Todd Miller:

I'm Todd Miller of Isaiah Industries, manufacturer

Todd Miller:

of specialty metal roofing and other building materials.

Todd Miller:

Today my ho co-host is Seth Heckman.

Todd Miller:

How you doing Seth?

Seth Heckaman:

Doing well.

Seth Heckaman:

How are you doing today?

Todd Miller:

Doing great.

Todd Miller:

You haven't been on the show in a while.

Todd Miller:

It's good to have you back.

Seth Heckaman:

Yeah, thanks for having me.

Seth Heckaman:

Looking forward to the good conversation and, uh, guest we've got today.

Seth Heckaman:

It's gonna be fun.

Todd Miller:

I know it will be.

Todd Miller:

I know it will be.

Todd Miller:

Absolutely.

Todd Miller:

So, um, I, I do wanna share something that occurred to me the other day.

Todd Miller:

It seems like usually when I run into people who are vegans, they don't like me.

Todd Miller:

I don't know why I've never had any beef with them.

Todd Miller:

Okay.

Todd Miller:

That was, do I get a five, six?

Seth Heckaman:

Yeah, that's an eight on the dad joke scale.

Seth Heckaman:

That was pretty good.

Todd Miller:

We'll take that.

Todd Miller:

Good deal.

Todd Miller:

Well, um, just a reminder to our, uh, audience, we are doing challenge

Todd Miller:

words once again, this episode where each, uh, Seth and I and our guest,

Todd Miller:

uh, have accepted a word that we are challenged to work into the

Todd Miller:

conversation as seamlessly as possible.

Todd Miller:

And, uh, at the end of the show, we will reveal our challenge word in

Todd Miller:

our last success or lack thereof in working it into the conversation.

Todd Miller:

So.

Todd Miller:

If you hear an interesting word or phrase, make note, that might be our

Todd Miller:

challenge word, or it may not be, we may just be saying something strange.

Todd Miller:

Um, so Seth, we're good to go.

Seth Heckaman:

Let's do it.

Todd Miller:

Well, as we've been discussing here for the last couple

Todd Miller:

episodes, now that we're into what we're calling season three of Construction

Todd Miller:

Disruption and about 160 episodes or so, um, we're starting to this

Todd Miller:

season really focus on guests who we believe are going to be a strong

Todd Miller:

interest to contractors in the home improvement and home services basis.

Todd Miller:

So, um, to that end.

Todd Miller:

We are especially excited about today's guest, which is Scott Berman.

Todd Miller:

Um, Scott is president of Florida Window and Door, Florida's leading

Todd Miller:

replacement window contractor.

Todd Miller:

Um, but we're also gonna be talking to Scott about his newest venture.

Todd Miller:

And I love this because he saw a need, uh, in his business and in the

Todd Miller:

industry, and he went out and filled it.

Todd Miller:

So his newest venture is heavy set technologies.

Todd Miller:

A firm that is disrupting lead acquisition acquisition with

Todd Miller:

modern tech-based solutions.

Todd Miller:

Um, Scott, in his past history, has been recognized as a legend

Todd Miller:

of the home improvement industry.

Todd Miller:

So lots to learn here, and he is a leading representative of our entire industry.

Todd Miller:

Um, Scott, welcome to Construction Disruption.

Todd Miller:

Look forward to learn learning from you today.

Scott Berman:

Thank you for having me and that kind introduction.

Todd Miller:

Well, we're ex we are excited to have you.

Todd Miller:

Thank you very much.

Todd Miller:

Um, Scott and I had a chance to sit down and talk a couple weeks ago at the Dave

Todd Miller:

Yoho event in, uh, St. Louis, and I walked away saying, we gotta get you, get him

Todd Miller:

on the show and tell his story and talk a little bit about this new venture as well.

Todd Miller:

So I. Um, we're gonna go back a little bit in history.

Todd Miller:

So, uh, you graduated with your Bachelor's in Business Administration

Todd Miller:

and that was back in the early nineties and about 17 years later, um, you

Todd Miller:

started Florida Window and Door.

Todd Miller:

Um, tell us a little bit about what interested you about this

Todd Miller:

industry that caused you to start floor to window and door.

Scott Berman:

Well, what what happened was my father was a

Scott Berman:

window manufacturer in Ohio.

Scott Berman:

Um, I was, originally, I'm from Ohio, happened to go to school, university

Scott Berman:

of Miami, went back to work for him, um, and realized that I didn't really

Scott Berman:

wanna, wanna manufacture windows.

Scott Berman:

Um, so he ended up selling that company to another manufacturer.

Scott Berman:

And I didn't really have a job, so I came back to Florida just sort of on vacation

Scott Berman:

and I was actually on my way to meet him for lunch and I saw a guy replacing

Scott Berman:

a window on the side of the road.

Scott Berman:

And so I pulled over and I started talking to him and I'm never usually late, but

Scott Berman:

I was about 45 minutes late to lunch and my father said, where have you been?

Scott Berman:

And I said, you're never gonna believe this.

Scott Berman:

Saw this guy replacing a window and I think I'm gonna

Scott Berman:

open a window business down.

Scott Berman:

And he looks at and.

Scott Berman:

How many windows was the guy replacing?

Scott Berman:

I said, I have no idea.

Scott Berman:

He said, well, how do you know it's a good business?

Scott Berman:

I said, I don't, but I, I have nothing else to do, so I'm gonna try it.

Scott Berman:

And, um, effectively we ended up opening and at that time, um, I had my dad's

Scott Berman:

partner in another business who offered to gimme money in addition to my own capital.

Scott Berman:

And, uh, my father told me at the time, don't take his money.

Scott Berman:

You don't need it.

Scott Berman:

You're making a mistake.

Scott Berman:

And I took it.

Scott Berman:

I didn't listen to him.

Scott Berman:

Um, and effectively we closed that company due to a partnership disagreement and I

Scott Berman:

actually filed for personal bankruptcy.

Scott Berman:

Uh, we liquidated the company and then I started floor to window

Scott Berman:

and door, uh, over basically new, um, with about 10, 10,000 in my.

Scott Berman:

Started from nothing.

Scott Berman:

And that's really how I got started.

Todd Miller:

Some of the best things out of those adversity situations

Todd Miller:

where I gotta make this happen.

Todd Miller:

Um, so that's a cool story.

Todd Miller:

Thank you.

Todd Miller:

Well, you know, as you look at Florida window and door and your placement

Todd Miller:

there in the Florida market, um, what would you say is the biggest thing that

Todd Miller:

really sets your company apart from other replacement window contractors?

Scott Berman:

You know, I know that, um, when I say this.

Scott Berman:

I'm gonna regret what comes out of my mouth, but candidly, um, for those

Scott Berman:

people who spend a lot of time in Florida, it's very difficult to get

Scott Berman:

reputable work done in your home.

Scott Berman:

Um, and so when we first started, like I was adamant that we'd be on time and

Scott Berman:

we're early, you know, five minutes early because I'm from the Midwest.

Scott Berman:

Everybody in the Midwest is early.

Scott Berman:

Um, and I think initially that's really what set us apart is

Scott Berman:

like I was never gonna be late.

Scott Berman:

And I think customers really respected that.

Scott Berman:

And we were, when we were running late, we would call and

Scott Berman:

say, Hey, we're running late.

Scott Berman:

Um, now the system is way more advanced.

Scott Berman:

Uh, obviously we do really good work, but I also think it's the way in which

Scott Berman:

we market ourselves, the commitment to the customer, and ultimately

Scott Berman:

the goal of trying to satisfy every customer that we do business with.

Todd Miller:

That's a great answer.

Todd Miller:

Does it get any better?

Todd Miller:

Better than that?

Todd Miller:

And I hear what you're saying about floor.

Todd Miller:

Florida.

Todd Miller:

Um, I'm not sure that that isn't the case to some degree in most states anymore, um,

Todd Miller:

but I certainly hear what you're saying.

Todd Miller:

No doubt about it.

Todd Miller:

Well, I'm, I'm kind of curious.

Todd Miller:

This almost seems like ancient history now to go back and talk about COVID,

Todd Miller:

uh, in the COVID years 2020 and 2021.

Todd Miller:

Um.

Todd Miller:

We always heard, of course, during that period that Florida was navigating

Todd Miller:

the pandemic better than other states.

Todd Miller:

I'm kind of curious what did your company have to do anything special

Todd Miller:

during those times, or what did that look like for you folks?

Todd Miller:

I.

Scott Berman:

It's interesting, um, being a legend.

Scott Berman:

I remember I was at a, actually at a David Yoho conference in, uh, Orlando

Scott Berman:

and David Moore said, uh, we were in this meeting and David Moore said, there's this

Scott Berman:

thing coming called COVID, and it it, it ended up taking over the entire agenda.

Scott Berman:

And, um, I remember driving home, calling my bankers and being like, I

Scott Berman:

gotta meet with you this afternoon.

Scott Berman:

I'm on my way home from Orlando.

Scott Berman:

There's this thing called COVID coming.

Scott Berman:

And so I went into their office and they look at me like I have two heads.

Scott Berman:

I'm like, we gotta extend our line of credit.

Scott Berman:

We're gonna have to do things like just get moving.

Scott Berman:

We bought a bunch computers, et et all.

Scott Berman:

What David?

Scott Berman:

While the rest of the country really was impacted by COVID, we did go remote

Scott Berman:

and um, you know, we, we, we basically gave all of our salespeople masks and

Scott Berman:

picnic tables and chairs and gloves.

Scott Berman:

Um, but we were lucky in the sense that we were still operating, uh, in Florida,

Scott Berman:

if I recall, essential industry was still allowed to work and we were really in the

Scott Berman:

gray area of essential industry because.

Scott Berman:

We're in the replacement window business, but construction was still going on.

Scott Berman:

I didn't really know if we were allowed, but I'm like, okay, we'll figure it out.

Scott Berman:

And we kept going and um, you know, it's, we, we doubled our business like so many

Scott Berman:

people in our industry in that year.

Scott Berman:

Um, but we've been able to maintain that level of volume and even go beyond that.

Scott Berman:

So, I mean, it was obviously our supply chain, uh, changed.

Scott Berman:

You know, we stopped.

Scott Berman:

We stopped, uh, we bought more internationally than domestically.

Scott Berman:

Um, we got creative, but I also think that it taught us really a good lesson

Scott Berman:

in the sense of how good our systems are.

Scott Berman:

And, and, you know, we fell back on our process and our process actually worked.

Scott Berman:

And when it.

Scott Berman:

Um, you know, we, we fixed it and, and I think it was, it

Scott Berman:

was an eye-opening experience.

Scott Berman:

Um, you know, obviously my feeling at COVID is everybody, even the bad

Scott Berman:

companies made money during COVID.

Scott Berman:

So I think now it's gone in reverse and, you know, everybody now realizes that

Scott Berman:

the home in home improvement industry is really a grind at the end of the day.

Scott Berman:

Leaves are hard.

Scott Berman:

They're expensive.

Scott Berman:

Um, I think COVID spoiled all of us.

Scott Berman:

Uh, but we were lucky enough that we've exited COVID with

Scott Berman:

the same discipline and the same aggressiveness that we had prior to.

Todd Miller:

That is a great response.

Todd Miller:

Glad I asked that.

Seth Heckaman:

Yeah.

Seth Heckaman:

And such a, like you said, testament to your systems of not

Seth Heckaman:

only being able to scale a hundred percent in a year, but then.

Seth Heckaman:

And maintain it, uh, on beyond.

Seth Heckaman:

'cause you know, like you alluded to, that's not the story we're hearing

Seth Heckaman:

from most, that three, four years after COVID were, you know, most aren't

Seth Heckaman:

anywhere near what those volumes were.

Seth Heckaman:

Uh, I'm curious, out of COVID having to do things differently, picking tables

Seth Heckaman:

and masks probably aren't still in the arsenal, but were there any new

Seth Heckaman:

innovations that were f uh, forced to, you know, into development that, uh,

Seth Heckaman:

are still being used and are having a powerful impact for you guys now today?

Scott Berman:

I mean, I think, you know, looking back, we did a lot of

Scott Berman:

automation where I think a lot of stuff was done manually because people

Scott Berman:

just weren't coming into the office.

Scott Berman:

So, you know, when COVID came, I really thought we were

Scott Berman:

gonna be shut down for months.

Scott Berman:

And so we, we redid our CRM and we spent a lot of time in the infrastructure,

Scott Berman:

assuming we weren't gonna do business.

Scott Berman:

The actual exact opposite happened.

Scott Berman:

We were implementing programs and processes and at the end of the

Scott Berman:

day, our business was exploding.

Scott Berman:

So, and you know, the one thing that we really did, I think well, was we

Scott Berman:

basically took advantage of talent.

Scott Berman:

Companies were closing, they were laying people off, we were hiring.

Scott Berman:

Um, we didn't care what it cost.

Scott Berman:

We were hired.

Scott Berman:

If we found the right people, we were hired.

Scott Berman:

Um, and we sort of always maintained that attitude since, which is, even if.

Scott Berman:

Necessarily need somebody.

Scott Berman:

If the resume is good and the interview is good, we're gonna hire that person.

Scott Berman:

And I think that's really what has allowed us to continue to grow and separated

Scott Berman:

us out from so many people down here.

Scott Berman:

I mean, you know, being from Cleveland, um, you know, the perspective of

Scott Berman:

Cleveland is always, we're always in a recession, it's always a grind.

Scott Berman:

So my feeling is that never really changes in my, my mindset.

Scott Berman:

And so we're just grinding it out.

Scott Berman:

Whether that's COVID and our business is booming, I'm still saying, God, we could

Scott Berman:

have been, we could have done 20% better.

Scott Berman:

So just sort of like how I'm built for better or for worse.

Scott Berman:

But you know, it taught us a lot.

Scott Berman:

I.

Todd Miller:

You know, I think that's interesting where you're

Todd Miller:

talking about, you know, we hire them, you know, based upon fit.

Todd Miller:

More so than, you know, skills or something.

Todd Miller:

And, and I hear so many great companies say that we can teach

Todd Miller:

skills, but there are those softer things, whether they fit within our

Todd Miller:

organization that we can't teach them.

Todd Miller:

So I'm, I'm kind of curious, I mean, you know, especially dealing with

Todd Miller:

construction, that's been a pretty tight labor market in recent years.

Todd Miller:

Um, what are some of those skills or softer skills or fit type things that you

Todd Miller:

look for in, uh, prospective team members?

Scott Berman:

You know, I think every candidate we look for, um,

Scott Berman:

from a management level is different.

Scott Berman:

I, I think it's more or less like, number one, are you a cultural fit with us?

Scott Berman:

What's your experience?

Scott Berman:

Doesn't necessarily have to be in Windows if it's in construction.

Scott Berman:

What's your commitment to customer satisfaction?

Scott Berman:

Are you willing to learn?

Scott Berman:

Do you wanna work hard or you just.

Scott Berman:

Um, you know, I think that it's the, it's not always right.

Scott Berman:

I mean, the key is, and you hear it all the time, the key is,

Scott Berman:

is you hire slow and fire fast.

Scott Berman:

And I know that's so cliche, um, but we really look at it in 90 day windows.

Scott Berman:

And I'm, and my famous saying is that you can hide in our organization for 90

Scott Berman:

days, and you'll be lucky if you get to 90 days, but you can hide for 90 days.

Scott Berman:

But on the 91st day, we're gonna find you.

Scott Berman:

So, you know, and you're, if you're loafing and, and we're a

Scott Berman:

performance driven organization across all metrics in all departments.

Scott Berman:

So, you know, we'll find you.

Scott Berman:

Um, we hired a couple people during COVID who I thought could really

Scott Berman:

help us, wanted to relocate to Florida and they were terrible.

Scott Berman:

Not 'cause they didn't have the skillset, but because they

Scott Berman:

didn't wanna work that hard.

Scott Berman:

And then ultimately they weren't a good cultural fit.

Scott Berman:

Um, but I hired some really big winners also.

Scott Berman:

And so everybody gets, you know, focused on the losers.

Scott Berman:

You really have to focus on the winners because the winners are what are, are

Scott Berman:

going to make your organization different.

Scott Berman:

And the other thing that I think we learned over time was that,

Scott Berman:

you know, not everybody wants to work in a large company.

Scott Berman:

Some people are a lot happier at 10 million, 15 million.

Scott Berman:

And that's the, that's the, uh, mindset that they're in and

Scott Berman:

that's where they wanna stay.

Scott Berman:

And so.

Scott Berman:

It is larger in dealing with so many customers and is a lot more

Scott Berman:

technologically sophisticated.

Scott Berman:

It's a hard, you know, it's a hard shake and uh, you know, so

Scott Berman:

I think that all comes into it.

Seth Heckaman:

We alluded to it a second ago where you, you all

Seth Heckaman:

are maintaining where others are maybe falling off and um, we got.

Seth Heckaman:

Tipped off a little bit from what you were sharing from, uh, from

Seth Heckaman:

the stage in St. Louis at the Yoho event there that, uh, leads may be

Seth Heckaman:

a little softer this year and, and dealing with some other challenges.

Seth Heckaman:

But curious what you're seeing there in Florida specifically, uh, in the home

Seth Heckaman:

improvement market, how you're feeling about things and maybe how, uh, you

Seth Heckaman:

all are addressing some of the, uh, challenges of pulling the leads out.

Seth Heckaman:

We need to maintain the volume and still be accomplishing our goals moving forward.

Scott Berman:

So in our case, um, you know, I think one of the strengths of our

Scott Berman:

organization is we continually reevaluate where we are and what we're doing.

Scott Berman:

So at the end of last year, around the fourth quarter, I started looking

Scott Berman:

at our sales process and leads and, um, you know, really trying to figure

Scott Berman:

out how this model is gonna change.

Scott Berman:

And obviously you had the TCPA laws coming into effect, allegedly coming into effect.

Scott Berman:

And so we were like, okay, we gotta really change our model.

Scott Berman:

And so what we, what we recognized was we're very data driven and

Scott Berman:

you know, we're almost like Google for the home improvement industry.

Scott Berman:

Like everything's on a, everything's on some kind of system and being

Scott Berman:

trapped every second of every day.

Scott Berman:

So one of the things that we recognized was we had terrible

Scott Berman:

retention in our sales force.

Scott Berman:

And when I say terrible, I mean it was terrible.

Scott Berman:

And we had spent, um, about $550,000 in 2024 on recruiting.

Scott Berman:

And when I tell you if we had 10 salesmen for the $554,000,

Scott Berman:

I'm big, overly generous.

Scott Berman:

Um, so my goal at the beginning of the year was to, to figure out

Scott Berman:

really how to fix retention and, and you know, when I use five 50.

Scott Berman:

What's scary is, and I didn't wanna do this and I probably should

Scott Berman:

have, but I didn't wanna be sick.

Scott Berman:

I didn't add in the amount of money I spent for the leads that I sent

Scott Berman:

these guys out on who are not with me, which is probably 4 million.

Scott Berman:

So we looked at the retention and we basically determined, Hey, for

Scott Berman:

living in Florida, we're really not paying our sales guys enough money.

Scott Berman:

So we, we, we change our compensation package.

Scott Berman:

But at the same time, while we change our compensation package, we also announced

Scott Berman:

expectations for our sales force.

Scott Berman:

And if they didn't do the expectations, they would get knocked down in

Scott Berman:

terms of lead flow, uh, or bonus or whatever the case may be.

Scott Berman:

And so the argument was, Hey look, I'm happy to pay you more money, but I'm gonna

Scott Berman:

expect more from you on the other end.

Scott Berman:

And as I ended may, I think our retention is close to 80% and the, and the 20%

Scott Berman:

are the people that we wanna get rid of.

Scott Berman:

Um, I will tell you that I am a hundred percent convinced that if we

Scott Berman:

could start this industry over again, um, salespeople would pay something

Scott Berman:

for the leads that we give them.

Scott Berman:

Because I think when I use the analogy all the time, and maybe you

Scott Berman:

guys heard me say this, I don't.

Scott Berman:

But like I look at leads and a salesman as the guy at.

Scott Berman:

All I keep doing is feeding this guy.

Scott Berman:

So if he knows it's an unlimited amount of food, why is he gonna sit

Scott Berman:

in the guy's driveway for another 20 minutes when he knows tomorrow?

Scott Berman:

I'm gonna give him two more leads.

Scott Berman:

And so it all came down to really a, a, an epiphany, for lack of a better word,

Scott Berman:

where it was like, we're doing this wrong.

Scott Berman:

Like we're gonna give you two leads every day and your

Scott Berman:

closing percentage is terrible.

Scott Berman:

So it costs me nine.

Scott Berman:

Give lead.

Scott Berman:

And it's like roulette.

Scott Berman:

And the data's there and we're not, and we're not following it.

Scott Berman:

So we really went back and said, Hey, look, if you're not closing at a certain

Scott Berman:

percent, you're gonna get less leads.

Scott Berman:

If you're behind the next tier, you're gonna get even less leads.

Scott Berman:

We implemented continuing education programs mandatory for low closures,

Scott Berman:

as well as our entire sales force on a credit basis over quarters.

Scott Berman:

We put in an LMA system so they could do it at their own, you know,

Scott Berman:

at their own discretion and time.

Scott Berman:

But we became more accountable.

Scott Berman:

And I think our salesmen, even though they claim they don't want

Scott Berman:

structure, the fact is they can't survive without the structure.

Scott Berman:

And so I think we're seeing the effects.

Scott Berman:

And when you look at it, what's happening is that our sales are up exponentially.

Scott Berman:

But what's interesting is our marketing costs are down.

Scott Berman:

Because I don't have to spend as much money for the two leads that I'm giving.

Scott Berman:

A guy who's not gonna sell, he's gonna be cut down to six or eight instead of 10.

Scott Berman:

We'll multiply that time.

Scott Berman:

70 people times $900.

Scott Berman:

You got a lot of money.

Scott Berman:

And so, you know, we're doing things like that because business is

Scott Berman:

tighter, leads are more expensive, and we have to be accountable.

Seth Heckaman:

That's incredible.

Seth Heckaman:

And there were so many facets of all you just laid out of what went into that.

Seth Heckaman:

It's amazing.

Seth Heckaman:

And it only goes back to having the data in the first place and sort of the

Seth Heckaman:

foundation of the technology to really pivot and, and have visibility where

Seth Heckaman:

all those pieces can come together.

Seth Heckaman:

So that had to have an.

Seth Heckaman:

Incredible impact on NSLI across the whole organization.

Seth Heckaman:

Right?

Scott Berman:

Significantly higher, and I'm.

Seth Heckaman:

Sure.

Scott Berman:

What it was a year ago.

Scott Berman:

But more importantly, what we commit to our sales team is, Hey listen,

Scott Berman:

we're gonna give you the expectation.

Scott Berman:

We're gonna expect you to follow the expectation, and we're not

Scott Berman:

gonna change it for the entire year.

Scott Berman:

'cause that's how we do everything.

Scott Berman:

We'll live with it.

Scott Berman:

Um, so the salesmen are making more money, but they're accountable on

Scott Berman:

the basis that if they don't do what we ask them to do, they know right

Scott Berman:

away they're gonna get less leads.

Scott Berman:

And so the, the trickle down effect is we have a compliance department

Scott Berman:

that hands out the leads and they're looking at it every, every week to what

Scott Berman:

the closing percentage is, and then they're feeding that information into

Scott Berman:

the call center because that then sets their schedule for the following week

Scott Berman:

and how many leads they need every day.

Scott Berman:

So it, it's driven through our entire organization and

Scott Berman:

it's been a big difference.

Seth Heckaman:

Yeah, and that was so something that came up

Seth Heckaman:

from a few different voices.

Seth Heckaman:

I think Chris Conahan mentioned it as well, and I know I've

Seth Heckaman:

heard it from Megan Beatty.

Seth Heckaman:

So, you know, other just really, um.

Seth Heckaman:

Incredibly smart people in our industry of this sort of, uh, batting order

Seth Heckaman:

perspective on lead distribution, which is sort of new for us in our

Seth Heckaman:

little segment where we're, you know, dealing with maybe some smaller

Seth Heckaman:

organizations or organizations covering huge geographic areas.

Seth Heckaman:

So they gotta, you know, distribute leads more just.

Seth Heckaman:

Based upon who the sales guy is closest.

Seth Heckaman:

But um, yeah, it seems like once the expectation is set, everyone across

Seth Heckaman:

the organization is really clear and it, uh, if you're at the bottom

Seth Heckaman:

of that order, you're either gonna opt out or know it's coming out.

Seth Heckaman:

You know, you're gonna opt out to leave and find something else yourself, or know

Seth Heckaman:

the writing's on the wall either way.

Scott Berman:

The key in our system is the information is done weekly.

Scott Berman:

Most other organizations are.

Scott Berman:

And in my mind that's too late.

Scott Berman:

Because what, what we realized also was when we looked at the

Scott Berman:

retention, it was like a bell curve.

Scott Berman:

You would've, the salesmen come out of training and they were amazing

Scott Berman:

and then they sort of crested on that curve and they started going down.

Scott Berman:

If you can't save that guy before he starts to crest,

Scott Berman:

you're gonna lose the guy.

Scott Berman:

So what we did was we put in coaches who like call 'em every

Scott Berman:

morning, how you doing today?

Scott Berman:

What's going on?

Scott Berman:

They're mindset coaches.

Scott Berman:

And they're, they're riding with them every day and, uh, you know,

Scott Berman:

making sure that their headspace, they're not having marital problems,

Scott Berman:

drinking problems, medical problems, whatever problems you would have.

Scott Berman:

And, uh, also we have a, we have a department called compliance, which

Scott Berman:

strictly does Rilla, uh, listens to Rilla, but we listen to every call

Scott Berman:

and then they're calling, they're sending the comments to the salesman.

Scott Berman:

And if the salesman doesn't listen to the comments, they get less leads.

Scott Berman:

So everything is intertwined because I don't, what I don't want is we

Scott Berman:

don't want a salesman who is un who is, um, unwilling or incapable

Scott Berman:

to educate himself to get better.

Scott Berman:

If we have that guy, he doesn't belong here.

Scott Berman:

He's just costing us money.

Seth Heckaman:

Are those mindset coaches, you know, more, uh, senior

Seth Heckaman:

salespeople that then are, have a couple of guys under 'em, or.

Scott Berman:

they're, um, they're people who are, who are.

Scott Berman:

Uh, managers who are, who are understanding and have, have processed the

Scott Berman:

one call close or for other organizations, but are, you know, really there to

Scott Berman:

check the temperature of the sales rep because these guys are so up and down.

Scott Berman:

So we're trying to, we're, we're trying to mod, we're trying to moderate them

Scott Berman:

to the point where we can control their emotions and what we typically

Scott Berman:

say, look, in order to be successful.

Scott Berman:

You have to have short term memory.

Scott Berman:

You're not gonna sell every job.

Scott Berman:

You're gonna get a cancellation, but you can't let it affect the next job.

Scott Berman:

And these, these positions are, uh, you know, positions that they're set

Scott Berman:

up where they don't sell anything.

Scott Berman:

They're not, um, you know, they're not salespeople.

Scott Berman:

They're strictly there to assist and mentor the salesman from a skillset

Scott Berman:

as well as a mental perspective.

Seth Heckaman:

That's awesome and it.

Seth Heckaman:

It's so easy to see all the benefits for the organization, obviously, of

Seth Heckaman:

making sure your investment's going, where you're gonna get the biggest

Seth Heckaman:

return, but obviously all these things are in the best interest of the team

Seth Heckaman:

members who want to maximize their ability and be successful and just

Seth Heckaman:

creates incredible opportunity for 'em.

Seth Heckaman:

That's awesome.

Scott Berman:

That was the idea behind.

Seth Heckaman:

One of the other things loved, uh, that you shared

Seth Heckaman:

in St. Louis and would, uh, yeah.

Seth Heckaman:

Love if you could share with our audience, uh, uh, now is, uh, the story

Seth Heckaman:

of Shelly, the Turtle and that, how that came together and, uh, what that

Seth Heckaman:

has meant for your guys' marketing, uh, this year, uh, that you've rolled out

Scott Berman:

Well, Shelly started out as a manatee

Seth Heckaman:

really.

Scott Berman:

a.

Todd Miller:

There you go.

Scott Berman:

Set me up perfectly.

Scott Berman:

Um, you know, it's an interesting story, somewhat funny, um, about

Scott Berman:

last year around, uh, the summer of last year sometime, we ran a

Scott Berman:

focus group of around 40 people.

Scott Berman:

And, uh, I truly, we do all of our own marketing internally, so we have a. And

Scott Berman:

I didn't really know they were doing this, but they did a focus group and they

Scott Berman:

put together all the ads in the state of Florida tv, radio, print, um, direct

Scott Berman:

mail, whatever the medium would be.

Scott Berman:

And they brought everybody in to 40 people and they showed 'em everything.

Scott Berman:

And then they let 'em go for a day and they asked him to come back.

Scott Berman:

And, um, they asked him, what do you remember?

Scott Berman:

Nobody remembered anybody, any company name.

Scott Berman:

They remembered the offer.

Scott Berman:

They remembered some guy putting a baseball bat through a window

Scott Berman:

or stepping on a window, but they couldn't identify the name.

Scott Berman:

So the marketing department, um, came up with the concept of Shelly.

Scott Berman:

So then they asked to meet with me, and I, I typically have my marketing

Scott Berman:

meetings twice a week, and so we'd like to show you something said, okay.

Scott Berman:

And they put Shelly in a very rare form.

Scott Berman:

In a rough form on the TV screens, and they show me what this is.

Scott Berman:

And I honestly thought they were kidding.

Scott Berman:

And I said some words to the effect of, are you blah, blah?

Scott Berman:

Kidding me, this is what I pay you guys for.

Scott Berman:

Um, and they said, no, but give us a few more minutes.

Scott Berman:

Just watch what happens.

Scott Berman:

So they brought a, about 10 people into my, off into the office,

Scott Berman:

into their department, all from different departments, uh, who, who

Scott Berman:

also had no idea what was going on.

Scott Berman:

And they said, all we want you to do is watch the people's face

Scott Berman:

while they walk in the door.

Scott Berman:

So I said, okay.

Scott Berman:

I watched the people's faces and um, every one of them left

Scott Berman:

with a smile on their face.

Scott Berman:

They're like, oh my God, we love Shelly.

Scott Berman:

So I said, okay, well, you know, I, I mean, I'm wrong.

Scott Berman:

Let's see if it works.

Scott Berman:

So, um, they developed it and, uh, we are now, I think the, according

Scott Berman:

to market research, the number one recognized brand in Florida for Windows.

Scott Berman:

Um, I, and it's all due to Shelly.

Scott Berman:

To the point where I have friends.

Scott Berman:

Actually, one of my first customers 20 years ago in Miami called me and said,

Scott Berman:

I just wanna let you know I love Shelly.

Scott Berman:

Like this is the, it's the most amazing thing I can, and I can't believe it.

Scott Berman:

I was in a mediation the other day and the guy's like, oh, you're

Scott Berman:

turtle tough the glass, right?

Scott Berman:

I'm like, yeah.

Scott Berman:

So it's, it's, it's really beyond anything that I could have ever imagined.

Scott Berman:

Um, but what it's also done is it's brought down our lead.

Todd Miller:

A good deal.

Todd Miller:

We'll.

Todd Miller:

I checked out the Shelly commercials and I love 'em.

Todd Miller:

I certainly see why it's working.

Seth Heckaman:

No.

Seth Heckaman:

Absolutely.

Seth Heckaman:

We were, yeah, I went and found 'em that night on, on YouTube in the hotel too.

Seth Heckaman:

So encourage people to check 'em out and, and yeah.

Seth Heckaman:

I love what your team did with them.

Seth Heckaman:

It was a, they threaded the needle very in incorporating it where she's

Seth Heckaman:

prominent and ta but also not, uh, I, you know, not corny or quirky.

Seth Heckaman:

It, it is, it's memorable.

Seth Heckaman:

It's cute.

Seth Heckaman:

It makes you feel warm and fuzzy and, uh, it sticks with you.

Seth Heckaman:

It's awesome.

Scott Berman:

I.

Scott Berman:

Um, is we really wanted to get rid of aggregators as a lead source.

Scott Berman:

And I think what we found, and this is only what we find, is that when your

Scott Berman:

aggregator, when your leads are too many, too high, a percentage of your

Scott Berman:

overall leads, your sales are down.

Scott Berman:

And so we started looking at the numbers of, of aggregator sources

Scott Berman:

we were using, and labor took us to.

Scott Berman:

Get the lead to set and then the cancellation rate, and then the

Scott Berman:

average sale and everything else.

Scott Berman:

And we started looking at this, we're like, this is not really sustainable.

Scott Berman:

And yet, if we would go on television with no Shelly, we would just be

Scott Berman:

another company on television or run an ad. We would just be another company.

Scott Berman:

So we developed Shelly, got rid of all the aggregators, went heavily on

Scott Berman:

television and direct mail and radio.

Scott Berman:

Well, we're not on radio yet.

Scott Berman:

We're going on radio billboards.

Scott Berman:

Um, and what we found was people really recognized Shelly, uh, to the point

Scott Berman:

where it was a competitive advantage.

Seth Heckaman:

Well, that's huge.

Seth Heckaman:

People.

Seth Heckaman:

People always assume the $75 aggregator lead is gonna be their cheapest

Seth Heckaman:

option, and guys just default to that.

Seth Heckaman:

But if you can be creative and do things better, you said, you said it brought down

Seth Heckaman:

to your overall marketing costs, right?

Seth Heckaman:

So.

Seth Heckaman:

It's incredible.

Seth Heckaman:

Well, well, not to diminish any, the other, uh, brilliant ideas coming

Seth Heckaman:

outta the marketing department, other areas of your organization,

Seth Heckaman:

uh, you know, I could keep asking questions all day about all that.

Seth Heckaman:

But do want to pivot here to, uh, probably what you're itching to

Seth Heckaman:

talk about, uh, heavy set tech.

Seth Heckaman:

Technologies.

Seth Heckaman:

And in this new venture, you're kicking off and starting, uh,

Seth Heckaman:

tech firm that started in 2021 with the goal to help businesses

Seth Heckaman:

integrate appointment scheduling, uh, directly onto their websites.

Seth Heckaman:

Uh, so, uh, heard a little bit about it.

Seth Heckaman:

Would love to learn more, and if you could share, uh, how heavyset

Seth Heckaman:

started and how you're helping folks.

Scott Berman:

So heavyset started because we started to see a tremendous

Scott Berman:

amount of leads that we were unable to set either after hours or just

Scott Berman:

couldn't get in touch with the customer.

Scott Berman:

And so we developed the idea of heavyset candidly, for use on our own.

Scott Berman:

And it started in 2021, only because I was like, well, let's

Scott Berman:

start a different company.

Scott Berman:

If, if it works, we can market it.

Scott Berman:

But I didn't, I I didn't really think it was gonna work.

Scott Berman:

Um, and it ended up working.

Scott Berman:

You can see I'm a little skeptical.

Scott Berman:

So, um, basically what what we decided was we wanted to send people to our website.

Scott Berman:

Initially and allow them to set an appointment, not by bot, which you

Scott Berman:

say, Hey, I want a 10 o'clock, and then the next morning they call and say, we

Scott Berman:

can't come at 10, but we can come at 12.

Scott Berman:

We wanted it to be, um, at a specific time, updated every few seconds, and,

Scott Berman:

um, allow somebody, like an Amazon experience to set a lead without

Scott Berman:

ever talking to a, to a human.

Scott Berman:

And this was really before ai, so to speak.

Scott Berman:

So the first phase we hired, you know, we, we brought in an internal programmer.

Scott Berman:

Um, he programmed it.

Scott Berman:

We weren't really happy with it, but we were using it and it was

Scott Berman:

working, and probably around 15% of our leads we're coming from heavyset.

Scott Berman:

Um, and the, and the conversion rate was better, and the average

Scott Berman:

sale was slightly better, and the cancellation rate was lower.

Scott Berman:

But what we also recognized was it allowed us to advertise at times

Scott Berman:

when everybody else was closed.

Scott Berman:

So therefore, we were getting leads that either other people wouldn't

Scott Berman:

see, or we were advertising hours that were less expensive, so we were

Scott Berman:

generating leads at a lower cost.

Scott Berman:

So that was important.

Scott Berman:

Um, so we kept developing it and, uh, you know, it, it, it,

Scott Berman:

it morphed into a lot of things.

Scott Berman:

Like we, we spoke to some people.

Scott Berman:

I, I showed some people that I knew.

Scott Berman:

I'm like, get this crazy idea.

Scott Berman:

What do you think?

Scott Berman:

And they're like, oh, this is amazing.

Scott Berman:

Can we use it?

Scott Berman:

I'm like, yeah, use it.

Scott Berman:

Let me know what you think.

Scott Berman:

Um, so they started using it and then they started bringing us some ideas.

Scott Berman:

And I started to realize, Jesus, we, we really have a business here.

Scott Berman:

So one of the things that I pride myself on, I think, is that I don't really wanna

Scott Berman:

develop something or give advice to people only who are the largest companies or

Scott Berman:

share ideas with the largest companies.

Scott Berman:

'cause I think there's a lot of value in the smaller companies, but can't

Scott Berman:

really scale an idea where I can take an idea and I can scale it and I probably

Scott Berman:

won't do an idea if I can't scale it or a business if I can't scale it.

Scott Berman:

I, I wanted to develop this for small companies as well,

Scott Berman:

because I think it added value.

Scott Berman:

So we came up with a pricing structure where it was basically a flat monthly

Scott Berman:

fee, and then it was a cost per lead, uh, that heavyset would set.

Scott Berman:

So if, for example, you're in December and you're in Ohio, your cost is $995 a month.

Scott Berman:

Clearly not crippling, but if you got two leads, it'd be $995 plus.

Scott Berman:

13 or $15 for the lead.

Scott Berman:

I don't remember.

Scott Berman:

Um, because I wanted the small guy to benefit from it.

Scott Berman:

So we signed up a couple people who were smaller accounts 'cause we

Scott Berman:

wanted to start with smaller people.

Scott Berman:

And then we sort of realized, well the downside to the smaller

Scott Berman:

company is, is they don't really spend a lot of money advertising.

Scott Berman:

So set's really not gonna be effective to it.

Scott Berman:

But they, they offered some insight.

Scott Berman:

They're like, Hey, you know, we'd like to have heavyset set

Scott Berman:

leads at a show so I could sit and talk to somebody at the show.

Scott Berman:

And instead of taking a piece of paper, writing it down and having 'em call,

Scott Berman:

you could take the phone number, or I'm sorry, the name and the email address.

Scott Berman:

And if they're in your database, it'll populate right away.

Scott Berman:

If they're not, it'll give you the opportunity to set the

Scott Berman:

appointment right there with a calendar invite sent to the person.

Scott Berman:

Um, sitting at the, at your standing, at your table on a shelf or a canvas lead.

Scott Berman:

Um, it also allows you to, if you're slow in a particular area or day,

Scott Berman:

you can text all of the customers in your database who didn't set a lead

Scott Berman:

and you can push a text out to say, Hey, we're running a special sale.

Scott Berman:

Keep our crews busy.

Scott Berman:

And we schedule a lot of appointments that way.

Scott Berman:

The other thing is, is that what we did, uh, is now, you know, two,

Scott Berman:

three years later, um, it confirms all appointments using AI by text.

Scott Berman:

So effectively, whatever your questions, you ask both people

Scott Berman:

home, are you the homeowner?

Scott Berman:

How many windows, how many stories, whatever, it does it through ai.

Scott Berman:

What's interesting is that the numbers, uh, in terms of conversion rate.

Scott Berman:

Um, average sale and, uh, cancellation rates are all significantly lower

Scott Berman:

than somebody setting a lead with, with my call center, which

Scott Berman:

by the way is very, very good.

Scott Berman:

So it's not like my call center sucks, and I'm comparing something

Scott Berman:

that's really good against it.

Scott Berman:

And actually, we publish all the numbers of what Shelly does, both in terms of

Scott Berman:

lead set and confirmation percentage.

Scott Berman:

Against our call center and against our confirmation department.

Scott Berman:

So, and, and what's happening is our confirmation department, as an

Scott Berman:

example, is using the conversation that Shelly is, I'm sorry, that heavyset is

Scott Berman:

having to better off to better their confirmation rate because it's using AI

Scott Berman:

so you can see the whole conversation.

Scott Berman:

So what we found, so now we have I think about 45 or 50 customers.

Scott Berman:

And it could be, you know, we have customers doing a hundred million

Scott Berman:

to, to customers doing 5 million.

Scott Berman:

I think, you know, three to 5 million is probably the, the bottom because they

Scott Berman:

just don't advertise enough to justify it.

Scott Berman:

But, um, you know, it's the future.

Scott Berman:

And, and, you know, we believe, and I think we're pretty close, um, that

Scott Berman:

we'll have voice ai, uh, to set leads and re and go through our database

Scott Berman:

within the next several weeks.

Scott Berman:

And, you know, we anticipate, I mean, from a, from a lead percentage, you

Scott Berman:

know, 35 to 40% of our leads are set using heavyset on a daily basis.

Scott Berman:

But the best part about it is, is that you come to work in the morning and

Scott Berman:

you have 40 or 50 leads sitting there that have already been set to fill your

Scott Berman:

schedule for the next day or the day after because we're readily available.

Scott Berman:

And, and so.

Scott Berman:

Um, I, I'm minimizing what the technology does 'cause it has email and all this

Scott Berman:

other stuff that, you know, candidly, I I, I'd be doing a disservice if I explained

Scott Berman:

it, but the general idea behind it is, is to make you more available 24 hours

Scott Berman:

a day to provide you an opportunity to advertise when your customers don't,

Scott Berman:

when your competitors don't advertise.

Scott Berman:

And to give your customer 24.

Scott Berman:

To schedule an actual appointment where you don't have to call 'em back

Scott Berman:

and say, we're not available, and I think the numbers speak for themselves.

Todd Miller:

I'm curious, we had Marcus Sheridan on the show, uh, author of

Todd Miller:

endless customers, uh, recently and, uh, in regards to online appointment setting.

Todd Miller:

He mentioned that some companies are starting to even let, uh, the

Todd Miller:

prospect choose their own salesperson.

Todd Miller:

Is that something that potentially heavyset could do or do you

Todd Miller:

have any feelings on that?

Scott Berman:

We could do it.

Scott Berman:

Um, we, I, in our organization, we.

Scott Berman:

The performance of the rep against the

Scott Berman:

lead.

Scott Berman:

So,

Todd Miller:

Yep.

Scott Berman:

you know, I think that gets a little dangerous.

Scott Berman:

'cause then it's like the best looking guy, you know, or the best

Scott Berman:

looking woman, or they wanna deal with a woman instead of a man.

Scott Berman:

I don't really wanna give 'em that perspective, but I think where heavyset

Scott Berman:

does come into value is that it's really only designed to do lead generation.

Scott Berman:

I'm not getting into the customer experience.

Scott Berman:

With, you know, the installation or this is strictly, I can get you more leads.

Scott Berman:

Like, for example, perfect example is an aggregator.

Scott Berman:

You, you, you know, when we were using aggregators, um, the aggregator text would

Scott Berman:

hit our, or the aggregator information would hit, customer information, would hit

Scott Berman:

our database and we would send a text out saying Thank you for contacting Florida

Scott Berman:

window and door, even though they didn't contact Florida window and door directly.

Scott Berman:

We would send the text out and then call 'em immediately.

Scott Berman:

Well, now, now not only do we send the text out, but we sent

Scott Berman:

the link to heavyset on the text.

Scott Berman:

And so what we're we're able to determine is, is that we're actually

Scott Berman:

setting more aggregator leads as a result of heavyset than we are when

Scott Berman:

my operator calls, because they've called three other people and they

Scott Berman:

don't wanna answer the phone anymore.

Scott Berman:

So when you talk speed, the lead, it doesn't get any faster than that.

Todd Miller:

Absolutely.

Seth Heckaman:

I am curious, can you give an example on advertising in hours

Seth Heckaman:

when others aren't, is that, you know, spending finding some cheap TV space at

Seth Heckaman:

nine o'clock at night and someone can still set it, sit on the couch or I.

Scott Berman:

It could be anything.

Scott Berman:

It could be, for example, you know, the easiest thing would be to say, um, Google

Scott Berman:

leads you, you know, most campaigns we used to stop at like six or seven.

Scott Berman:

Or four o'clock on a Sunday, because that's when our call center closed, which

Scott Berman:

effectively means you're out of business.

Scott Berman:

So you still have the, you, you still have the expense of the

Scott Berman:

building, the phones, the terminals, but you're not setting any leads.

Scott Berman:

This allows you to literally be open 24 hours a day.

Scott Berman:

So it's not uncommon for us to, to include a budget every day for

Scott Berman:

Google, between eight at night and 6 37 in the morning, eight o'clock in.

Scott Berman:

When our main money kicks in because we know there's nobody there, we're like

Scott Berman:

advertising with none of our competitors because their call centers closed.

Scott Berman:

So when you look at it from that perspective, it, it also

Scott Berman:

is not a less expensive lead.

Scott Berman:

It's a less competitive lead because if you're my competitor,

Scott Berman:

you're not gonna reach that guy who's not home during the day.

Scott Berman:

What if it's a fa, especially like in the Midwest, like there's so

Scott Berman:

many people who work second shift.

Scott Berman:

How are you reaching a guy who works second shift you?

Scott Berman:

You're not.

Scott Berman:

So he is never gonna buy windows.

Scott Berman:

Of course he is.

Scott Berman:

How are we gonna reach him?

Scott Berman:

That's where heavy set's ideal.

Todd Miller:

How would someone go about getting started with heavyset?

Scott Berman:

All you have to go is, um, first you should get a demo.

Scott Berman:

Uh, the, the best way to do it is go to www heavyset tech TECH, and

Scott Berman:

that might, uh, the company will set up a demo for you and do a far

Scott Berman:

better job of explaining it to.

Todd Miller:

Uh, it sounds like Heavyset was kind of born out of, you know,

Todd Miller:

you saw this need any, where, where do you look at for, for inspiration

Todd Miller:

for your business and for ideas?

Todd Miller:

I. Today, are there any particular people you follow or books you read?

Scott Berman:

You know, I, I think at the end of the day what we do is

Scott Berman:

we, we try to find technology or a process that doesn't necessarily have

Scott Berman:

to be in the home improvement space.

Scott Berman:

I read a lot of books.

Scott Berman:

More biographies than anything, but I think it's more or

Scott Berman:

less like, wait a second.

Scott Berman:

You know, heavyset, my wife we're driving to dinner and she's shopping on Amazon.

Scott Berman:

You know, I can't even have a conversation with her 'cause she's

Scott Berman:

always shopping on something.

Scott Berman:

Um, and it's like, wait a second.

Scott Berman:

Why can't you do that for home improvement?

Scott Berman:

It doesn't make sense.

Scott Berman:

You're talking about your week.

Scott Berman:

It's the weekend.

Scott Berman:

You are just cleaning your windows.

Scott Berman:

There are a disaster gutters.

Scott Berman:

You need exterminating, whatever.

Scott Berman:

Why are you limited to the amount of hours that a business is

Scott Berman:

open and this environment, you really can't do that anymore.

Scott Berman:

Um, so we're looking at stuff that, you know, in all honesty,

Scott Berman:

hasn't been done before.

Scott Berman:

Um, and I think if you, if you look at it from that perspective and adapt

Scott Berman:

it to your business, I think you'll find some pretty damn good ideas.

Scott Berman:

And, you know, obviously the legends and all the people we know,

Scott Berman:

um, you know, and the people that you can talk to in our industry.

Scott Berman:

I mean, I remember when I was a smaller company and far less

Scott Berman:

recognized than I am today.

Scott Berman:

Um, I was scared to go up to people like me.

Scott Berman:

And what I find now is I'm like, oh my God, these people

Scott Berman:

are so special and so super.

Scott Berman:

I mean, like, you know, Brian Elias and Mark Curry and some of

Scott Berman:

these guys who are just brilliant.

Scott Berman:

They're, they're my closest friends and we all, we all want each other to do better

Scott Berman:

and are all more, more than willing to help other people build their business.

Scott Berman:

And we take great pride in it.

Scott Berman:

And so, you know, I, I use what I said to you guys before, it's

Scott Berman:

like, I can, I hear good ideas.

Scott Berman:

From a lot of groups that we're involved in, but it's a small company

Scott Berman:

and they're like, nobody's listening to that guy, but I'm listening because

Scott Berman:

I think I can take something he said, and it still teaches me to this day,

Scott Berman:

and when it doesn't teach me anymore, or I'm not learning anymore, I'm done.

Scott Berman:

And I know I'm done because there's nothing else to do.

Todd Miller:

Well, this has been a fascinating discussion.

Todd Miller:

Thank you very much, Scott.

Todd Miller:

I'm very thankful for your time.

Todd Miller:

Uh.

Todd Miller:

We're close to wrapping up what we call the business end of things.

Todd Miller:

Is there anything we haven't covered today that you wanted to

Todd Miller:

be sure to share with our audience?

Scott Berman:

I think at the end of the day, you're in a great industry.

Scott Berman:

Um, you know, the companies that are have the best process, have the

Scott Berman:

best systems, continually change those systems to make them better.

Scott Berman:

Are gonna be the companies that survive.

Scott Berman:

And I think, you know, all of us have gotten very spoiled over the last three or

Scott Berman:

four years, and I beg you to change your process and to be more critical of your

Scott Berman:

thought process and analyze information because that's really what the future is.

Scott Berman:

You know, that there's so many things like that.

Scott Berman:

When I go into our office and I look at, um, you know, the amount

Scott Berman:

of data we're analyzing every day.

Scott Berman:

If you would've told me 15 years ago that this is what we do, I would've

Scott Berman:

told you, you were absolutely crazy.

Scott Berman:

And now it's everywhere.

Scott Berman:

It's realo, it's engaged, it's, uh, balto, you know, and it goes on and on and on.

Scott Berman:

And I think that so many people who are in our industry don't do

Scott Berman:

the things or learn the things that they're uncomfortable with.

Scott Berman:

So it's like, well, I'm not good at marketing, so I'm gonna

Scott Berman:

hire somebody to do marketing.

Scott Berman:

I'm not good at the accounting.

Scott Berman:

I'm gonna hire somebody to do the accounting.

Scott Berman:

And they're gonna take the, the time to learn.

Scott Berman:

And it's, and they can learn.

Scott Berman:

It may not be the best, but they can learn.

Scott Berman:

And I just implore everybody to, you know, to learn because

Scott Berman:

there's so much out there.

Scott Berman:

And the industry is changing so fast.

Scott Berman:

So fast.

Scott Berman:

And if you're not changing and you're not.

Scott Berman:

Growing, you're really gonna be left behind.

Scott Berman:

You know?

Scott Berman:

And I, and I can tell you, just knowing what we do every day, like, I'm not

Scott Berman:

saying that's normal, but I think that's gonna become the normal down the road.

Todd Miller:

Well, great advice, Scott.

Todd Miller:

So much, A lot what you said was just so spot on and kind of like that

Todd Miller:

first strawberry of spring, just, um, so sweet and, and so perfect.

Todd Miller:

So thank you.

Todd Miller:

Well, before we do close out, I wanna ask if you're willing

Todd Miller:

to participate in something we call our rapid fire questions.

Todd Miller:

Scott, these are seven questions.

Todd Miller:

Some are serious, some are silly.

Todd Miller:

All you have to do is give a response.

Todd Miller:

You're up to the challenge of rapid fire.

Scott Berman:

Sounds like fall.

Todd Miller:

Awesome.

Todd Miller:

Seth, you wanna ask the first one?

Seth Heckaman:

Sure.

Seth Heckaman:

Absolutely.

Seth Heckaman:

So for the, I'm gonna call an audible for the first question

Seth Heckaman:

because I'm a sucker, uh, for book recommendations and love biographies.

Seth Heckaman:

So what was a recent one you've read that uh, you would recommend for the audience?

Scott Berman:

It's an old one.

Scott Berman:

It was the Rockefeller story.

Seth Heckaman:

I'm gonna look it up

Todd Miller:

Cool.

Todd Miller:

Thank you.

Todd Miller:

Uh, question number two.

Todd Miller:

If you could swap lives with someone for a day, who would

Todd Miller:

you choose to swap lives with?

Scott Berman:

To be Elon.

Todd Miller:

There you go.

Seth Heckaman:

today,

Todd Miller:

Today we, we are recording this during the

Todd Miller:

Great Musk Trump, uh, feud.

Todd Miller:

So by the time this airs, we'll see what's going on at that point.

Todd Miller:

Good answer.

Seth Heckaman:

Uh, question number three.

Seth Heckaman:

If you could instantly master one skill, what would it be?

Scott Berman:

Lead generation

Todd Miller:

Question four, uh, dog, person or cat person.

Scott Berman:

Dog

Todd Miller:

There you go.

Seth Heckaman:

What has been a product or service you have, you

Seth Heckaman:

have acquired in recent memory that was a real game changer for you?

Scott Berman:

Power bi.

Seth Heckaman:

What is that?

Scott Berman:

Power BI allows you to summarize all of the data in

Scott Berman:

your CRM so that you can, you can look at it a lot quicker and, and.

Scott Berman:

And more efficiently.

Todd Miller:

I'm gonna check that out.

Todd Miller:

Hadn't heard of it yet.

Todd Miller:

Um, question number six, and you've already mentioned a couple.

Todd Miller:

Um, who is a teacher or mentor that has had a profound impact on your life?

Todd Miller:

Let's, let's change that.

Todd Miller:

Go back to elementary school, favorite teacher and what,

Todd Miller:

what you remember about them.

Scott Berman:

It's funny, uh, my favorite teacher was a woman named Flo Goodman.

Scott Berman:

She was my kindergarten teacher and I actually just ran into her.

Scott Berman:

Coincidentally, she.

Scott Berman:

And I ran into her and I was like, you were the only teacher who

Scott Berman:

liked me and gave me a good grade.

Todd Miller:

Did she remember

Todd Miller:

You

Scott Berman:

did?

Scott Berman:

Yeah.

Todd Miller:

Oh, that's awesome.

Todd Miller:

Good.

Todd Miller:

Good answer.

Todd Miller:

I.

Seth Heckaman:

Last question, rapid fire number seven.

Seth Heckaman:

What would you like to be remembered for at the end of your days?

Scott Berman:

I would like to be remembered for helping, for talking to

Scott Berman:

people in a very straightforward and easy manner, and for helping as many

Scott Berman:

people in our industry as I possibly can.

Scott Berman:

Uh, grow their business or do whatever they want with their business.

Seth Heckaman:

Fantastic.

Todd Miller:

Good stuff.

Todd Miller:

Well, Scott, thank you again for your time today.

Todd Miller:

Um, for those who may wanna get in touch with you, of course, I know

Todd Miller:

they can find you on LinkedIn pretty easily, but, um, or again, give us the

Todd Miller:

heavyset technology information as well.

Todd Miller:

Uh, what are ways folks can connect with

Scott Berman:

So you can, the best way is probably email, it's

Scott Berman:

scott@floridawindowanddoor.com all spelled out.. On the heavy set, it's heavyset.tech

Todd Miller:

Good deal.

Todd Miller:

Well, thank you again and congratulations guys.

Todd Miller:

I think we all got in our challenge words.

Todd Miller:

Um, Scott, the word you had to work in was

Scott Berman:

manatee.

Todd Miller:

manatee.

Todd Miller:

You worked it in great.

Todd Miller:

Um, Seth, you got your, I don't think anyone probably even noticed yours.

Todd Miller:

Yours was.

Seth Heckaman:

Diminish

Todd Miller:

Diminish

Seth Heckaman:

did.

Seth Heckaman:

Yep.

Todd Miller:

and uh, mine was probably kind of obvious

Todd Miller:

as I worked in strawberries.

Todd Miller:

So I was, I was, uh, we were getting close to the end and I was desperate.

Todd Miller:

So thank you again, Scott, for being here.

Todd Miller:

We really appreciate your time.

Scott Berman:

I.

Todd Miller:

Well, and thank you to our audience for tuning into this

Todd Miller:

episode of Construction Disruption with Scott Berman of Florida Window,

Todd Miller:

indoors, and also heavyset technologies.

Todd Miller:

Please watch for future episodes of our show.

Todd Miller:

We're always blessed with great guests.

Todd Miller:

Don't forget to leave a review or give us a thumbs up or whatever.

Todd Miller:

Um, until the next time we're together, though, keep on disrupting, keep on

Todd Miller:

challenging the status, status quo.

Todd Miller:

Um, looking for better ways of doing things.

Todd Miller:

Uh, and don't forget to have a positive impact on everyone you encounter.

Todd Miller:

Uh, make them smile, encourage them.

Todd Miller:

Simple, yet powerful things we can all do to change the world.

Todd Miller:

So God bless and take care.

Todd Miller:

This is Isaiah Industry signing off until the next episode

Todd Miller:

of Construction Disruption.