Dealing With Drought

Baby, it's dry outside... but sales don't have to evaporate. Lawn & Landscape talked to three professionals who share strategies for promoting new water services, educating clients and keeping steady business during a drought.

The dog days of summer are here, not a rain cloud in the sky.

That’s great news if you’re in the business of installing swimming pools. Homeowners would rather hunker down in the air-conditioned house or stake out by the pool than spend time in their landscaped “outdoor rooms.” (Those rooms don’t have the same refreshing shot of cold air.) Planting more flowers or installing that natural screen of arborvitae is the last thing on their agenda.

But that doesn’t mean your business has to suffer.

“The goods news is, drought offers opportunities to landscapes with resource-efficient plants that work hand-in-glove with our natural environment and reinforce the natural beauty of an area,” says Bill Welch, landscape horticulturist at Texas AgriLife Extension Service in College Station, Texas.

Now is a good time to highlight finished projects that incorporate Earth-kind plants. Show potential clients how water-tolerant plants add a sense of place to the landscape, Welch says. And remind people that if they sign on for installation services now, they’ll see results faster. “There may be less of a wait to get work taken care of,” Welch points out. “And, the fact is, dry weather is a good time to plant as long as material is properly installed and maintained.”

For instance, drip irrigation is a conscientious “feeding” method for plants during dry times. Customers should be reminded that less efficient systems can be retrofitted to conserve water and save money on bills. Additionally, amending soil with organic matter can improve moisture retention. “Organic material lends more success to the overall landscape development,” Welch says.

Explain to customers how your company’s horticultural practices – mindful mowing, applying organic material – boost a landscape’s water retention capabilities. “The biggest challenge is helping people get over that inertia they fall into when it’s hot and dry – not wanting to move forward on projects,” Welsh says. “It takes some stimulation through marketing.”

Mitigate drought symptoms – lagging sales, resistant clients – by educating the public about irrigation opportunities and services that don’t depend on water. Showcase services you offer that do not involve plant material. “We are seeing more contractors do hardscapes, decks, gazebos and outdoor living area construction,” says Dr. Allen Owings, a horticulture professor at Louisiana State University who works with the commercial nursery and landscape industry in the state.

While Louisiana is experiencing a slight drought, the state has not weathered drought like Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and Texas, Owing says. Still, he notices more landscape contractors offering irrigation installation.
Meanwhile, Welch sees a renewed interest in an old-time water conservation tool: the rain catcher. Companies such as Aquascape have introduced rainwater harvesting systems that contractors can sell as an eco-component of a landscape design, he says.

“The quality of rainfall is so good that plants appreciate it, and we don’t lose as much water in the runoff process,” Welch points out.

This month, Lawn & Landscape asked three landscape contractors who operate companies in different revenue categories how they stay healthy during drought.
 

Jump to:
Small Business - Less than $500,000
Medium Business - $500,000 to $2 million
Large Business - More than $2 million
 

The author is a freelance writer based in Bay Village, Ohio.

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