|
Profile: Brock Lawn
and Pest Control
Heading: Population growth and internal change help
Panhandle company boom.
By: Ernie Neff
Give booming population
growth around Panama City some credit for Brock Lawn and Pest
Control’s recent double-digit revenue growth, including 33
percent in 2003-04 and 25 percent in 2004-05. But population
growth alone wouldn’t have brought the frothy expansion Brock
has enjoyed.
Corporate growth is
largely the result of conscious internal changes that Brock
began in 1996. That’s the year Tim Brock, fresh out of Troy
State University, joined his father and company founder Doug
in the family business at Lynn Haven, just north of Panama
City. “With Tim coming on board, we made a commitment to build
a business as big as we could,” Doug recalls.
Pre-Tim, “I was handing
out work every morning,” Doug says. The son with a business
degree and father with life experience agreed to create
departments, with individual supervisors, for termites, lawn
and ornamental (L&O), and general household pests (GHP).
Around 2004, Doug says,
“We went through a complete redesign of our image.”
Consultants and an advertising agency helped. “You need
outside experts sometimes to run your business,” Tim says. The
company took its current _ and fourth _ name at that time. It
previously was Douglas Pest Control, then Douglas Brock Pest
Control and Brock Pest Control.
The company uses several
strategies to get, on average, more than $150,000 revenue
annually per truck. Switching from monthly to quarterly
service increased productivity. The use of global positioning
systems (GPS) and mapping programs integrated with service
software to create the most efficient routes also increased
productivity. Training the office staff on the geographic area
Brock serves helped. “They get enough information to schedule
service as efficiently as possible,” says Tim, who’s pursuing
an MBA from Troy State.
Upping its advertising
budget to 6-7 percent of total expenditures helped Brock bring
in more business. Forty percent of the ad budget goes to
yellow pages; TV and radio get 20 percent each; 10 percent
buys billboard space and 10 percent goes to other ad
mediums.
Tim, who became company
president this January, thinks having everyone at Brock
certified QualityPro by the National Pest Management
Association increased the company’s professional image and
aided growth. He adds that better, longer-lasting insecticides
that came on the market in recent years made technicians more
productive and aided corporate growth.
Corporate revenues that
hovered around $1 million for several years started bounding
in 2002 and 2003. This year’s revenue will be close to $3
million. The company had about 20 employees when Tim joined it
in 1996; today it has 35, including 18 technicians. There are
seven GHP routes, six termite routes and five L&O routes.
Seventy-five percent of
Brock’s business is in its home county, Bay. It also services
Franklin, Gulf and Walton counties out of the main office. A
branch established two years ago in Marianna services Calhoun,
Holmes, Jackson, Liberty and Washington _ all rural Panhandle
counties.
Technicians drive pickups;
three salesmen make calls in Volkswagen Beetles. All vehicles
are bright yellow with green lettering. They bear the slogan,
“Our family protecting your family since 1968.”
FAMILY DISCORD, AND HARMONY
Doug’s father, Ernest
Brock, started a pest control company in the Panama City area
in 1965 after working eight years for Orkin. “I joined my
daddy’s business in 1968 after serving four years in the U.S.
Air Force,” says Doug, a retired National Guard major.
Doug was stunned when his
father told him he had sold the business to Redd Pest Control
in October 1973. When Doug asked if he could buy the company
instead, Ernest said no, the deal was done. Doug declined to
continue working with his father in the business that was
being sold. “That very much disappointed my dad,” he says.
“Because of that, he and I had no relationship for 12 years.”
A month after Ernest sold
the business, Doug started Douglas Pest Control as a one-man
operation and added his first technician in 1975. He started
with GHP and termite service, adding L&O in the late 1970s. By
1980 he had seven employees.
Ernest by then had left
the pest control company he sold to Redd and opened another
company that competed directly with his son’s operation.
“Probably the most difficult business situation I’ve been in
in my life was having to be in competition with my dad,” Doug
recalls. Doug bought Ernest’s new pest control company in
the mid-1980s, ending the father-son competition. “That was
probably the best family decision I made, in that since then,
he and I have had a very good relationship,” Doug says. Doug
also bought the pest control business that Ernest had sold to
Redd a dozen years earlier.
In recent years, Ernest
has appeared in some Brock Lawn and Pest Control advertising,
including TV commercials.
Tim says, “Now I’m getting
the opportunity that he (Doug) never got” _ to learn the
business from his father and have the chance to take it
over.
Doug adds, “That’s one of
the goals for him (Tim), for him to get the opportunity to
grow the business that I never had and to have the legacy of
maybe passing it on to his kids.”
Tim and Doug remain
committed to building as much business as possible. “We are
always looking for ways to expand our business within our
current market,” Tim says. “But, we also plan on expanding our
service area in the Panhandle and possibly into other states
as we are fairly close to three other states.”
Cutlines for Photos:
L-R: Doug Brock, Jim
Strickland, Jimmie Bass and Tim Brock.
Doug Brock with photos of two service trucks numbered 207;
both were damaged in wrecks. Brock retired the number after
the second wreck.
"Everybody acts like family."
Get employees talking about Brock Lawn and Pest Control, and
it won’t be a minute before they’re mentioning the family
atmosphere.
“Everybody
acts like family,” says Sentricon technician and
self-described “termite sniffer” Burton Funchess. The 13-year
employee likes doing what he does, and says the company
respects that. “They give me opportunities (to advance) but I
don’t always take them, because I believe I’m most effective
where I am.”
“They take good care of me and I love what I do,” says Jimmie
Bass, termite service manager. “If I get in and get all my
guys ready and get them out, and they’re doing what they’re
supposed to be doing, we’re fine.” Bass, who’s been with Brock
12 years, says he’s stayed “because of the family-oriented
atmosphere.”
You’ve got to believe Vice President of Operations Jim
Strickland when he says, “They are a good family company, and
I’m sure you’d hear that from every employee here ... I’ve got
the best job I’ve ever had in my life and I work for the best
people I’ve ever worked for.” His opinion is backed by
experience. The retired Army Airborne first sergeant and
manager at another pest control company for seven years has
had many bosses _ good and bad.
Company founder Doug Brock and son Tim, the recently-named
president, both say taking care of employees is the top
priority. “I’ve always felt like if you take care of your
people, they’ll take care of customers and my customers will
be loyal and take care of me,” Doug says.
“We
feel like we’re in service to our employees,” Tim adds. “We’re
here for them, to make their jobs easier and enjoyable.”
RECOGNITION AND
WORK ENVIRONMENT
Tim says he believes employee recognition is the number one
employee motivator. “And a good environment to work in,” Doug
chimes in. Brock employees get lots of both.
A Goal Cup is presented annually to individuals, departments
and office workers who meet annual goals. That recognition is
accompanied by a plaque and a gift certificate, usually to a
restaurant.
An Extra Mile Award, again including plaque and gift
certificate, is presented once a quarter to employees who go
“above and beyond the call of duty,” Tim says. These awards,
presented every fifth Friday during a company cookout and
training session, honor employees for something they do
outside their job description to help customers or
co-workers.
All employees receive cards and movie tickets on their
birthdays.
Money, of course, is also an employee motivator. Everyone at
Brock has opportunities to earn sales and production
commissions. “We basically incentivize the pay scale,” Tim
says.
Funchess says the Brocks provide coffee in the morning and
popcorn in the afternoon. But there’s something even more
important than all that, he says. “Mr. Brock’s (Doug) like a
father figure,” he says. “When you come in and Mr. Brock or
Tim pat you on the back, you’re ready to go out and work. That
means a lot.”
Tim says his wife, Natalie, plays a key role in the company
even though her main corporate involvement, coordinating
special events, is part-time. More importantly, Tim says, “I
can do so many good things at the office knowing my wife’s
taking care of the (three) kids.”
COMMUNITY AND
INDUSTRY
The company is active in the communities it works in,
supporting the Panama City Rescue Mission and other charitable
and service organizations. Once in 2005, Brock Lawn and Pest
Control was recognized as business of the month by the Bay
County Chamber of Commerce.
Doug and Tim say when the company supports youth sports and
other activities, it puts emphasis on those in which
employees’ children are involved. “We look to our employees
first,” Tim says.
Both Brocks have put in much volunteer time as leaders of the
Florida Pest Management Association. Doug was FPMA president
in 1996-97; Tim’s on the association’s Executive Committee.
Open range
Doug and Tim Brock are proud of their family roots that date
to 1836 in the Florida Panhandle. Before Doug’s father,
Ernest, got into pest control, he worked with his father
grazing thousands of head of cattle on open range and some
land of their own. Doug, who herded cows in his youth, lives
on property his great-grandfather owned in northern Bay
County.
Doug and Tim smile when they recall how Ernest and his father
sold chunks of land on the Gulf of Mexico cheap because they
couldn't graze cattle on the beach. A few acres of that beach
land could now be sold for several years’ worth of pest
control company revenues.
|
 |
Previous Issue:
Profile:
John
Duke
Nematodes -
Small worms that can cause big troubles
By William T. (Billy) Crow
Bird Control
Bird control is often
one of the most challenging types of pest
control.
By Bill Kern
|
|