Strongpoint Services CEO on the power of outbound efforts
A conversation about outbounding, cross-trade bookings, and the replacement environment
❝
I can go into the market, spend dollars, and acquire strangers as customers, or I can re-tap and re-activate these customers I’ve already dealt with.
Rich Jordan, CEO of Strongpoint Services, a multi-trade home service company with over 50 trucks, talked to Homepros about contractors’ mistakes, call conversions, and the newest, oldest trick in the book.
The big picture: Jordan isn’t sold on all of the industry’s best practices.
-
“Home service companies put a lot of effort into leave-behinds and QR codes as it relates to generating reviews. I don’t think a lot of that works; it’s a lot of effort for a little gain,” he said.
-
“Folks, especially from outside the industry, think you can win on Google PPC… and that’s just not true. It’s the other guerilla customer retention strategies that are more cost-effective.”
What’s happening: There’s been a shift in conversation lately from acquiring new customers to leveraging existing customers for growth.
-
“I definitely feel that [outbounding] has been a topic of discussion more and more over the last year. And that may be because it’s gotten harder to do anything productive with LSAs, PPC, and stuff like that… [Contractors] are trying to get off of Google dependency. They’re looking to other avenues,” Jordan noted.
Details: Strongpoint has grown revenue significantly over the past year by simply making outbound efforts to existing customers.
-
“For someone who’s been around for a while, your customer list can be fairly large. Our customer list across the portfolio has almost 60,000 contacts.”
-
“So, I can go into the market, spend dollars, and acquire strangers as customers, or I can re-tap and re-activate these 60,000 customers I’ve already dealt with.”
-
The strategy has also opened up acquisition opportunities: “One of the [customer] lists we bought last year, we called backward and forward I think six times. We got multiples of the purchase price back in revenue due to the outbound effort,” he added.
Of note: Jordan’s team openly borrows and tweaks ideas from other contractors — and re-shares them. Recently, they took a nugget from a Houston contractor to increase customer awareness of other trade offerings.
-
“This is a head-slapper. We call it the ‘Oh, by the way.’ If you tell your call center you’ll give them $20 for every cross-trade booking, they’re like, ‘Okay, great, but I don’t see a natural way to bring that up in conversation.’”
-
“But this idea is, after going through the booking flow, saying, ‘Oh, by the way, we also offer electrical and we’re running this promotion right now for a panel inspection. Would that be something you’re interested in?’ Or something along those lines.”
The numbers: For a promotion started in May, Strongpoint’s seeing a 30% pick-up rate on phone calls and around a 30% booking rate — converting 9% of raw phone calls.
-
“That’s one of the higher-performing promos, but that’s generally what we see. 20-30% of people will actually answer the phone, and then depending on the promo, we’ll see a 50% booking rate, or a 30% or less. I’d say, often, it’s less — 20%.”
What else is bubbling: Jordan commented on the HVAC replacement environment getting more challenging due to higher financing costs and economic pressure — whether real or perceived.
-
To address this, Jordan noted, “We’re trying to increase customer contacts and visits into the home, assuming that, probabilistically, will increase replacement sales.”
-
“We’re not dumping money into ad words; we’re just trying to get into your home more often and offer low-barrier-to-acceptance promos like system checks or tune-ups. Then ultimately, it comes down to technician performance, presentation, and option building to get those replacements up.”
📬 Get our stories in your inbox
Keep reading
What the HVAC industry is saying in D.C. — Part 1: Labor
Notes from the industry's May visit to Washington
Why did ACCA launch a credit card for contractors?
Given ACCA's focus on government advocacy, I was curious about the motivation and did some digging