Forum Discussion
This is one I would love more feed back about. I just went from a 3 person team, me and an installer, to a 5 person team. Now I have a person answering the phone, making the schedule and doing gofer tasks for me as well as an install team that can work without my labor contribution. Now that I am off the tools and the phone I have time to sell way more than I ever have before. However, my payroll cost is way up and my profit has disappeared. I raised my prices today but worried how to tell my long term clients.
Hey! great discussion and great question. I would look at this way, you didn’t lose profit… you just invested ahead of revenue.
You basically built capacity before demand caught up. You’ve got more payroll and a team that can run without you, which is great, now the business just needs more sales volume to support it.
Right now the focus should be filling the calendar as aggressively as possible. I'm sure you're already doing this, but reach back out to old leads, follow up on past estimates, reconnect with previous customers, and push whatever your best entry offer is to generate more work quickly. Idle labor gets expensive fast and just "keeping people busy" without any real ROI is kind of the worst.
On the pricing side, I wouldn’t overthink how to tell long-term clients. Keep it simple and confident:
“Hey [Name], quick update, we’ve expanded our team to improve speed, communication, and overall service quality. As part of that, we’ve updated our pricing to reflect that. We’re excited to keep taking care of you.”
You could also try locking them on a service plan for a year. Something like “Hey (og person) we’ll be adjusting our pricing in the next couple of months as we continue improving our service. Since you’ve been such a great client, we’d love to keep you locked in at your current rate before that happens. Let me know if you’d like to take advantage of that.”
I wouldn't apologize, just try to position it as an upgrade in your service and a reward for their loyalty.
The big shift here is that you’re no longer the one doing the work, (which is awesome btw!) so your role is now to drive sales and keep the pipeline full! That’s the transition point into actually scaling a business.