Shed Rescue

You’re Running Hard Just to Stand Still

When you’re exhausted from spinning plates and competition keeps getting tougher

Does This Sound Like Your Monday Morning?

  • Your dealers complain about a 10% conversion rate on marketing leads while getting 60% on walk-ins. Meanwhile, you’re wondering why you’re even spending on marketing if they won’t pick up the phone.
  • Sales lost delivery fees that weren’t in the initial quote. Customers feel it’s a bait-and-switch, but you can’t get your software to include them automatically.
  • Your permit requirements are putting you at a 50% disadvantage while competitors play by different rules. The uneven playing field is killing your growth.
  • Simple things like broken WiFi and faulty headsets stop sales in their tracks. But you’re too busy with bigger fires to fix the “small stuff” that’s actually costing you money.

The Expensive Reality of “Small” Problems

One shed company had “decision tag” – where one person talked to the owner, then the sales manager, then back to the owner. Each had different priorities. What should have been a 15-minute decision about painted doors turned into days of back-and-forth and a compromise nobody liked.

Another business lost sales because delivery fees weren’t in their quoting software. Customers felt baited-and-switched. The software could do it – but nobody had connected the dots between lost sales and a simple settings change.

These aren’t dramatic problems. They’re death by a thousand paper cuts. Each one seems too small to fix, but together they’re bleeding your business dry.

What If You Had Someone Who Could See Around Corners?

  • Know exactly what your marketing costs per sale – not just per lead (one company discovered they could spend 3X more and still profit)
  • Stop the “decision tag” that turns 15-minute choices into week-long ordeals
  • Get delivery fees into quotes automatically so customers stop feeling baited-and-switched
  • Free up your sales team from vendor calls and admin work (250+ hours per year back to selling)
  • Build simple systems that prevent fires instead of constantly fighting them