Forum Discussion

jose-miami's avatar
jose-miami
Contributor 3
7 months ago
Solved

Putting in the work, but no clients yet. What would you do in my shoes?

I recently started my pool service business here in Miami. I’ve been working hard to get it off the ground, created a clean competitive website, post regularly on social media, and even hand out handwritten cards door to door.

But despite all that, I’m still struggling to find clients. I know the pool industry is highly competitive here.

For those of you with more experience, what helped you get customers early on?

Thanks in advance 🙏

Also, if you're in Miami and ever want to connect in person, I’d be happy to meet up and exchange insights. You can find my contact info on my website: https://sapphirepools.co

  • I completely understand how you're feeling. I’ve been there myself. In the cleaning industry, I marketed hard and still saw little return at first. What started to shift things for me was developing a personable elevator pitch and putting myself in places where I could genuinely connect with people, like local Chamber of Commerce events, festivals, Wine after Dark, and any setting that allowed for real conversations. Truth be told, when you’re in those types of settings, the first question that usually comes up is “So, what do you do?”
    What I learned quickly is that people do business with people they like. Time and time again, I’ve seen clients stick with vendors who were just "okay" because they had built a personal connection. And while you and I both know we provide professional, timely, and top-quality work, at the end of the day, we’re in a service-based industry, which means we’re selling something intangible. At the start, all you have is your word.
    So, keep marketing, but make sure you're also selling yourself first, your personality, your integrity, and your dependability. People remember how you made them feel. If they like you, they’ll trust what you offer.
    I follow a simple model, not grammatically perfect, but it works: ABS (Always Be Selling). Have a strong elevator pitch and keep networking. That personal connection can open doors that marketing alone can’t.
    Keep pushing. Warm Regards

28 Replies

  • At the backbone of your business and being a business owner, i believe having a solid door knocking marketing plan would help you connect to even more people than you can imagine. if you are at ground zero. 100 doors per day with having an intention of selling! Make sure you are selling at the doors! don't be satisfied with leaving your card, engage with your customers and make them a lifetime customer by having them earn YOUR card! Good luck.

    • jose-miami's avatar
      jose-miami
      Contributor 3

      Great advice, I'll try with 100 houses or so, but my fear is the area I serve is high end, and might be sensible to having someone knocking. 

  • BHS's avatar
    BHS
    Contributor 3

    Have you thought about partnering with lawn companies?  You could have them send out a discount offer to their clients for your service, and in exchange, you provide them with a referral fee for any client who signs up for your weekly service. 

    The nice thing about lawn companies, at least in my area, is that they tend to focus on specific areas to build their clientele (neighborhoods, subdivisions), which reduces travel time between jobs.  I'd imagine the same applies to your business, too.

    • jose-miami's avatar
      jose-miami
      Contributor 3

      I've thought about it, I do it with realtors, might start doing it with lawn care too, i have contact with some of them in the area. Great advice, thanks for your help

  • Easey Peazy. One word solution. Multifamily, Buiy some cheap duckies and bring a couple business cards and then start cold calling. Pools are underserviced. Good Luck! 

  • First,  Welcome to entrepreneurs world lol. Seriously, I find word of mouth and showing your work helps in a highly competitive industry. Don't forget great customer service is everything. Even if the customer is wrong,  educate them in your response. Great energy to you

  • FredHodgeJr's avatar
    FredHodgeJr
    Jobber Ambassador

    You are on the right track. I would join a networking group to rub elbows with other local business owners. Look up Letip, BNI or the local Chamber of Commerce. They are usually free for the first 1-2 meetings and you can see which you have the most synergy with. 

    • BrandenSewell's avatar
      BrandenSewell
      Jobber Ambassador

      Spot on advice. Community and relationships are the game changer.

  • ryaantuttle's avatar
    ryaantuttle
    Jobber Ambassador

    Work for free for a portion of your projects !!! Prove yourself!!
    That will easily get the word out my man.

    • jose-miami's avatar
      jose-miami
      Contributor 3

      Great advice, did this to earn the first clients. Thanks Ryan 

    • BrandenSewell's avatar
      BrandenSewell
      Jobber Ambassador

      I love this idea. Not everything has a dollar sign on it. Sometimes you have to look at the opportunity costs of doing things like this. Very smart.

  • EnergizeUs's avatar
    EnergizeUs
    Jobber Ambassador

    You’re doing everything right — the website, the local cards, the social posts. Sometimes it’s not about trying harder, it’s about assessing where you stand and making a few key adjustments.

    I’d love to help you with that. We’re in South Florida a few times a year visiting contractors we work with and host solar courses down south, we also work with Patrick Pitt and David, and I’d be happy to connect while we’re down there. I also have a few solid connections in the area I can introduce you to that might open some doors for you.

    Appreciate what you’re building — it shows.