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Market Pressure, Pricing, and the Fork in the Road
Had a good conversation this morning with another operator in the community. We’re both dealing with the same external reality: A large national rental company (recent IPO) has dropped two locations into our local market. Close proximity. Aggressive pricing. A lot of iron hitting the street. Some rentals are being lost. Local market dynamics are changing. No denying any of that. Where the conversation got interesting was how differently we view what comes next. One approach is to chase price i.e. lower rates to protect utilization, keep machines turning, and “stay competitive.” The other approach is to hold pricing, double down on differentiation, and make it painfully clear why someone should rent from us instead. That difference isn’t about optimism vs pessimism. It’s about how we define the threat. I do see the national chains affecting the market. I just don’t see them as an existential threat unless my only lever is price. If the only way I can win a rental is by being cheaper than a company with: - cheaper capital - national buying power - shareholder pressure to chase utilization …then I’ve already lost. I just haven’t admitted it yet. Their pockets are too deep for me to win that fight. To be clear: I’m not saying price never matters. It does. But racing to the bottom tends to solve one short-term problem by creating several long-term ones: - thinner margins - higher wear and abuse - worse customers - less cash to reinvest - more stress, not less - a slow and excruciating death by 1000 cuts (or 1000 less than profitable rentals) From my seat, the better question isn’t “How do I match their price?” It’s “What problem do I solve that they can’t or simply won’t?” Reliability. Speed. Local knowledge. Trust. Flexibility. Relationships. The stuff that doesn’t show up on a rate sheet but provides huge value to the right customers. This path is definitely not as easy as adjusting prices. There will need to be a lot of intentional actions taken for a long time. There will be continued missed rentals and lost customers. But the reward, when successful, will be a moat that lower rates can't cross, and a customer base that values us as more than a commodity rental yard.
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How did everyone finish the year?
Intro & Thoughts
Greetings everyone, my name is John Touchet and I am currently managing our equipment rental company located in Maurice, Louisiana. A little brief background, we have 5 sister companies all in one building that have been in operation from 25 years, 15 years, all the way down to 2 years. Point of me saying this is that we have been well known throughout our community with mainly only 1 of our 6 companies throughout time and that is our Tire and Service operation that has been in business for 25 years. To cut this short my meaning of this post is to get ideas of how you guys are not only marketing your Rental Equipment, but also putting your name out there right in front of your costumer base? Extra Info: We just made 8 months in business with our rental equipment. Starting out at the beginning of March 2025, my father in law had a goal of wanting this company to just generate 10k per month for the first year. I managed to exceed that goal by doubling it the last 4 months of operation and still feel like I had too much equipment laying around on certain weeks. We are in a heavy travel zone with the perfect location in between two bigger cities. Our competition is 20-25 minutes North and 10 minutes South from us and from what we have heard from our local homeowners and few contractors, is that the way we are running this business and the shape our equipment is in, is by far more advanced and smoother than our competitors. With that I understand that we are young and still have a lot to improve on with the way we operate and advertise, but I also feel like my fleet is not big enough to chase down contractors as they like monthly rentals with a lot of equipment. Maybe I am looking too far out the box and need to zone in on something different, but definitely open for any ideas you guys have to get more leads coming through. It's our first time going through winter and it hasn't even really started yet and our leads have took a huge plato and I am hardly renting out anything last 2 weeks. Thanks
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Building Systems
There’s a lot of talk about systems in the business world. Until recently, I didn’t really know what that word meant. I was running on an assumed definition until one day I asked ChatGPT to explain it. That conversation led me to a book called Work the System by Sam Carpenter. The main idea of the book is simple but powerful: we live in a world of systems, both natural and manmade, that function correctly 99.9% of the time. As small business owners, we often fail to see our own operations through that lens. Instead, we get stuck in the daily loop of putting out fires, reacting to whatever screams the loudest, day after day, ad nauseam, until we quit or go bankrupt. But if we step back and identify the major systems in our business, then break those down into subsystems, and document how we actually perform each task, something changes. We start seeing the causes of those fires instead of just the flames. And once we see them, we can fix them permanently through a clear, written process (an SOP) that anyone can follow. And this is how successful businesses operate. If you’re anything like me, you’re probably doing some of this already. I had documented processes here and there, but they were random at best. This framework is helping me see the entire structure of my business more clearly. It’s helping me organize those scattered systems and finally begin to fix the inefficiencies that have been quietly lighting fires behind the scenes. I’m curious, how intentional have you been about identifying and documenting the systems in your business? Do you think most of your daily fires come from missing systems, broken ones, or ones that only exist in your head?
What is the pain we are solving?
Drilled down on this today. We solve the pain of downtime, debt, and distraction — giving you the right tool, right now, without owning a thing.
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