littlejoetqt
ArboristSite Lurker
Hello,
I am considering starting a tree care business, and I have a few stupid questions. First I'll give you my situation. I am a crew foreman for a utility line clearance company (Penn Line). In two years' time, I've climbed from ground hand/CDL driver to manual/bucket/spray foreman, and have worked circuits of all voltages imaginable. I have recently hired a climber with 19 years experience in tree work. Beside line clearance, he's done a good bit of residential work(the last 5 years before coming to work for me.) In that time, he's developed a fair customer base and a good name, but he wants someone to help him get a legitimate business started with it(namely me). I have no official education or certification in arboriculture, but my company gives various classes on pruning techniques, hazard tree/limb identification, etc, and I'm pretty confident in my climber's abilities as well.
I have any necessary gear to do prunings and removals manually, and either of us can climb comfortably, with or without gaffs. I have saws, climbing gear, rigging gear, pole pruners and pole saws, etc. He has a truck, I have a sharp mind for customer relations, marketing, advertisement and such things. We do not have a chipper, so any jobs we take would require us to remove the brush via pickup(I have a safe legal place to dispose of brush, (my farm) and wood (my heating stove).
Okay, here come the stupid questions. I understand that I will need a business license and liability insurance to operate legally. What I want to know is: What should I expect to learn(not the hard way) about residential work? I'm 100% confident that we can take on most jobs safely(excepting trees that aren't fit to put a climber in), I'm not so confident that my own experience is 100% adaptable to this work. I know absolutely nothing about cabling trees, but I'm not sure there's much of a market for such things in my area(very rural, no local regulations about trees that I'm aware of.) I'm a licensed pesticide applicator, but in utility work we only deal in phytotoxins...nothing about insect damage and treatment. Their solution to insect damage in trees is removal. There is a definite need for a legitimate tree business in this area, most tree work is provided by moonlighting drug addicts with no insurance and poor judgement.
Any input from current/past tree business proprietors would be helpful. What should I be looking at to strengthen my one-sided knowledge of tree care, how can I market myself effectively among a flood of lowballing moonlighters, and what problems should I expect to face?
I am considering starting a tree care business, and I have a few stupid questions. First I'll give you my situation. I am a crew foreman for a utility line clearance company (Penn Line). In two years' time, I've climbed from ground hand/CDL driver to manual/bucket/spray foreman, and have worked circuits of all voltages imaginable. I have recently hired a climber with 19 years experience in tree work. Beside line clearance, he's done a good bit of residential work(the last 5 years before coming to work for me.) In that time, he's developed a fair customer base and a good name, but he wants someone to help him get a legitimate business started with it(namely me). I have no official education or certification in arboriculture, but my company gives various classes on pruning techniques, hazard tree/limb identification, etc, and I'm pretty confident in my climber's abilities as well.
I have any necessary gear to do prunings and removals manually, and either of us can climb comfortably, with or without gaffs. I have saws, climbing gear, rigging gear, pole pruners and pole saws, etc. He has a truck, I have a sharp mind for customer relations, marketing, advertisement and such things. We do not have a chipper, so any jobs we take would require us to remove the brush via pickup(I have a safe legal place to dispose of brush, (my farm) and wood (my heating stove).
Okay, here come the stupid questions. I understand that I will need a business license and liability insurance to operate legally. What I want to know is: What should I expect to learn(not the hard way) about residential work? I'm 100% confident that we can take on most jobs safely(excepting trees that aren't fit to put a climber in), I'm not so confident that my own experience is 100% adaptable to this work. I know absolutely nothing about cabling trees, but I'm not sure there's much of a market for such things in my area(very rural, no local regulations about trees that I'm aware of.) I'm a licensed pesticide applicator, but in utility work we only deal in phytotoxins...nothing about insect damage and treatment. Their solution to insect damage in trees is removal. There is a definite need for a legitimate tree business in this area, most tree work is provided by moonlighting drug addicts with no insurance and poor judgement.
Any input from current/past tree business proprietors would be helpful. What should I be looking at to strengthen my one-sided knowledge of tree care, how can I market myself effectively among a flood of lowballing moonlighters, and what problems should I expect to face?