Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who sold their landscaping buisness, for the one who doubted me let me explain.
After taking over Somerset, Kenwood and Wood Acres bit by bit, I had to hire friends to help me cut lanws after school and all day on weekends. sometimes 30-40 lawns a day. I bought two trucks and two horse trailers,and hired people to drive them, bought as much used equipment as I could from the lawn mower place on Butler Road, and rented space off River Road to sotre the equipment. During high school I went half days my junior and senior years part of a work program I got into. Much like the students who do other trades, I got approval to do this.
I got several accounts for large developments like kenwood forest, parkside, and many others. Hired more employees and it grew and grew.
Need more proof?
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who sold their landscaping buisness, for the one who doubted me let me explain.
After taking over Somerset, Kenwood and Wood Acres bit by bit, I had to hire friends to help me cut lanws after school and all day on weekends. sometimes 30-40 lawns a day. I bought two trucks and two horse trailers,and hired people to drive them, bought as much used equipment as I could from the lawn mower place on Butler Road, and rented space off River Road to sotre the equipment. During high school I went half days my junior and senior years part of a work program I got into. Much like the students who do other trades, I got approval to do this.
I got several accounts for large developments like kenwood forest, parkside, and many others. Hired more employees and it grew and grew.
Need more proof?
She has to earn her keep!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who sold their landscaping buisness, for the one who doubted me let me explain.
After taking over Somerset, Kenwood and Wood Acres bit by bit, I had to hire friends to help me cut lanws after school and all day on weekends. sometimes 30-40 lawns a day. I bought two trucks and two horse trailers,and hired people to drive them, bought as much used equipment as I could from the lawn mower place on Butler Road, and rented space off River Road to sotre the equipment. During high school I went half days my junior and senior years part of a work program I got into. Much like the students who do other trades, I got approval to do this.
I got several accounts for large developments like kenwood forest, parkside, and many others. Hired more employees and it grew and grew.
Need more proof?
I don't doubt that entreprenurial kids have done this, but I question the part about starting at age 7. We have 12-14 year olds in our neighborhood with a fledgling lawn care business, but half that age seems a bit much.
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who sold their landscaping buisness, for the one who doubted me let me explain.
After taking over Somerset, Kenwood and Wood Acres bit by bit, I had to hire friends to help me cut lanws after school and all day on weekends. sometimes 30-40 lawns a day. I bought two trucks and two horse trailers,and hired people to drive them, bought as much used equipment as I could from the lawn mower place on Butler Road, and rented space off River Road to sotre the equipment. During high school I went half days my junior and senior years part of a work program I got into. Much like the students who do other trades, I got approval to do this.
I got several accounts for large developments like kenwood forest, parkside, and many others. Hired more employees and it grew and grew.
Need more proof?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started at 7, often started early after delivering my papers, sold my business after I got out of high school and paid for my education including grad school with the money. still had some left over.
I started with one lawn and it grew to well over 500 by the time i graduated high school.
I say let the kids do it, kids these days are too lazy.
I call BS on this post.
NP here and this seems totally possible. I had a high school friend who ran a successful mowing business and basically mowed every lawn in the three to four mile radius of his nieghborhood in Silver Spring. He paid for a car with his earnings and no doubt had quite a bit of savings from his venture. He was and is quite an entrepreneur and went on to open several successful businesses in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started at 7, often started early after delivering my papers, sold my business after I got out of high school and paid for my education including grad school with the money. still had some left over.
I started with one lawn and it grew to well over 500 by the time i graduated high school.
I say let the kids do it, kids these days are too lazy.
I call BS on this post.