Every fix in this document is laid out step by step — the tools to use, the exact copy to send, what "done" looks like. Built so anyone on the team can execute it without needing to figure out the technical details first. Whether you build it yourselves or we build it together, this is the shape of the work.
2024 closed at $186K. 2025 closed at $260K. You're at $182K through April of 2026 — tracking to clear $500K this year if nothing changes. But something always changes at this stage: the systems that got you from $180K to $260K aren't the ones that get you from $260K to $500K, and definitely not the ones that get you to $1M. The seams you're feeling right now aren't a signal that something's wrong. They're a signal that you've outgrown the way you're running the business — and it's time to rebuild the back office around where you're headed, not where you were.
You're responding "as soon as possible, within 8 business hours." Homeowners who submit a form at 9am Monday are hearing from someone else by lunch. Industry data is brutal on this: response time past 5 minutes drops close rate off a cliff. The good news is this one is almost entirely automatable.
You already know Stan struggles with this. That's not a Stan problem — it's a system problem. The booking fee should be introduced and collected before a human ever has to defend it, so the conversation Stan has with the client is the warm one you actually want him having.
You wrote it yourself: "we struggle with closing estimates." Every estimate that goes quiet without a structured follow-up is either a client you lost, a competitor you funded by educating them, or a job that happens three months late at a worse margin. A close sequence fixes this in a week.
When you can't see where a lead stands, when Travis doesn't know what estimate Stan sent, when Miguel and Cory don't have clear tomorrow — that's not a people problem, it's a visibility problem. One shared pipeline view, one source of truth per job, and the "where are we on that?" conversation stops eating your week.
Your own answer nailed the solution: self-serve scheduling with a warm human touchpoint the day before. That's a solved problem — calendar, auto-collected fee, confirmation sequence, day-before check-in text or call. Stan's time stops getting spent on the part of the funnel where people shudder at $79 and starts getting spent on the part where people show up ready.
You want clients who align with your pricing and your culture. That's not a lead-volume question — it's a website and messaging question. Right now the site is speaking to "anyone with a handyman need." It needs to be speaking to "homeowners who love their home with intention and attention to quality" — your own words. When the site sorts the right people in and the wrong people out, Stan's $79 conversation stops being a fight.
"Attracting clients that align with our business culture and pricing structure. Getting clients that align with our pricing would allow us to put more focus on the quality of the experience itself and would save time and energy from people who are negative or uncommunicative."
Every leak above is worth patching. But the magic wand answer is the real north star — and the operational fixes in weeks 1–3 are what make week 4's positioning work actually stick. Attracting aligned clients with a site that doesn't convert, an intake that leaks, and an estimate process that stalls would just mean losing better clients faster. We fix the bucket first, then we re-aim it.
Sequenced so each week compounds on the one before it. Weeks 1–3 are operational — they stop the bleed and buy you the margin (time and money) to make week 4's positioning work possible. Skip the order and we'd be re-targeting a funnel that still leaks.
This plan is written assuming a single CRM running the back office. The recommended stack below is what we use at NUUN — it's what every step in this document is built around. If you're using something different, the steps still apply, the menu names just change.
The first week is about the first sixty seconds of every lead's journey. Every minute past that costs you close rate, and it costs you the kind of client who goes with whoever called back first.
Any time a call comes in and nobody answers — Stan's on lunch, Ashley's heads-down, the team's on a job — the homeowner gets an automatic text within 60 seconds. They don't sit wondering. They don't dial the next handyman on Google.
Right now the website form is firing into an email inbox somewhere. The fix is to land submissions directly in the CRM and bounce back an instant SMS + email + internal notification — all within 60 seconds.
One system of record. Every lead, call, text, email, and job lives in the same place. Everyone on the team sees the same board. Once this exists, the rest of the plan has somewhere to live.
By the end of this month, you should be able to answer: "Where did our last 20 leads come from, and which sources actually became paying jobs?" Right now there's no good answer. By Friday of week 1, there will be.
?utm_source=google_profile&utm_medium=organic.Every inbound lead is acknowledged within 5 minutes. Nothing sits. Nothing falls through. Stan and Ashley stop playing whack-a-mole with missed calls.
Your own vision answer solved this one. We just build it. The booking fee stops being something Stan has to defend on a cold call and becomes a natural next step in a well-designed intake.
Homeowners pick a slot, pay the $79, and get a confirmation — without anyone on the team touching it. The mechanical parts of intake stop eating Stan's day.
The fee isn't the problem. The way it's currently described is the problem. Reframe it everywhere from "a charge to come out" to "a deposit that proves intent on both sides," and Stan's hardest conversation gets quieter every week.
Your worksheet specifically called this out: a system handles the booking, then a human reaches out the day before to make it warm. We build that.
A one-page document that turns Stan from someone who freezes on hard conversations into someone who handles them the same way every time. The whole thing fits on one laminated page next to his desk.
Bookings happen on autopilot. Fee friction drops. Stan's conversations shift from defending $79 to building rapport for the assessment.
You said it: "we struggle with closing estimates." The problem isn't the estimate — it's what happens in the five to fifteen days after it's sent. This week we build the system that chases every estimate until it's a yes, a no, or a clear timeline.
One template. Same format every time. Goes out within 24 hours of the assessment, every time, no exceptions. Right now estimates vary by who's writing them and when they get to it. That stops this week.
Every estimate that goes out triggers a 4-step sequence over the next 14 days. Runs automatically. Stops the moment the homeowner replies, approves, or you mark them closed. Travis never has to remember to follow up again.
Ashley needs to be able to answer "where are we on the [client] estimate?" in under 10 seconds. Right now that question takes a phone call to Travis or a dig through email. By Friday it takes a glance at her dashboard.
Every completed job gets a review request 2 days later, automatically. Long enough that the homeowner has lived with the work, short enough that the experience is still fresh. Your Google profile starts compounding while you sleep.
g.page/r/[id]/review). Don't use the long search URL — it asks people to find your business first instead of dropping them straight into the review form.No estimate goes unchased. Close rate starts climbing inside the same week. Review velocity picks up, which starts doing week 4's work for you for free.
The magic wand. Now that the bucket doesn't leak, we re-aim it. This week is about the website and the positioning doing the work of sorting — so the people who book are already pre-qualified on culture and price, and the ones who weren't going to fit never book at all.
The homepage is a sorting machine. Right now it speaks to "anyone with a handyman need" — and that's exactly who's calling. By Friday it will speak to "homeowners who love their home with intention and attention to quality" (your own words from the worksheet) — and the people who hear themselves in that line will be the ones who book.
A one-page written profile of who Su Casa works best with. Once it exists, every team member can use the same definition to qualify in or qualify out — and the homepage copy in fix 4.1 has somewhere real to point to.
Aligned homeowners recognize themselves in the work. The website's visual content is doing 80% of the sorting work — make sure it's doing it for the right buyer.
End of week 4 you stop building and start measuring. Pull the numbers, look at what's working, decide what's next. Don't pick 10 priorities for month 2 — pick 3.
Your website does the work of attracting aligned homeowners and filtering out the ones who don't fit. Stan's $79 conversations keep getting easier because the people on the other end already know what they're signing up for.
Same roadmap, different levels of hands-on. You've got Ashley in a dedicated BizOps role, which is rare and genuinely valuable — it means you have real options here. The Partnership fits your situation the best based on what the worksheet tells me. The Playbook works if budget is the deciding factor and Ashley has the bandwidth to carry the build.
I handle every technical build in the 30-day plan. Ashley stays on decisions, approvals, project photos, and client relationships — the parts she's actually good at and wants to spend her time on. Travis doesn't touch any of it.
I give Ashley the plan, the templates, the SOPs, and coaching. She builds it. I'm a text away when she's stuck and on a 30-minute call every week to keep things moving. Slower, cheaper, and only works if Ashley genuinely has the hours.
This roadmap is yours either way — you can take it and run. If you want me to build it with you, the next step is a 30-minute kickoff call where we pick the tier, lock the start date, and line up week 1. No contract. First month has a performance guarantee — if it doesn't earn its keep, you don't pay for it.