Speaker:

John and Connie Kuder: Today, we are

Speaker:

celebrating Jay Barrett and by proxy, his

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grandfather, of Barrett Pressure Washing.

Speaker:

Hi, Jay.

Speaker:

How are you doing?

Jay Barrett:

Hello.

Jay Barrett:

I'm doing well.

Jay Barrett:

How are you?

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder:

Jay Barrett:

Welcome to the party.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah!.

Jay Barrett:

Thank you.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: So, this is

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a little bit unusual for our podcast

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because we're normally interviewing two

Jay Barrett:

family members and, uh, but when we had

Jay Barrett:

a, a, chat, everything you learned about

Jay Barrett:

running a business and, and the quality

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in business, I believe was, you know, that

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you had learned from your grandfather.

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when you were younger.

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And so I thought, wow,

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let's talk about that.

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Let's see what, um.

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what, you learned about it from

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your grandmother and we could share.

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So, , first, I don't want to

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like get things out of order, but

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whatever, your current business

Jay Barrett:

is Barrett Pressure Washing

Jay Barrett:

It is

Jay Barrett:

Barrett Pressure Washing

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: In St.

Jay Barrett:

Petersburg, Florida, right?

Jay Barrett:

Yes, I cover Pinellas

Jay Barrett:

County, Hillsborough County,

Jay Barrett:

Manatee County, Southern Pasco.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: But you

Jay Barrett:

didn't start in Florida, did you?

Jay Barrett:

I did not.

Jay Barrett:

I am from Maine.

Jay Barrett:

I am a Mainer.

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John and Connie Kuder: And so how did you

Jay Barrett:

get into the pressure washing business?

Jay Barrett:

So, uh, pressure washing

Jay Barrett:

and exterior cleaning was something

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that a former employer, I was an

Jay Barrett:

operations manager for a very large

Jay Barrett:

commercial facility management company,

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And without going into huge detail,

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pressure washing and exterior cleaning

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and maintenance of commercial buildings

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was one of the services that we offer.

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So, in order for me as the operations

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manager and to instruct other managers

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and employees on the best operations

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and how to do it safely, those kinds

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of things, uh, did extensive training,

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uh, in, lift safety, chemical safety,

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chemical interactions, those types

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of things, uh, in order to, best to

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instruct those employees on safe practices

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and how best to do those cleanings.

Jay Barrett:

So that's how I got started.

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John and Connie Kuder: Okay.

Jay Barrett:

So that's a whole different level

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than, the person that's, mounts a

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pressure washing pump on their, on

Jay Barrett:

their truck and, goes to the pool

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store and buy some chlorine and sets

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themselves up in business, right?

Jay Barrett:

I mean, it's way different.

Jay Barrett:

It is.

Jay Barrett:

I have a much different background

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than a lot of people in my industry.

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I find that.

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Lots of guys in my industry, uh,

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started pressure washing because they

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maybe didn't want to have a full time

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job or maybe they do it on the side.

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It's their side hustle.

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They do it on weekends, you

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know, something like that.

Jay Barrett:

Uh, I come from a very, um, uh, I

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guess professional background where,

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you know, I've had the certifications,

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done certification classes, and,

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uh, I really enjoyed The, the work.

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So, you know, backing up a bit as the

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operations manager wasn't supposed to be

Jay Barrett:

doing labor, but found myself doing lots

Jay Barrett:

of labor when we had these large scale

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pressure washing jobs going up on the

Jay Barrett:

lifts, you know, with the harnesses and

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being, uh, toggled into the, to the lift

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and having these big 30 foot extension

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lawns that we were using to clean.

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I mean, it was just so much fun for me.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder:

Jay Barrett:

Boys and their toys.

Jay Barrett:

That's all I can think of..

Jay Barrett:

Right, right.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Okay.

Jay Barrett:

So now your grandfather.

Jay Barrett:

I know you said you learned a lot,

Jay Barrett:

earlier days from your grandfather.

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How does that kind of connect

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back to what you learned from your

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grandfather and what did you learn?

Jay Barrett:

Tell me about your granddad

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and your relationship with him.

Jay Barrett:

Well, so, I

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mean, about my grandfather, my

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grandfather was a Navy veteran.

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You know, he was, uh, in World War

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II, very, very, you know, my memories

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of him, very, very meticulous man,

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very organized, and I mean, like,

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over the top obsessive organized.

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And I have this clock here, right there,

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and I, you know, I can tell you the

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date that my grandfather got that clock.

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Do you know why?

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Because he wrote it on

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the back of the clock.

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Not only that, but there's also

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dates on that clock of every time

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he changed the battery since 1986.

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When he got the clock.

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So, he was, you know, one of those

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people who journaled every day about the

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weather, you know, the news of the time.

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Uh, you know, not personal

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journaling at all.

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It was very much structured of

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what the weather was, what was

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going on, those types of things.

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Maybe his to do list of

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the day, things like that.

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So he was a very, very organized person.

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And, he taught me, first and foremost,

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how to have a very, strong work ethic.

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And how to do things to perfection.

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So my, , some of my earlier memories of

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him was, or working for him was mowing

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his lawn and after I was done mowing

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his lawn, he would go around with a

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yardstick and actually measure different

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points of the yard to make sure that I

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had not missed any parts of the lawn.

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When I would do snow removal for him,

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he would go around and inspect to make

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sure that every little inch of asphalt

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had been uncovered and scraped down

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so there was no possibility of ice

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forming on any part of that asphalt.

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So he was, it was very overbearing, but

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at this, you know, and I kind of resented

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it when I was young, but You know, fast

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forwarding to now, I have that in me to

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do a job to literal perfection, where I

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am not satisfied until the job is perfect.

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And it kind of suits what I do for

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work because in a lot of trades

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there are kind of gray areas,

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but in cleaning there's no gray.

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Something's either dirty or it's clean.

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And it's either, you know,

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all clean or it's not clean.

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So that's one example of something that

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he definitely taught me in business.

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John and Connie Kuder: Nice.

Jay Barrett:

Nice.

Jay Barrett:

So really high standards, quality

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control and high standards.

Jay Barrett:

Very, very high standards.

Jay Barrett:

Yes.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Did you find

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that that was, um, very supportive of

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when, when you got into the facilities

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management and you were doing these

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certifications and, and, you know,

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and getting that, you know, much more

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professional training in, in those,

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uh, you know, operating all that

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equipment, the chemicals and everything.

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Did that background really serve you?

Jay Barrett:

Oh, absolutely.

Jay Barrett:

So, I mean, as another example, um,

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as he was getting older, you know, his

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hands weren't working quite as well.

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He had really, really bad

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arthritis in his fingers.

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And he, uh, also sold used cars as

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a, you know, kind of a side hustle.

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And.

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Wasn't able to actually do the work.

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So would have, you know, would sit back in

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his chair and have me, you know, doing the

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operations on the, on the car and fixing

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the cars, but, you know, telling me why.

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Things went in a certain order like you

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have to remove this piece before you

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can get to this piece And you know, it's

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very important that you know, you don't

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you know Go over here and and mess with

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this part because you know You're gonna

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open up a whole can of worms that you

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so, you know things like that, which

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yes really served me in especially

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in management where you're trying to

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convey order of operations and systems

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to employees and and conveying the

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importance of those and explaining, you

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know, why these things are important.

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So yeah, I mean, absolutely.

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And again, another thing that I really

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resented when I was young, and I

Jay Barrett:

was like, Oh man, this guy's a jerk.

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But you know, he was really

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teaching me something.

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And A lot of people

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laugh at this story too.

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So when I was, when I graduated

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from high school, lots of my family

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were giving me gifts and money and,

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you know, just a real celebration.

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And my, my grandfather gave me

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this card and in it was written

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10 keys to a successful life.

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And it was I get a little, you

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know, choked up when I think about

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it, but it was, keeping your

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credit good and when to pay your

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bills and , just things like that.

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And then at the bottom it was

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always take care of your mother.

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And, you know, it's just, it was a

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really, it's one thing that, and I

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don't have the card anymore because, um,

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unfortunately I lost it in the fire, but

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it, it's something that I still remember

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all of those things that were in there

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and, you know, wish that I would have

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maybe taken it more into consideration

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when I graduated from high school, not,

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you know, when I was in my 30s and 40s.

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John and Connie Kuder: No

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18-year-old understands anything.

Jay Barrett:

So it sounds like it was very, it

Jay Barrett:

sounds like it was very important

Jay Barrett:

yes.

Jay Barrett:

Yes.

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John and Connie Kuder: That he that

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he conveyed to you, you know, that

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he shared with you what he felt was

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most valuable, which wasn't cash.

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Or a gift.

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It was the gift of his wisdom of what

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he had learned, you know, here's here's

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what's going to make your life better.

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Yes, absolutely.

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John and Connie Kuder: And you probably

Jay Barrett:

don't remember any of the other gifts.

Jay Barrett:

I don't I

Jay Barrett:

well, no, that's not true.

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I got a sony stereo that

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John and Connie Kuder: That was

Jay Barrett:

pretty awesome, but still that the

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one thing went into your heart.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

Oh yeah, absolutely.

Jay Barrett:

Absolutely.

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John and Connie Kuder: We want to stick

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with our theme of family business.

Jay Barrett:

So in working with your grandfather,

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what are some things that you

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learned about working with family?

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You know, What what was it?

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What were the strengths of,

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of, working with family rather

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than just having a boss?

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And were there any challenges

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that you remember, you know,

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dealing with and overcoming?

Jay Barrett:

Well, yeah, I mean,

Jay Barrett:

so working with him, there was, as

Jay Barrett:

opposed to a boss, there was a lot more

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fostering, you know, going on, you know,

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a lot more, uh, a lot more attention,

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you know, I got, you know, really good

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instruction and really was there to

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help me every step of the way, you know,

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and As far as challenges go, I mean,

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it was me being a young, young kid and

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him being an old man and very stubborn

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and stuck in his ways and he wasn't,

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uh, he didn't have abusive language or

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anything like that, but he, very stern.

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You know, when you weren't doing things

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right, that very stern voice would come

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out, , you're not, this isn't right, this

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isn't the way you're supposed to do this.

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It wasn't, you know, like a boss might do

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where, , you tried and that's great, but

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, here's the way we'd like to see it done.

Jay Barrett:

No, it was, "No, you're

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not doing that right.

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You got to do it right or

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you can't do it anymore."

Jay Barrett:

So, , and that was a big challenge.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Okay.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

So that's kind of typical family

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stuff , where a lot of times

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we dispense with the niceties.

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uh, we don't show our family members

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necessarily the same courtesy

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that we would show, a non family

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member, an employee or employer.

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Obviously if you talk to a boss like that,

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you'd probably get fired pretty quick.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah, right.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Very cool.

Jay Barrett:

The other thing that you brought

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up was that the two generations,

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you know, a lot of people that

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work together in family businesses,

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they're just one generation apart.

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It's, a daughter and father,

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father, son, that kind of thing.

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So that that generation skip

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is a little bit wider age gap.

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And so, , you brought that up.

Jay Barrett:

Um, so.

Jay Barrett:

any any other thoughts about, it?

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

So it was, , him coming from, and I think

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a lot of it had to do with his military

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background, you know, very, very rigid,

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very, very, very, um, no room for error,

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you know, there are certain steps that

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need to be taken to accomplish whatever

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it is, even if it was mowing the lawn.

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There was a, there was a class

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involved in me mowing the lawn.

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It wasn't just, here's the mower.

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It was, you know, you got to know

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where the cotter pins are and how to

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change the blades and how to change the

Jay Barrett:

oil and how to change the pull cord.

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And, you know, you got to know

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about the machine before you

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can even push the thing, right?

Jay Barrett:

So it was.

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It was, uh, you know, a total knowledge

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of everything that you could possibly

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need to know in order to cut a blade of

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grass and cut them all evenly, right?

Jay Barrett:

So, and me, I've always

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been, , kind of aloof, right?

Jay Barrett:

You know, I'm, uh, I'm very laid back

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and very easygoing and, I'm into that

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type of lifestyle and I'm not, my

Jay Barrett:

personality isn't built like that, but him

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instilling that in me makes it possible

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for me to be like that in business.

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So I can separate, my personality from

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who I need to be and what I need to do

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in order to run a successful business

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and in order to, you know, be able to

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manage employees like I used to, and,

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you know, be able to, uh, effectively

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convey instruction and things like that.

Jay Barrett:

So, but the.

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It didn't come without its battles, right?

Jay Barrett:

I wasn't always the happy, you know,

Jay Barrett:

Okay, Grandpa, you know, that wasn't me.

Jay Barrett:

You know, I would fight it.

Jay Barrett:

I would fight it, and he would get mad,

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and you know, there would be, you know,

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a little silence there, and you know,

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but then it would come back together.

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As far as the generation gap, I think

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that was probably the biggest, and

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the military background, you know.

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I think that really affected his The way

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that he was with, with life in general.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Well, and when

Jay Barrett:

was he roughly, when was he born?

Jay Barrett:

Do you remember?

Jay Barrett:

In the twenties.

Jay Barrett:

So yeah, he was,

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: okay, so he

Jay Barrett:

had lived through some hard times.

Jay Barrett:

Oh yeah.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: And plus, war

Jay Barrett:

time and uh, that was no small thing.

Jay Barrett:

And so, yeah, I think that that

Jay Barrett:

gave people an edge, that, us

Jay Barrett:

baby boomers , and beyond,

Jay Barrett:

I count myself as a baby boomer, you

Jay Barrett:

know, that that were born after World

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War II, um, haven't just haven't

Jay Barrett:

lived through, haven't experienced.

Jay Barrett:

So, um, to add to that,

Jay Barrett:

you know, I think now that I have

Jay Barrett:

my own business and the only person

Jay Barrett:

that I'm accountable to is myself

Jay Barrett:

and, you know, I don't have a boss

Jay Barrett:

and I don't have employees yet.

Jay Barrett:

Um, it's, it's given me that, you know,

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somebody said to me, a peer of mine,

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uh, who is getting out of this business.

Jay Barrett:

Uh, and I've been talking to him

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about acquiring his customer base

Jay Barrett:

and, you know, in talking with him

Jay Barrett:

and I've worked with him a little bit.

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And he's an, he's also

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an older, uh, gentleman.

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He's in his sixties now.

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And what he said to me was, you know,

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I feel like you're above this industry.

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And I kind of was like, well, and I

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think what he meant was, is that I have.

Jay Barrett:

So much knowledge of, you know, practices

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and, and chemicals, and chemical

Jay Barrett:

interactions, and, you know, how to, what

Jay Barrett:

chemical neutralizes another chemical,

Jay Barrett:

and how do they interact, and how do they

Jay Barrett:

interact when they're put on a particular

Jay Barrett:

surface, whether it be metal, or wood, or

Jay Barrett:

concrete, or plastic, You know, because

Jay Barrett:

they all interact differently and what's

Jay Barrett:

best for each application and, and, you

Jay Barrett:

know, a lot of these guys are calling,

Jay Barrett:

um, cleaning chemicals by their brand

Jay Barrett:

names, where I am talking about, you know,

Jay Barrett:

what they're, what they're composed of.

Jay Barrett:

And I really think that it doesn't

Jay Barrett:

put me above the industry, but it

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puts me above my competition for sure.

Jay Barrett:

Like, straight up, that's my biggest

Jay Barrett:

competitive advantage is that I have that

Jay Barrett:

that knack for just, and it's not a knack.

Jay Barrett:

It's, well, if I could show you

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my notebook the other day, because

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people always ask me, you know, well,

Jay Barrett:

what do you know about chemistry?

Jay Barrett:

You know, so I started writing in my

Jay Barrett:

notebook and I just, you know, started

Jay Barrett:

with a chemical, oxalic acid, and I just

Jay Barrett:

started writing things that I know about.

Jay Barrett:

You know, and that's my geek out, right?

Jay Barrett:

Like SDS sheets is my geek out,

Jay Barrett:

you know, I know how to read them.

Jay Barrett:

I know how to, you know, interpret them.

Jay Barrett:

I know how to find, I know how to

Jay Barrett:

find lies, you know, where chemical

Jay Barrett:

manufacturers will say, well, this is

Jay Barrett:

biodegradable and I can go and look

Jay Barrett:

at the SDS sheet and I say, Oh, well,

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it says right here that you can't,

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you shouldn't put it down a drain.

Jay Barrett:

And I've, and I've called

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vendors out on this before.

Jay Barrett:

It's, it's, you know,

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just part of what I do.

Jay Barrett:

So when you talk about, you know, what do

Jay Barrett:

you bring to the table as far as, um, you

Jay Barrett:

know, your industry, that is by far, and

Jay Barrett:

I, and I learned that from my grandfather,

Jay Barrett:

you know, you don't do, you don't push the

Jay Barrett:

mower until you know how to fix it, until

Jay Barrett:

you know how it runs, until you know,

Jay Barrett:

you know, how to cut a blade of grass.

Jay Barrett:

And, and that's the same

Jay Barrett:

way with pressure washing.

Jay Barrett:

I do not do a job unless I 100

Jay Barrett:

percent know from start to finish

Jay Barrett:

exactly how it's going to work out.

Jay Barrett:

And I will get on the computer or open

Jay Barrett:

a book and I will research exactly

Jay Barrett:

what I need to do, if I don't know

Jay Barrett:

already, what I need to do from start to

Jay Barrett:

finish to make sure that when I'm done,

Jay Barrett:

that that job is absolutely perfect.

Jay Barrett:

And he taught me that.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: That's awesome.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Yeah, I'm,

Jay Barrett:

confident that that is, is your, you

Jay Barrett:

know, professional differentiator

Jay Barrett:

for sure within the industry.

Jay Barrett:

and that, that kind of knowledge

Jay Barrett:

I think is very uncommon uh, to,

Jay Barrett:

to have that level, the depth the,

Jay Barrett:

depth and the, the breadth and

Jay Barrett:

the certifications to go with it.

Jay Barrett:

We have had in our previous,

Jay Barrett:

uh, homeownership, our

Jay Barrett:

(house), um, pressure washed.

Jay Barrett:

and it wasn't pretty.

Jay Barrett:

Uh, so one of my, one

Jay Barrett:

of my things is I take pictures.

Jay Barrett:

I take pictures of damage whenever

Jay Barrett:

I'm walking or driving somewhere

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and I see a driveway that's damaged.

Jay Barrett:

I'll, I'll snap a picture of it.

Jay Barrett:

And you know, there, it's very widespread.

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And, and I, and I think, well, if

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you take, um, a driveway, a paver

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driveway, for instance, and a normal

Jay Barrett:

on average paver driveway to install

Jay Barrett:

is anywhere from $50 - $80,000.

Jay Barrett:

So why, why then would you take that

Jay Barrett:

$50 - $80,000 investment and spend

Jay Barrett:

it on, you know, the maintenance on

Jay Barrett:

somebody who doesn't have any sort of

Jay Barrett:

background in the industry, doesn't have

Jay Barrett:

the knowledge of the chemicals that he's

Jay Barrett:

using, or how it's going to interact

Jay Barrett:

with your particular, , environment?

Jay Barrett:

Uh, is using chemicals that are dangerous

Jay Barrett:

to not only the applicator, the person

Jay Barrett:

who's using these chemicals, but to

Jay Barrett:

everything around it, only to pay a

Jay Barrett:

few hundred dollars less when you're

Jay Barrett:

talking about an $80,000 driveway.

Jay Barrett:

Why would you spend, $150 for somebody

Jay Barrett:

to clean it and seal it when you could

Jay Barrett:

hire somebody who you know will do a

Jay Barrett:

good job, who will own it until it's

Jay Barrett:

done, and pay a little extra money?

Jay Barrett:

I mean, it's, uh, it's a no brainer for

Jay Barrett:

me, and trying to convey that out into

Jay Barrett:

the world has been my biggest challenge.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Sure,

Jay Barrett:

Sure, Yeah, I understand.

Jay Barrett:

Because it's, it's that, um, well, it's

Jay Barrett:

just overcoming the general ignorance.

Jay Barrett:

I mean, most of us, I think in, in,

Jay Barrett:

you know, in almost any, um, service

Jay Barrett:

and a lot of products that we buy we

Jay Barrett:

don't buy them that often and we don't

Jay Barrett:

we really don't know how to buy them.

Jay Barrett:

You know, what I mean, how do I go, how

Jay Barrett:

do I buy a professional service and,

Jay Barrett:

how do I compare one against another?

Jay Barrett:

That's, I think that's a challenge service

Jay Barrett:

providers to, to deal with and overcome

Jay Barrett:

and the ones that can do it and convey,

Jay Barrett:

communicate that successfully, uh, you

Jay Barrett:

know, I think are going to dominate.

Jay Barrett:

So kudos to you for continuing to do that.

Jay Barrett:

And, and to follow in your

Jay Barrett:

grandfather's footsteps.

Jay Barrett:

that's that's quite amazing.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah.

Jay Barrett:

Is there anything, um, so one of the

Jay Barrett:

questions we like to answer, anything

Jay Barrett:

about, and, and, you know, feel free

Jay Barrett:

to, but anything about family business

Jay Barrett:

that you know, now that you wish you'd

Jay Barrett:

known when you started, I know you're,

Jay Barrett:

you're right now a solopreneur, but,

Jay Barrett:

um, yeah, I'm trying to think how to

Jay Barrett:

pivot that, like, I know you were a kid

Jay Barrett:

when you worked with your grandfather.

Jay Barrett:

What is there, is there

Jay Barrett:

anything there anything?

Jay Barrett:

you know now, uh, that, you know,

Jay Barrett:

if, if you had been a little

Jay Barrett:

older or or if you guys were, you

Jay Barrett:

know, one generation apart vs.

Jay Barrett:

two that you could, you could, draw

Jay Barrett:

more from what he, his example?

Jay Barrett:

Um, I mean it, so if

Jay Barrett:

we take the, you know, being in

Jay Barrett:

business for myself aspect away from

Jay Barrett:

it, it would've been to, if I could

Jay Barrett:

have done something differently.

Jay Barrett:

It would have been to really solidify

Jay Barrett:

my work history earlier in my life.

Jay Barrett:

Um, and been more responsible with,

Jay Barrett:

you know, my employment and things

Jay Barrett:

like that, you know, before I had

Jay Barrett:

the, the operations manager job, I

Jay Barrett:

was, you know, all over the place.

Jay Barrett:

I would do this for a while and quit,

Jay Barrett:

do this for a while and quit and

Jay Barrett:

never really took that responsibility.

Jay Barrett:

And, um, so I guess if I had something

Jay Barrett:

to learn, um, you know, just that I

Jay Barrett:

would have done that differently and, you

Jay Barrett:

know, maybe I would be someplace else.

Jay Barrett:

And, but, you know, I'm very content

Jay Barrett:

on where I am now and looking forward

Jay Barrett:

to this year and my business growing.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Well, so,

Jay Barrett:

um, how, where can people, how can

Jay Barrett:

people, get ahold of you if they're,

Jay Barrett:

if they're looking for your services,

Jay Barrett:

pressure washing, uh, that protects

Jay Barrett:

the environment and gets it done right?

Jay Barrett:

So, uh, my website

Jay Barrett:

is barrettpressurewashing.

Jay Barrett:

com.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: That's

Jay Barrett:

Barrett with two R's, two T's, right?

Jay Barrett:

Barrett

Jay Barrett:

with two R's and two T's.

Jay Barrett:

And my phone number is 888

Jay Barrett:

658 WASH, which is 9274.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Awesome.

Jay Barrett:

Cool.

Jay Barrett:

And

Jay Barrett:

I'll just, uh, in case somebody when

Jay Barrett:

somebody goes to your website and they,

Jay Barrett:

uh, see your little, um, video, audio

Jay Barrett:

commercial, um, I wanted to,

Jay Barrett:

you know, mention that I know

Jay Barrett:

that you sang, sang that so that

Jay Barrett:

you're the voice in your Jingle,

Jay Barrett:

that's what it

Jay Barrett:

was.

Jay Barrett:

I am.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: He's,

Jay Barrett:

multi- talented, guys yeah.

Jay Barrett:

You are.

Jay Barrett:

You've been so much fun to learn about.

Jay Barrett:

We've enjoyed your friendship.

Jay Barrett:

Talented.

Jay Barrett:

Look at that.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Who knew?

Jay Barrett:

All right.

Jay Barrett:

That's right.

Jay Barrett:

Any last thoughts or words of

Jay Barrett:

wisdom before we wrap this up?

Jay Barrett:

I mean, so, you know,

Jay Barrett:

my mantra lately has just been No

Jay Barrett:

matter what just be kind to people,

Jay Barrett:

you know And uh, it helps in business.

Jay Barrett:

It helps in personal life.

Jay Barrett:

It helps in everything Uh, it helps

Jay Barrett:

when you go into the grocery store

Jay Barrett:

and somebody wants to cut you in line,

Jay Barrett:

you know, just be kind to people.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Well, you don't

Jay Barrett:

know what stress they're going under also.

Jay Barrett:

Great advice.

Jay Barrett:

Yeah, very true.

Jay Barrett:

Very true and be kind

Jay Barrett:

to the earth Be kind to the earth.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: There you go

Jay Barrett:

yeah without it.

Jay Barrett:

There are no more issues

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Right

Jay Barrett:

Jay, thank you so much

Jay Barrett:

for spending this time

Jay Barrett:

with us.

Jay Barrett:

We appreciate it.

Jay Barrett:

And, uh, we look forward to

Jay Barrett:

it's always

Jay Barrett:

fun with you guys.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Thanks

Jay Barrett:

Look forward to seeing you again soon.

Jay Barrett:

All right.

Jay Barrett:

John and Connie Kuder: Bye.

Jay Barrett:

Take care.

Jay Barrett:

Thank you.