Mike I'm not sure if your reply is based around your personal business strategy
''The biggest market we have is homeowners who have the disposable income to afford to pay someone to do the work they can’t or are not willing to do''. - Is that the biggest market your business has?
The second half of the post reads that all pressure washers working at a residential level should focus mainly on the home owner - Is that correct?
From my perspective the biggest market we have is residential, small commercial & then when you're ready larger scale works, (if you want to go to that level).
Nothing is out of bounds - in this instance the larger commercial works are probably too much but there is no difference between
an industrial estate unit frontage, cleaning 3 or 4 parking spaces & a residential block paved driveway.
I based my business model & marketing on getting work to make a good living & that took me away from home for several years because the money was there to be earned that was the justification of being away all week.
For a long time I have ignored the residential market, that is being corrected.
When you started pressure washing you did so on the back of an already established carpet cleaning business, so had a developed client base (I am not saying you gained from this), you understood residential and commercial marketing, had played around with different leaflets and the when was the best time to get the leaflets out.
You had the confidence with customer interaction & an ability to sell a service after an initial enquiry.
It wasn't your only source of income and that allows for experimenting & time to get it right.
As I read it Paul wants to make a living from selling this service but also has his newly started moving service to offer income - unfortunately for him both are new, with no credibility or experience & no real sustainable income.
He may be the best thing since sliced bread for pressure washing but people don't know that, if he limits hisself to residential then he is already on a back foot, the perception is that there is a 'season' for residential work and he will not only have to market but also change the home owners thinking to make a living through the winter.
Small commercial is there and unless there is six inches of snow on the ground then it can be done and my experience is that there is work there that extends the 'season'.
Confidence to sell your service helps you and I to sustain an income long after most people have packed up their pressure washers for the year and then there are the businesses that are 12 month round but offering a much larger scope of services and these would be predominantly commercial only.
Is there anyone on here who can offer residential pressure washing all year round and wont worry about paying their rent or mortgage, without another angle to their business?
Paul is only offering pressure washing, not window cleaning, conservatory cleaning, FSG cleaning - so only low level.
If he opens his services up a little then he could live well through the winter but not as it stands on residential pressure washing only, he has admitted to not being very confident with converting enquiries to paid work so converting a 'season' mentality might be more than he is ready for & my advise would be to ignore nothing but get into a position where he has more 'options'.