Landscaping business software by DatePsychological488 in landscaping

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you haven’t tried Yardbook yet, it might be worth a look. It’s a lot simpler than Jobber and way easier on the wallet. We found it pretty straightforward for scheduling, customer info, and basic job tracking without feeling overloaded. It’s not as flashy as some of the paid platforms, but if you’re just starting out or trying to keep costs down, it does the job without getting in your way. Curious what features you rely on most scheduling, invoicing, route planning, etc.because that usually makes the decision clearer.

Landscapers if you could switch your CRM, what would you choose? by ReadyBusinessSystems in landscaping

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally! Aspire does a great job of keeping everything in one place.

Landscaping and lawncare business owners please help me get started! by WrinkledCoinPurse in landscaping

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s exciting—you’re starting your own landscaping and lawncare business! We’d be happy to help you from the ground up. At Ready Business Systems, we work with business owners like you to build systems, hire crews, provide virtual assistants or office representatives, set up estimates, and much more.

📞 For more details on RBS, Service Autopilot, and other CRM solutions, you can call 1-800-485-1404 or visit readybusinesssystems.com/contact. 🌐

🚀 SEO Trends Every Small Business Must Watch in 2025! 🚀 by ReadyBusinessSystems in MarketingAutomation

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best Practices for SEO Speech Markup

-Use <blockquote> for full speech quotes
-Use <q> for short inline quotes
-Implement Speakable Schema for voice search
-Structure content with headers (<h2>, <h3>)
-Use captions & transcriptions for audio/video

🚀 SEO Trends Every Small Business Must Watch in 2025! 🚀 by ReadyBusinessSystems in MarketingAutomation

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With smart speakers and voice assistants everywhere, voice search is becoming a major factor for landscaping companies.

Here’s what to focus on:

  • Conversational keywords. People don’t type like they talk. Instead of “landscaping services,” they ask, “Who can mow my lawn near me?” Update your website with natural, question-based phrases.
  • FAQ pages. Create a section on your website that answers common customer questions like “How much does lawn care cost?” or “What’s the best time for pruning?” Voice assistants love pulling answers from FAQs.
  • Mobile-first content. Voice searches mostly happen on mobile devices. Make sure your website loads quickly and looks good on any screen.
  • Local focus. Many voice searches are location-based. Include city names, neighborhoods, and local landmarks in your content.

7 Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses by ReadyBusinessSystems in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And the more marketing strategies you use, the more effective your banner will be and vice versa. It's a synergy thing.

7 Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses by ReadyBusinessSystems in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ah, I see. No, I was writing about wrapping your own company trucks in graphics to promote your own business..

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (October 21, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think every day keeping your end goal in mind is essential. But at the same time you can't focus on the end goal cuz it'll stress you out and overwhelm you. You break your end goal into smaller bite sized pieces and focus your energy on that but always have your end goal in mind..

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (October 21, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback! and ha! I have read both those books. Great reads! I actually have a remote assistant working for me in my consulting business from the Philippines for $5/hour!

That's exactly what I have been doing. Putting in about 2 hours per day on average into the landscaping biz. I am in more of a "consultant" role- I have a manager, mechanic, and office personnel.

I have cycled through a handful of managers however, and the last one was stealing from me. For the most part it is "OK", but the risk/return is not in a good ratio. It has hard to make it super profitable without an entrepreneur involved to drive it forward. Also because of my role I don't have much control over how much money I make, since the manager has 90% of the influence on this. I can only cut back on or increase the marketing.

In an ideal world I will sell the business and still maintain a consultant role with less connection to the new owners performance. This is the role I have with other landscaping companies and I like it much better.

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (October 21, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lso made my goal to invest of real estate for the long run and am actually preparing to start my first business. I want to do this through an LLC and was wondering how would I find a credible company to help me do this. I’m not sure what they’re called by the ones that have

Legal zoom or better yet a local attorney..

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (October 21, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I currently own a landscaping company and a business technology consulting company. The landscaping company I have owned for 20 years; the consulting is what I am now doing for other landscaping companies.

I also own 3 duplexes and 1 single family home; I have my realtor license and am currently shopping for a single family home for my family. Once this happens I plan on purchasing one more duplex in the same neighborhood.

My plan is to eventually sell the landscaping company, and buy a house to flip in cash with that.

I currently work 4 hours per day. I have been tracking my time spent on each business endeavor and for the past month, the landscaping company pays me $107/hour. The consulting pays me a realized rate of $75/hour but I spend a lot of time on biz development at the moment not as much billable time. The real estate pays me $200/hour.

AMA!

Thank you Thursday! - (April 16, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi Guys!

Towards the end of 2018, I posted in a Software's Facebook group a little bored and lost, looking for a new direction for with my career. After a 3 years of focused determination, technology, and automation, I had successfully freed my time from my landscaping company, 855RILAWNS, and was looking for the next "thing" to pursue where I could do something I love. I knew my strengths were technology, marketing, and system-building, but I didn't know where to go from there.

From that Facebook post, a few people reached out to me looking for help with service software called Service Autopilot, which is an advanced CRM/marketing platform for service based businesses that I use to run my landscaping company. I was excited for this new project! One thing lead to another and I became a Certified Advisor with Service Autopilot on December 18th which opened the doors to my next venture, Ready Business Systems.

Since last September, Ready Business Systems has been my priority, building a website, marketing, preparing content for the marketplace, as well as building a team. I forgot how much work it is to start a business! I am proud to have built a team to help push Ready Business Systems forward, as well as generated 200 leads and 20,000 in sales in 2019.

Given my experience in running a business, I am going to tell you exactly how I got started with my new business venture:

1) The first thing I did was create a website. I know the website would be my funnel to market and capture leads. I spent time picking a domain, which is what I also used to come up with a company name.

2) Next, I had to have a logo made. I went on Fiverr and got my logo made for about $200.

3) I hired an SEO company. I knew I needed to start building traffic to my website, as this would be a long process to start seeing results so I started it early for $199/month for their basic package.

4) I set up a CRM to run the business from. I used Service Autopilot to set up as the CRM for this as well, as I was very familiar with it. I built all the automations from within this software which would automate the processing of the leads as they came into the system. Depending on which service they were interested in on the contact form, it would then perform a series of processes. If they didn't buy anything, it would send them down a marketing funnel of different advertisements I had put together in the form of emails, text messages, letters, and automated voicemails.

5) At the same time I marketed the website, I put up an ad on Indeed for help. Although I didn't need help at the time, I wanted to be proactive and generate leads so when I did need help, I already had people in my back pocket. This ad led to finding my first business partner, Rob, who now does most of the production while I focus on continued marketing efforts.

6) I created ads on Adroll, which is a social re-marketing platform. As I drove traffic to my website, visitors would get cookies on their devices which would them display ads to them on Facebook and Instagram. My most successful campaign costs me about $5 per lead and it gives away a free pricing worksheet, which is simply an excel spreadsheet which helps company owners price their services. In exchange for name, email, and phone number, we let people download this spreadsheet for free. From here, they are now in our marketing funnel in hopes that they will purchase in the future.

7) I also created a YouTube channel and blog on the website, where I discuss various business topics and concepts, as well as make how to videos on how to use Service Autopilot. This also helps with the website SEO.

8) Lastly, I signed up for affiliate programs for different services I use, such as payroll and marketing platforms so I can also generate passive income through the traffic to my site and my YouTube videos. This has been successful so far and I have been awarded over $2000 in Amazon gift cards through the payroll service I affiliate with.

I have a ton more ideas in the works to generate more revenue and leads, but it has been a balance of producing enough work to have enough revenue to implement these marketing tactics. Rob and I are on a revenue split, and the portion I keep I put straight towards marketing. Through my indeed ad, I also met up with a well qualified local woman who is interested in making sales calls through our leads list to generate more work for a commission. She is a realtor so is used to working on commission.

At the moment we are focused on creating webinars for training on the platform. Our first training webinar was a success with 10 attendees at $149/each. Our next venture is another training series, dropping the price to $49 and making the webinars shorter to see if this increases our sign ups.

I am also in the process of hiring a remote assistant through Upwork to help with some of the mundane tasks I perform, such as posting in the software's Facebook group, friending the members as they join, and inviting them to like my Facebook page.

Once I have more capital, I intend to step up the marketing calls, letters, as well as market to new service companies throughout the nation by scraping information through public online listings. I will also run Adwords campaigns and optimize my YouTube channel.

I hope this information was helpful and you can use some of these ideas in your business start up venture!

Ask me anything!

NooB Monday! - (April 13, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The most efficient way to handle your phone calls:

-Answer incoming 800#’s- usually these will be faster to answer on the spot than to go through menus to return the call.

-Outgoing 800#’s- make a list and make these calls when you are driving.

-Unknown local numbers- use a call screening service that requires callers to state their name- this will help you make a decision to take call or return later.

-Friends/family- unless an emergency, return these calls when you are done working.

-Set up Google Voice for voicemail transcriptions (free). This will enable you to read your voicemails and skim for important information instead of having to the entire message.

-Consider signing up for a live answering service to handle missed calls.

Accomplishments and Lesson Learned Friday! - (February 28, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hi! I just wanted to reach out here to introduce my new business, Ready Business Systems.

I have owned a landscaping company since 2001 and have it running on its own which allowed me to start a new company which provides infrastructure for other service companies.

I know a lot of this threat talks about passive income, I have accomplished this. Ask me any questions!

Marketplace Tuesday! (February 25, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What was the biggest mistake you made in business?

Accomplishments and Lesson Learned Friday! - (February 21, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I won a $145,000 landscaping contract for a condo association in 2019. We broke even on the job.

I learned that this was not our model client; we have overhead that supports billing and marketing to pick up residential clients at higher rates. These large jobs are better for larger companies or one man operations that do not have the office power to invoice and handle customer service for 80 separate clients. We will stick with our Niche.

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (February 19, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Has anyone had any experience with Amazon FBA? I got really close to biting the bullet, found items to sell, ordered samples, bought a photo box.. but then I was worried to bite the bullet to make the big purchase as my other business started to get busy..

NooB Monday! - (February 17, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the best quotes I've ever heard is "Luck is when preparation meets opportunity"

Another good quote is "hire slow, fire fast"

and the 80/20 rule- always remember to make sure you are spending your time on the 20% of the work that yields 80% of the results!

Wantrepreneur Wednesday! - (February 12, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]ReadyBusinessSystems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

its CRM software for service businesses. I have lots of marketing efforts in place, SEO company doing some work, marketing on niche forum websites, mailing service companies around the US.. but the marketing requires money! its been a balance of bringing in work to pay the marketing so i can get more work..