Showing posts with label Landscaping Industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landscaping Industry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Monster Tree Service featured in Lawn & Landscape

Monster Tree were recently featured in Lawn & Landscape in an article discussing Monster Tree Service's CEO Josh Skolnick career path, specifically how he became the founder and owner of Monster Tree Service. Josh also discusses the systems and processes of the company and how he has been so successful at such a young age. The article also discusses franchise investment information as well as quick tips about tree services. Click here to read the article or begin below.

"Designed playbook - Formulas for Success"
By Kristen Hampshire

Thinking about adding on to your landscape business? Why not explore a ready-made system?
The secret's in the system. And that's exactly why entrepreneurs invest in a franchise. They're buying a business that can enhance an existing offering or thrive as a stand-alone operation. In the landscape world, there is a range of complementary services that can attract new customers, round out a service mix, separate a firm from its competitors and rake in more revenue.


Of course, the bonus of a franchise is that the plays are already in the book. You can leap over any learning curve because of vast support networks (depending on the franchise you choose.) This month, Lawn & Landscape spoke to a few franchisors about their add-on opportunities.


Click here to read the entire article.



Friday, July 20, 2012

What’s really killing Texas trees?

In an article for AgriLife Today, Dr. Eric Taylor, Texas AgriLife Extension Service forestry specialist, says that there are many factors that have been killing trees in Texas lately, beyond drought. Read more to see how preventative maintenance can stop many of these problems!

What's Really Killing Texas Trees?
By Robert Burns

Although drought is often the cause, trees can die for other reasons besides lack of soil moisture, said Dr. Eric Taylor, Texas AgriLife Extension Service forestry specialist, Overton.

“Drought is the primary contributor to tree kill, but it may not be exactly the way you might be thinking,” Taylor said. “You may find this hard to believe, but relatively few trees likely died directly from dehydration in 2011. Instead, the 2011 drought severely weakened mature trees, making them susceptible to opportunistic pathogens like hypoxylon canker and insects like pine bark engraver beetles.”

He said that in most instances, the trees that died in 2011 were already stressed from a number of pre-existing environmental factors such as overcrowding, growing on the wrong site, age, soil compaction, trenching or inappropriate use of herbicides. If not for these factors, a large proportion of the trees that died might have recovered from the drought.

“This is an important concept to remember because our best defense against drought is to promote a tree’s health and vigor through proper care and management,” Taylor said.

(Read More)

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Monster Tree Service Featured in Turf Magazine

Monster Tree Service was recently featured in Turf Magazine in an article titled,“Why Not Add Tree Services, Too?.” The article discusses how landscaper Josh Skolnick stumbled into the tree maintenance industry, founding a multi-millionaire dollar company, Monster Tree Service. Josh discusses franchise opportunities, and why someone with a landscaping company would benefit from integrating Monster Tree Service into their current business. Click here to read the entire article.

By Ron Hall

In June 2008, a client asked landscape professional Josh Skolnick to take down a 70-foot-tall elm tree. Skolnick, 25 at the time, had never taken down a tree before. But, since he constantly told clients "we're a full-service company," he hired an experienced tree contractor to remove the elm.

That's when he discovered an opportunity. Leaving the arborist to dismantle the tree, he literally went door to door offering tree removals and related services in the suburban Philadelphia neighborhood where his Skolnick Landscaping had been providing landscape services. In just four hours he sold $20,000 in tree work.

Suddenly, Skolnick was in the tree business.


Thursday, June 21, 2012

Monster Tree featured on the Central Pennsylvania Business Journal website

Monster Tree Service was recently featured on the Central Pennsylvania Business Journal website in an article titled,“Tree service franchise looks to expand into Central Pa.” The article discussed how Monster Tree Service came to be, the aggressive expansion plans within Pennsylvania, as well as throughout the East Coast, and business opportunities for entrepreneurs wanting to own their own business as well as people already involved in the tree care industry. Click here to read the entire article.

Tree service franchise looks to expand into Central Pa.  
Monster Tree Service - PABy: Jason Scott  

A Montgomery County tree-management company that recently made the move to franchising has set its sights on growing up and down the East Coast, including in Central Pennsylvania.

Four years ago, repeated customer inquiries about tree services prompted landscaper Josh Skolnick to make the move into the tree maintenance business.

Without ever felling a tree himself, Skolnick launched Monster Tree Service, an executive-style model that gives budding business owners an opportunity to hire experts in the trade. It also gives local professionals the option of marketing their services under a brand.

“You don’t have to know how to cut trees or climb trees,” Skolnick said. “You have to be willing to learn and manage a business.”

(Read More)

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Monster Tree featured in Buffalo Business First

Monster Tree Service was recently featured in Buffalo Business First in an article titled,“Pa. tree service would like cut of Buffalo market.” The article discussed how Monster Tree Service is aggressively expanding into the Buffalo market, with potential to sell three to five franchisees in the area. Josh Skolnick discussed why the Buffalo market is a desirable landscape for his tree maintenance business and details about the business for prospective franchisees. Click here to read the entire article.

Pa. tree service would like cut of Buffalo market
By: James Fink

Monster Tree Service, a Pennsylvania-based lawn and tree care service, has identified the Buffalo Niagara market as one of the places where the company would like to expand.

Josh Skolnick, who founded Monster Tree Service four years ago, said the Buffalo area is perfect for his company’s expansion plan.

“There appears to be a lot of activity there,” Skolnick said.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Money Grows on Trees

Entrepreneur Makes Money Grow on Trees: Monster Tree Service Branches Out with Franchise Launch: Landscaper turned tree trimmer brings skills, training and professionalism to high-demand fragmented industry


FORT WASHINGTON, Penn.—Josh Skolnick, a career landscaper who started a multi-crew lawn care service while in high school, was often asked by customers to address their tree problems. Having no experience himself, he regularly subcontracted the task of customers’ requests to tree specialists who could handle the job. Ever the entrepreneur, Skolnick quickly realized there was opportunity to capitalize by incorporating tree care into his business.

“I’d never removed a tree in my life, so I got others to manage that area of landscaping—until I saw the money they were making,” said 28-year-old Fort Washington-native Skolnick. “I thought, ‘What’s wrong here?’ If they can do it, so can I. There’s a tremendous amount of money in it and I wanted a piece of that pie.”

Four years ago, Skolnick founded Monster Tree Service (MTS) to augment his existing landscaping firm. Without ever pruning or removing a tree himself, he hired existing professionals to work under his brand and led the firm to become a highly profitable multimillion dollar business which has grown to multiple crews. With multiple experts in the trade to assist him, Skolnick developed a system he recognized as highly duplicable, so he moved to franchise MTS in April 2012.

“A lot of tree guys are fly-by-night companies that have a pickup truck, some ladders and saws and physically climb trees to do the work,” said Skolnick, adding that MTS crews use bucket trucks and cranes to take down large trees. He said very few of those companies know how to hire large crews, manage their books or even grow their firms to a size that would support long-term employees seeking security and benefits. Skolnick notes how marketing is an integral part of MTS, with many independent tree contractors underestimating the importance of grassroots marketing and losing out on profit potential and market ownership.

“I know that most of these guys—even if they’re good at what they do—will never make the money on their own that we could teach them to make from day one. We have it down to a system: how to manage crews, schedule them, buy or rent the right equipment, get customers and take care of them in a timely fashion.” Adds Skolnick, “We even have certified arborists on staff who know what customers’ trees need. Everything we do is completely different from the typical tree guys.”

Monster Tree Service uses state-of-the-art science and equipment to address tree issues ranging from restoration to difficult pruning to complete removal. Customers receive quick responses from fully uniformed staff operating branded trucks and equipment, and they’re charged competitive prices. “We hear all the time from our customers that we make this process easy for them. We give estimates in hours, not days, and that means a lot in the industry we’re in.”

As he seeks to expand his business in the Northeastern U.S., Skolnick said he’s looking for franchisees who know how to manage businesses and the crews that do the work—not be hands-on operators.

“I’ve built a substantial business without ever removing a tree myself,” he said. “I knew how to hire the experts that wanted to belong to an established business they were proud to work for and that they could rely on to keep them busy. That’s what we bring to an industry that lacks a high level of professionalism, and that’s why we know this will be a successful franchise concept.”