Community Involvement: An important part of our lives and business
For those of you that know Terry and Gina Overacker personally, you know that being members of the Anoka Area Chamber of Commerce and the MetroNorth Chamber of Commerce is a huge part of what they do. Over the last decade, they have been actively involved in many different charities and organizations in this community that has helped grow their family owned plumbing business. However, the chambers are the organizations where they are able to network and help other small businesses thrive just as they themselves have been so fortunate to do.
Terry Overacker Plumbing is proud to be involved with so many great organizations in our community. Whether we are fixing a clogged toilet, replacing a kitchen faucet, doing a complete bathroom remodel or lending our time to any one of the many important institutions we proudly support, the team at TOP remains service and community minded. We’d like to thank Anoka and the surrounding area for allowing us to provide affordable plumbing services. We promise to continue to keep our prices fair and your houses clean!
Here is a link to the Anoka Area Chamber Newsletter from July 2015 where Terry Overacker Plumbing was featured, on page 6. http://www.anokaareachamber.com/about/newsletters/
Kudos to the Anoka Area Chamber for providing such an important service to our small business community which so many families rely!
Well coincidentally I was loonikg for a plumber for a while (Vancouver Canada) and they are HARD to find (our construction industry has been busy getting ready for the 2010 Olympics coming to Vancouver).My husband went down to the local plumber supply store and just hung around waiting for some real plumbers (not do-it-yourselfers) to come by. He found one. So how about asking your local plumbing store, home depot, etc. if they have bulletin boards and post a flyer?Other ideas: post in Craigslist in your town/city; join your local chamber of commerce you will find local businesses like to support members; join a construction industry association network with businesses and the industry make contacts.You might try advertising on radio very local; make sure your truck/car has your company name/phone number look for someone to do a car ad-wrap; have business cards lots they’re cheap to print (nothing fancy you’ll look too expensive).Good luck.
Tony, great tips! Thanks! How do you take off an old sweat joint to replace it with a new fittnig? Can you de-solder it, or does it have to be cut off?I have a water line in the bathroom under the toilet and I need to replace the faucet type connection with a new one. Thanks!
Yes, you can un-solder it. Unless there is enough pipe from the wall to just cut it off. Cutting it off is a much better fix if possible.
Great info. I know replacing a kitchen faucet can be almost impossible since the only access is from under the sink and many individuals lack the plumbing experience.Not all of our pros 🙁