So I landed the job. They gave me the proper training and all that stuff. Then the summer rolled around, and wouldn't you know it I had booked the most work. Meaning I had $130,000 worth of painting jobs on paper. Sweet! But how? I outworked every other intern. It's that simple. I flat out outworked everybody. None of us had any sales knowledge, or painting knowledge prior to this so it's not like I had an advantage going into this. I just did more estimates than everyone else. And more estimates lead to more sales. Who would have thought that taking more shots allows you to make more baskets? (Sarcasm) Now all I had to do was do what I promised my clients I would do. Simple, right? Wrong! Looking back it's easy to see the logic. It is easier to promise I will take care of their biggest asset, than to actually do it. But my thinking was "it is going to be damn near impossible to convince a homeowner that a 19-year-old who has zero painting experience to paint their most valuable asset. Oh and have them pay me near $6,000 per house, and sometimes closer to $10,000." I never thought that people would part ways with their money so easily. On a separate note, it was the best feeling to leave an estimate where I just met the homeowners with a 25% downpayment. Wow! I was a complete stranger 1 hour ago and now you're writing me a $2,000 check? I didn't understand but who am I to complain?
So that was my first lesson I learned, and I learned it the hard way. Meaning I priced things lower because I thought there was no way people would really pay me what I thought it was worth.
The next lesson was working with kids much older than me and I was the boss. It was weird to be the boss of someone the better part of a decade older than me. And what I did was I allowed some things to slide, instead of enforcing the rules and firing someone if they didn't do what they were repeatedly told! I remember I finally had to fire this guy Mike because he cost me quite a few jobs. He either would be late to the job or leave the job site with out telling me or the homeowners. After he single handedly lost me a $10,000 job I fired him. After that I had much more of a Jack Welch approach to hiring and firing painters. I think that certain industries can use this approach effectively, but it is not one I hope I will be using in the future. This lesson was a financially costly one for me.
In the end I ended up being the top seller and producer in the state of Washington, but more importantly I learned how to manage a crew and how to be persuasive in a sales situation. I credit College Works why I feel so comfortable in an interview question. I basically had 10 of them a week for almost 4 months. I also learned how to implement damage control with clients who were less than pleased.
I remember one house I had I sold a small job, just paining the fence and terrace. No big deal. There was this tree that was flowing over the fence and my painters cut it back. Just slightly trimmed the brush. The only thing my painters did wrong was not ask before trimming it. But it was pretty obvious it needed to be done. They completely freaked out telling me their kids could drown now that these branches were gone. Two things. 1 - The branches were not in anyway blocking anything. 2 - You have a 7' fence that goes all around the back yard. I calmed the situation down and tried to make it better by buying her a tree at Lowe's and planting it so that there was no way their kids would drown in the neighbor's waterfront property.
I was asked to come back as a District Manager, what Chris Hamilton did, but I turned it down to work for Russell Investment. I feel that I learned all I would have learned at College Works, and it was time for me to do a job where business casual was the norm, not Carhartt's and an old T-shirt. Also I was told I would make more of a commission that I made and I did not want to tell others that they would make 25% of what they produced when I could not do it myself.
I really enjoyed reading this! I'm currently considering a job at College Works and would love to know you're most favorite and least favorite aspects of the job. What lead you to the most success? And what is your greatest warning/the greatest downside to this job?
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