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The Top Ten Misconceptions About Running Your Own Home Referral Network Business
Copyright © Debra Cohen www.HomeOwnersReferral.com
Debra Cohen, owner and founder of the Homeowner Referral Network, gives us the scoop on running your own Home Referral Network Business.
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1. Contractors are too busy already and don't want extra
work. As one of my contractors once told me: "A good
contractor won't turn down a good, paying customer." The client may have
to wait for the job to be scheduled but most of my clients feel that good
contractors are worth waiting for.
2. The HRN business
requires costly advertising. This is a word of mouth type of
business and a lot of job requests are generated through networking in your
community, PR and direct mail. It's not expensive to promote the HRN
business. In fact, many HRN owners generate their first jobs before
they even launch a promotional campaign.
3. You need to
live in a heavily populated area to run a successful HRN business.
Actually, this is a very local business. Most contractors won't travel far
for work therefore an HRN needs to operate locally to start. Once you've
established a network in your immediate area, you can expand into new markets
and create new networks of contractors to handle the
business.
4. A local HRN business won't be able to
compete with established, national contractor referral
businesses. As CBS Marketwatch recently reported: "There's
probably no project that homeowners won't first research online, but when it
comes to inviting contractors to their remodeling project, they're less willing
to depend on electronic means." In fact, online referral services like
Improvenet and ServiceMagic haven't posed any competition to the hundreds of
HRN's operating nationally.
5. You need contracting experience to run an
HRN. The HRN owner is responsible for marketing and
promotion and the contractors represented in the network are responsible for the
technical aspects of the job therefore no contracting experience is
required.
6. The contracting business is male dominated and most
contractors won't take a woman seriously. Just the opposite-many
of my contractors tell me that they enjoy talking to a woman after working with
men all day. Besides, if you generate business for them--male or
female--you'll ultimately earn their respect.
7. The HRN
owner is liable in case of a mishap on a job. The contractor is
ultimately responsible for his own work and there are numerous safeguards in
place to protect the HRN owner including a signed liability clause, operating
procedures and insurance provisions.
8. Running an HRN
business means that my phone will be ringing in the middle of the night with
emergency calls. An HRN deals with home improvement "projects"
not "emergencies". Of course it's your prerogative if you'd like to set up
your business to provide emergency referrals.
9. The HRN
owner goes onsite to check out each job before referring it to a contractor in
their network. The HRN owner never goes to a customer's
home to check out a job. In fact, I handle more than 90% of my business by
telephone.
10. If I launch an HRN, I have to use the name
"Home Remedies". Actually, the name Home Remediesä is trademarked and each
HRN operates under it's own name.
---- Debra Cohen is owner
and founder of the Homeowner Referral Network (HRN) business-a home based
contractor referral service business-- and author of The Complete Guide To
Owning And Operating A Successful Homeowner Referral Network. For more
information about how to launch an HRN in your area, visit the HRN website at www.homereferralbiz.com.
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