Why did you join Zones?
Well, I guess my brother, Matt, and I were looking for a business. We discussed a few options, and I had just sold my own business, which was a transport company. We were distributors, but we couldn't set our prices. So we were looking for a business that we had control over so we could decide what we sold things for, and landscaping was something that always interested us. We'd come from a building background. Both of us have had a bit of a hands-on interest in building and construction. So landscape was definitely something we were keen on, and Zones sort of offered us the opportunity to get in and get started in that industry.
What's it like starting out as a Zones franchisee?
When Matt and I started as the first franchisees, we managed to get a job pretty early on, which was through a friend, but we followed the process of the design to build, so that went quite well and was great. We were really lucky, in that we both had contacts in the construction industry, so we had a big network of people we were going to use. We've managed to keep using a lot of them, and we still have a lot of them on board- friends and people that we use. Our suppliers have been great; we use Central Landscapes, and there's a lot of gruff tradesmen out there who have just been able to go and talk to the people behind the counter. They now tend to send our business cards out to people who come in and are looking to have landscaping done. So it's actually another way of finding some businesses using your suppliers as referrals as well. So that's worked really well for us.
What is your opinion of Zones’ Marketing?
Zones is offering us the ability to get out to everybody, especially first through digital marketing, I think. We noticed before, while we were looking for a business, that you don't need to have your phone number written on your car or anything like that. Basically, everyone's first point of contact is going to be the website now. So that's really important now that Gareth does an amazing job with that. The content they've got on there really draws people in, which is ideally what everyone wants, as some of those pictures are in the case studies on the website. They've got the magazine that we take to all the clients as well, so when we go to a meeting, we're taking the magazine, and we're giving something away for free right away, so you broaden the relationship with the client. All the case studies- we probably haven't been as good as we should be. We would love to get more photos out there and stuff like that, but we overcommit to work sometimes, and we get a bit bogged down. But the stuff that everybody else is doing at Head Office sort of makes up for it, but it is something we want to work on in the future. But yeah, it's been awesome so far.
How did you find your sub-trades and build your team?
We've got a team of four now- all subcontractors who work for us pretty much full time. We've got a lot of other guys we use quite frequently in terms of decks, retaining, and paving, but probably the toughest thing for us is finding the right people to come in and take some of the load off us. There's certain positions that we’re after- some independent people who don't mind pushing a wheelbarrow all day. They are not the easiest to find, but we try to make sure that we’re good employers, and if we can find an easier way to do things for our employees or subcontractors, we will do it, in terms of using a machine instead of making them hand-dig something. No-one wants to be in mud all day or anything like that, so if we're all after the same goal of getting the job done efficiently and the end goal looks as good as possible, then we're going to try and find the easiest way that everyone's happy to do it and that's also cost effective.
Do sub-trades like working with Zones?
We've got about three or four main subcontractors that we use. Consistently, we have a digger, a driver, a deck builder, and a concrete layer, and we make sure that we pay them on time. We've got questions answered before they ask them. So we try to think through what problems they might have. So a lot of the time, those subtrades that are concrete layers might be trying to get hold of a client to ask, “Where do you want your drainage?” but we've already tried to preempt a lot of those things so they can just get in and do the work, so it tends to work pretty well for them. We've established our standards; they're happy with that, and we’re cut from the same cloth. We enjoy working together, and we just want to get the job done.
Is there any advice you'd give to a potential franchisee?
I do remember when I started, I would stew over a four-line email for about half an hour, just worrying about what the customer might think, and this isn’t in a bad way, but I do think I've got past that. Now I know how to approach customers and try to make a judgement early on about a customer, what they're after, and what they want. So it is just not worrying about those little things sometimes and just getting in there and doing it.
Would you recommend becoming a Zones franchisee?
Yes, I think Zones has been a great franchise system in the three years we’ve been with them. We've obviously gone up and up from year one, which has been great. If what you're after is a franchise where you're in control and you're setting your prices, without too many restraints from head office but still having the support of them, then yeah, it's a great business to get into.