window at 1:00 PM or 4:30 PM."
2. Estimate on the Fly
If a quote takes you an hour of paperwork at night, you'll fall behind instantly.
- How I handle it: I built standard pricing matrices for my common services based on property size or linear footage.
- Using Templates: I keep saved text and email templates in my phone. When I finish measuring, I plug the numbers into the template and hit send from my truck in under 5 minutes.
3. Lean on Automation
Let your software handle the repetitive tasks while your hands are full:
- Auto-Reminders: Automatically text clients the day before a service.
- Quote Follow-Ups: Set up automated texts to gently nudge clients 3 days after sending an estimate.
- On-My-Way Texts: A quick, pre-saved tap on your phone before putting the truck in drive keeps clients informed.
The Golden Rule: When you are on a job, be 100% on the job. When you are in your office window, be 100% the professional operator. Trying to do both at the exact same second is how mistakes happen. Keep it organized, you got this!!!!
I will be taking a few tips from this. Thank you for sharing!