Your First Ten Customers
The people most likely to hire you and exactly how to reach them.
Why Ten Matters
Ten customers is the magic number for a new service business. Here's why:
- Proof of concept: If ten people pay you, this is a real business
- Learning curve: You'll figure out your process, pricing, and problems
- Review foundation: Ten reviews makes you look established
- Referral engine: Ten happy customers tell their friends
- Confidence builder: You'll know you can do this
Your only goal right now is getting to ten. Not a hundred. Not a thousand. Ten.
The Easiest Customers First
Not all customers are equally easy to get. Start with the easiest:
Tier 1: People Who Know You (Easiest)
These people already trust you. They want to support you. They're your fastest path to first jobs.
Who:
- Family members
- Friends
- Neighbors you know
- Coworkers (current or former)
- People from church, gym, clubs
- Friends' parents
- Parents' friends
How to ask:
Don't be weird about it. Just tell them what you're doing:
"Hey, I just started a lawn care business. If you know anyone who needs their yard done, I'd appreciate the referral. And if you want, I'd be happy to do yours—I'll give you a good deal since you'd be one of my first customers."
The "friends and family discount":
- Offer 20-30% off your normal rate
- Or do the first job free in exchange for a review and referral
- Make it clear this is a launch special
Why this works: They want to help you succeed. A small discount makes them feel good about hiring you. And they'll tell other people.
Tier 2: People Who Know People Who Know You
One degree of separation. Still warm leads.
Who:
- Friends of your friends
- Neighbors of your neighbors
- Your parents' coworkers
- Extended family
How to reach them:
Ask your Tier 1 contacts for introductions:
"Do you know anyone else who might need lawn care? I'm trying to fill out my schedule."
People love to help. Most people know someone who complains about yard work, house cleaning, or other services.
Tier 3: Neighbors Who Don't Know You
These people see you around but don't know you personally. Geographic proximity makes them accessible.
Who:
- People on your street
- People in your apartment complex
- Nearby neighborhoods
How to reach them:
Door knocking:
- Best on weekends, late afternoon/early evening
- Dress presentably (clean work clothes is fine)
- Keep it brief and friendly
Script: "Hi, I'm [Name], I live over on [Street]. I just started a [lawn care/cleaning/pressure washing] business and I'm offering a discount to neighbors. Would you be interested, or do you know anyone who might be?"
Door hangers/flyers:
- Simple design with your service, phone number, and a discount offer
- Hit 50-100 doors on a Saturday morning
- Focus on homes that look like they need your service
The "I just did your neighbor's house" approach:
- After completing a job, knock on 2-3 nearby doors
- "Hi, I just finished [service] at your neighbor's place. I noticed your [lawn/driveway/gutters] might need some attention. Would you like a free estimate?"
Tier 4: Strangers (Hardest, But Scalable)
Cold outreach to people with no connection to you.
Who:
- Anyone who searches for your service online
- People who respond to ads
- Leads from apps and platforms
How to reach them:
- Google Business Profile (next lesson)
- Facebook/Nextdoor posts
- Craigslist ads
- Lead generation apps (TaskRabbit, Thumbtack, etc.)
We'll cover these in detail in later lessons. For your first ten, focus on Tiers 1-3.
The First Ten Action Plan
Here's a concrete plan to get your first ten customers:
Week 1: Warm Outreach
Day 1-2: Make your list
- Write down everyone you know who might need your service
- Include everyone who might know someone
- Aim for 30-50 names
Day 3-5: Personal outreach
- Text or call each person on your list
- Tell them what you're doing
- Ask if they need help or know someone who does
- Offer a launch discount
Day 6-7: First jobs
- Book and complete your first 1-3 jobs
- Take before/after photos
- Ask for reviews and referrals
Week 2: Expand the Circle
Day 8-10: Follow up on referrals
- Contact anyone your first customers mentioned
- "Hi, [First Customer] suggested I reach out. I did their lawn last week and they thought you might be interested."
Day 11-12: Neighborhood push
- Door knock or flyer 50 homes near your first jobs
- "I just did [service] for your neighbor at [address]..."
Day 13-14: Book more jobs
- You should have 3-5 completed, 3-5 more scheduled
- Keep asking for referrals after every job
Week 3: Close the Gap
Day 15-21: Whatever it takes
- If you're not at 10 yet, increase activity
- More door knocking
- Post on Nextdoor and Facebook groups
- Craigslist ad
- Lower your price temporarily if needed
Pricing Your First Jobs
For your first customers, the goal is getting experience and reviews, not maximizing profit.
Pricing Strategy
Friends and family: 20-30% below market rate Neighbors: 10-20% below market rate Referrals: 10% below market rate or match what you charged the referrer
Example (lawn mowing):
- Market rate: $50
- Friends/family: $35-40
- Neighbors: $40-45
- After first 10: Move toward $50
The Free Job Debate
Some people recommend doing first jobs free. Here's the trade-off:
Pros of free:
- Easiest possible yes
- Good for pure practice
- Great for photos and reviews
Cons of free:
- Attracts people who don't value your work
- Sets wrong expectations
- Doesn't feel like a real business
Recommendation: Discount heavily, but charge something. Even $20 makes it a real transaction.
Overcoming the Awkwardness
Asking people to hire you feels weird at first. Here's how to get over it:
Reframe the Ask
You're not begging for a favor. You're offering a service people need.
Wrong mindset: "Please hire me, I need the money" Right mindset: "I can solve a problem you have, and I'll do a great job"
Use the "Starting Out" Story
People want to support someone who's getting started. Use that:
"I'm just getting my business off the ground and I'm looking for my first few customers. I'm offering a discount to people who give me a chance early on."
This is honest, relatable, and gives them a reason to say yes.
Accept That Some Will Say No
Not everyone needs your service right now. That's fine.
- "No" today might be "yes" in three months
- They might still refer you to someone
- It's not personal
Track Your Wins
Keep a simple list of every customer you get. When you feel discouraged, look at the list. Progress is motivating.
What to Do When You Get the Job
Getting the job is just the start. Here's how to set yourself up for success:
Before the Job
- Confirm the appointment (day before)
- Get clear on scope and price
- Gather everything you need
- Plan your route and timing
During the Job
- Arrive on time or early
- Take before photos
- Do excellent work
- Take after photos
- Clean up after yourself
After the Job
- Walk through with customer if possible
- Collect payment immediately
- Thank them
- Ask for a review
- Ask for referrals
The Golden Question
After every successful job, ask:
"I'm glad you're happy with the work. Do you know anyone else who might need [service]? I'm trying to grow my business and referrals really help."
Most people will think of at least one person. Some will give you two or three names.
First Ten Milestones
Track your progress:
- Customer 1: First paying job (anyone)
- Customer 2-3: Friends or family
- Customer 4-5: Neighbors or referrals
- Customer 6-7: One degree out (friend of friend)
- Customer 8-10: Mix of referrals and new outreach
When you hit 10:
- You have a real business
- You have reviews and photos
- You have a referral network starting
- You know your service works
- You're ready to scale
Action Steps
- Make your list of 30-50 people you know
- Reach out to 10 people in the next 48 hours
- Book your first job this week
- Complete the job and ask for review + referrals
- Repeat until you hit 10 customers
Next lesson: Setting up your Google Business Profile so strangers can find you.