Welcome to the JackQuisitions newsletter, |
Most people assume septic success starts with buying the right truck. That’s a bad assumption. |
I’ve seen it over and over again. Many owners get into trouble before they ever land their first customer because they take on too much debt, buy equipment they don't need, and leave themselves with little room for mistakes. |
In this week's podcast episode, I talk all about the most common financial mistake in the septic industry and how to avoid it. |
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Ready For Your Next Acquisition? |
Check out these acquisition opportunities that caught my eye this week: |
Septic pumping and portable toilet rental business generates $1.7M in revenue and $903K cash flow, with recurring customers, 10 employees, and a large fleet included in the sale.
Arizona HVAC company listed for $225K with $304K revenue and $118K SDE, offering an established customer base and growth potential in the Phoenix metro market.
Electrical contractor serving the Southeast generates $15.0M revenue and $3.57M EBITDA, with 35 employees and a $14.5M asking price after 46 years in business.
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Deals are Flooding the Market. Again. |
Acquisition activity is picking up across the skilled trades, and buyers who prepare early are putting themselves in the best position to win. |
Alan Peterson at First Internet Bank is helping operators get acquisition-ready before the right opportunity hits the market. |
The buyers getting the most traction today share the following traits: |
Leadership or management experience
Strong understanding of budgets and operations
Realistic acquisition expectations
Clean financial documentation
A bank pre-qualification letter that proves they're serious
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If you're considering an acquisition in HVAC, plumbing, electrical, manufacturing, or another skilled trade, connect with Alan and his team to start the conversation. |
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Cash Flow Beats Chrome |
The easiest way to put your septic business under pressure is to overspend on equipment. And that’s pressure you don’t need. |
Watch: The real blueprint for starting a septic business |
A truck should help you make money. Too often, it becomes the thing you're working to pay for. |
Many owners get caught up in buying the newest truck, the biggest tank, or the nicest setup they can afford. It feels like a shortcut to legitimacy. If the truck looks professional, the thinking goes, customers will take the business seriously. |
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The Reality is Different |
Customers rarely choose a septic company because of the truck parked in the driveway. They choose based on availability, responsiveness, reviews, referrals, and whether they trust you to solve their problem. A shiny truck might look impressive, but it won't generate phone calls on its own. |
What it will do is create a monthly payment. |
A brand-new vacuum truck can easily cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. That means every slow week, every canceled job, and every unexpected repair becomes more stressful. Instead of focusing on growing the business, you're focused on making the next payment. |
That's why experienced operators tend to think differently about equipment purchases. They view trucks as tools, not trophies. |
What matters when buying your first truck: |
Reliable chassis with easy-to-find parts
Strong maintenance history
Healthy engine and tank condition
Affordable monthly payments
Cash left over for repairs, insurance, and marketing
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What doesn't matter nearly as much: |
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There's another piece to this that often gets overlooked: flexibility. |
When you keep your equipment costs under control, you have options. You can spend money on marketing. You can hire help when demand picks up. You can weather a slow season without panicking. Most importantly, you can say yes to growth opportunities when they appear. |
The opposite is also true. When every dollar is tied up in equipment payments, the business loses flexibility. One major repair, one slow month, or one unexpected expense can create real problems. |
For operators with limited capital, starting with septic repair and maintenance work can be a smart alternative. It requires less equipment, less debt, and gives you an opportunity to build customers and cash flow before making a larger investment. |
The real goal in year one: |
Build a customer base
Generate consistent cash flow
Learn the market
Keep debt manageable
Create a reputation for reliability
Stay in business long enough to grow
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The companies that last aren't usually the ones with the biggest trucks. They're the ones that make disciplined financial decisions early, protect their cash flow, and put themselves in a position to grow over the long term. |
All my thoughts are here… |
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Don't Buy a Septic Truck Until You Watch This |
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Tell Me What You’re Thinking |
The goal isn't to own the nicest truck in town. The goal is to build a business with enough cash flow and flexibility to survive the early years and grow on your terms. |
Happy hunting, |
Jack |
How do you feel about today's JackQuisitions newsletter? |
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Disclosure: Some of the content and links in this newsletter are sponsored or affiliate links, which means we may receive payment or earn a commission if you click through or purchase. However, all opinions expressed are entirely my own. |
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