Awesome vid man. Haven’t gotten to that stage yet. Did get my very sig yesterday so I’m pumped. Thanks for the info on something I may be dealing with in the future. P.s- loved how you filled in the WHOLE nail with red. My ocd was like, “get those 2 little spots that are left” lmao
😆😂 You crack me up dude. Glad my art work brought some shine to your day. Also, CONGRATS on the 1st sale! Everyone remembers their first sale as the ultimate right of passage into this industry. Let the momentum carry you onward to the next 10!
Homeowner here - I called my insurance company to try to set up a re-inspection and they told me the roofing contractor would have to submit an estimate before they would schedule a re-inspection. Is this normal? Seems odd to me. TIA
Adam, I love your stuff. I liked the part about the second opinion, but if I were a homeowner in the situation, I'd still be unclear as to how the second inspection could yield much different results. Isn't the storm restoration contractor supposed to have shown the damage to the adjuster the first time? Or is the first inspection different in that the storm restoration contractor doesn't have the opportunity to guide the adjuster in his assessment of the damage? Or is that not a thing in either case? In other words, if I'm the homeowner, I'd be like "what would you do differently during the re-inspection that you didn't due during the initial inspection?" That make sense?
Great question. See 5:02 -- YES the contractor is supposed to point everything out. BUT it's up to the interpretation of the adjuster. 9/10 times - a NEW adjuster comes out for the reinspection. That means a DIFFERENT opinion. It's important for the contractor to tell the stories of their own experience with denials or partial payments turning into complete replacements. It happens a lot. I've had one adjuster deny a roof entirely, the next one pays for the whole thing (same roof - 1 week apart). Also, sometimes you'll see that adjusters show up early to avoid contractors and don't say anything. Or you may encounter a homeowner who didn't have a contractor there. Lots of scenarios at play. This video teaches all the angles to overcome this :) Does that answer your question?
I appreciate you dude. I started at zero and spent 3 years making videos before getting any traction. I don't do it for views, subscriber counts or any of those vanity metrics. I do this because I love helping people who were in my shoes. Thanks for being here and the support! More to come :)
Hey man! I’m 3 months into this business and have been hitting our company quota to make 50 percent of the profit of the roof: 15 sales a month. Since I have to hit 15 every month, sometimes i’m signing people up who don’t have great damage or who only have damage to the soft metals and not much visible on the shingles. Would you say that’s ethical and should I try to do reinspections even on one’s like that?
How do you get homeowners to call for a re-inspection?
Thanks for your support please keep helping all the public adjusters out there! God bless you man.... We all appreciate you!
Honored to help my dude 🙏 Thanks for the kind words!
This is topic that 's rarely touched. Getting that customer back on your side, can turn into a repeating client. Excellent video.
💪🙏
Awesome vid man. Haven’t gotten to that stage yet. Did get my very sig yesterday so I’m pumped. Thanks for the info on something I may be dealing with in the future.
P.s- loved how you filled in the WHOLE nail with red. My ocd was like, “get those 2 little spots that are left” lmao
😆😂 You crack me up dude. Glad my art work brought some shine to your day. Also, CONGRATS on the 1st sale! Everyone remembers their first sale as the ultimate right of passage into this industry. Let the momentum carry you onward to the next 10!
@@TheRoofStrategist Absolutely!! Got my second one tonight!! Let’s go!!!
@Muay Thai Clinch 💪BOOM! Congrats man!! KEEP IT GOIN!
BATTLE PACK ?!?!?!?
HELL to the YES !!!!
Homeowner here - I called my insurance company to try to set up a re-inspection and they told me the roofing contractor would have to submit an estimate before they would schedule a re-inspection. Is this normal? Seems odd to me. TIA
Adam, I love your stuff. I liked the part about the second opinion, but if I were a homeowner in the situation, I'd still be unclear as to how the second inspection could yield much different results. Isn't the storm restoration contractor supposed to have shown the damage to the adjuster the first time? Or is the first inspection different in that the storm restoration contractor doesn't have the opportunity to guide the adjuster in his assessment of the damage? Or is that not a thing in either case? In other words, if I'm the homeowner, I'd be like "what would you do differently during the re-inspection that you didn't due during the initial inspection?" That make sense?
Great question. See 5:02 -- YES the contractor is supposed to point everything out. BUT it's up to the interpretation of the adjuster. 9/10 times - a NEW adjuster comes out for the reinspection. That means a DIFFERENT opinion. It's important for the contractor to tell the stories of their own experience with denials or partial payments turning into complete replacements. It happens a lot. I've had one adjuster deny a roof entirely, the next one pays for the whole thing (same roof - 1 week apart). Also, sometimes you'll see that adjusters show up early to avoid contractors and don't say anything. Or you may encounter a homeowner who didn't have a contractor there. Lots of scenarios at play. This video teaches all the angles to overcome this :) Does that answer your question?
how in the hell you don't have a lot more views Adam I don't know
I appreciate you dude. I started at zero and spent 3 years making videos before getting any traction. I don't do it for views, subscriber counts or any of those vanity metrics. I do this because I love helping people who were in my shoes. Thanks for being here and the support! More to come :)
Hey man! I’m 3 months into this business and have been hitting our company quota to make 50 percent of the profit of the roof: 15 sales a month. Since I have to hit 15 every month, sometimes i’m signing people up who don’t have great damage or who only have damage to the soft metals and not much visible on the shingles. Would you say that’s ethical and should I try to do reinspections even on one’s like that?
GREAT question! I did a video on this very topic. I recommend you watch it here: th-cam.com/video/5uuSmpCz-YQ/w-d-xo.html
@@TheRoofStrategist got it. Thank you!
Smartroof?
@@hightiersmash4578 yep