A true story

Re: A true (pitch) story

Love the portable porter potty! Got a guy I work with that would kill for one of those
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Re: A true (pitch) story

Dale, I had the pleasure of meeting you with my then-girlfriend, Meg at the SCTCC in Little Rock '07. You were very kind to us, inviting us to stay with you folks for the'08 event. Meg and I have since married. Most of the time when I hear about someone going out of business it's because of some economic or emotional hardship and this is the first time I've heard of it being simply because of other interests. Like the others in the post I wish you all the best. Kristian Schultz
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

i'm not calling anyone a liar,but $600,000 a year with a 2 man crew?I really have a hard time with those numbers.
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

I've seen all 3 of those boys climb. That in itself makes it pretty believable to me bra. I can only think that their ground support for each other and removing every single wasted movement from their program supports that number.
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

I agree those numbers are hard to believe. I do believe they could hit those numbers when they had the other two guys who have since left. The only other way is if he's saying only 2 employees but has a sub help with cleanup duties.
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

i thought they did 750k when pancake,rob and ben where all together.Only sub help is a Crane that I know of.
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

[ QUOTE ]
i thought they did 750k when pancake,rob and ben where all together.Only sub help is a Crane that I know of.

[/ QUOTE ]

I must be doing absolutely everything wrong!!Anyone know if mcdonalds is hiring?
 
Re: A true (pitch) story

I'm with you. Those guys are rock star climbers, no doubt about it. But there are only so many hrs in day. The clean up alone on that amount of production could keep two guys busy year round...

Let's all keep in mind that when you pitch a sale you only tell the prospective client what you want them to perceive...Rarely do you see a booming company selling off for peanuts... If profit margin is high enough they'd stay until they could command a much higher price.
 

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