Mark Paup
bought City Rule Plumbing nine years ago. It had about five employees and a few
Chevy Express service vans painted white with red block lettering. A bit
“vanilla,” but a good, solid starter business.
Soon, though, the Grimes, Iowa, company “outgrew”
its name. “We felt it was time to rename the company to better reflect who we
are,” says Paup.
He discussed this major change with industry
consultants Al Levi and
Ellen Rohr, who were helping
him focus his business goals at the time. They whole-heartedly agreed: Changing
the name was a must.
For one, customers were butchering the old name.
“They kept asking, ‘What does it mean?’” Paup says. There also was confusion
with a competitor in town ― City-Wide HVAC.
With the new name of Golden Rule ― and a splashy fleet makeover
― the company could finally get its service message across.
“In all the years we where City Rule, nobody
instantly knew what we stood for as a company. Nobody stopped the employees or
myself in the grocery stores and gas stations because of the trucks,” says
Paup.
The trucks now have been upgraded to Sprinter
models, which better suit the jobs the company completes. They also have been
wrapped completely in a golden-yellow color with a stand-out red ribbon. The
trucks’ lettering is simple, highlighting the company’s services, and clearly
showcasing its phone number and Web site.
The way Golden Rule employees dress repeats this
highly visual message: red shirts with gold accents for service techs, gold
shirts with red for sales staff.
“Ever since the trucks have been rolling down the
road, people have been stopping and staring at them,” Paup says.
Interior-wise, Paup and his warehouse managers
follow Levi’s “Truck Design Tips” for efficient use of space and tools on the
job. The 30 trucks are stocked the same, and can handle any ticket. A parts
list is compiled at the end of each day, and replacement items are scanned by
the warehouse manager and binned for technicians to load onto their vehicles
every morning.
Taking a leap and changing an established company
name isn’t easy, Paup admits. It was actually “a very scary decision” for him
to make at the time. But now that it’s in progress and being notice in the
area, Paup believes it was “110 percent the right decision.”
He only wished he had done it sooner.
“For us, we decided that before we took the plunge
of changing our name, we wanted to make sure our customers saw not only a new
name, but also had a new experience with every install or repair we provided,”
Paup says.
That became possible after the company installed a
state-of-the-art training center and classroom in its shop. This allowed Paup
and his managers to in-depth train the techs on customer service and sales, and
also to cross-train them in other skills.
As for his own sound advice to contractors
wondering if it’s time for a change: If you can’t answer a customer who says,
“I like your company, but what does the name mean?” you may need to change your
name.
“And if you love it too much at first, you
probably went too safe on the truck design.”