HOW TO START & OPERATE YOUR OWN FIREWOOD SUPPLY BUSINESS
Unpredictable fuel costs and the necessity of keeping warm in the
winter have resulted in "boom sales" for manufacturers of wood-burning
stoves. There has also been a return to the use of the fireplace as
a form of supplementary heat and as a luxury that promotes the "cozy"
atmosphere sought after by both middle class and affluent families.
This renaissance in the popularity of wood heat, and upward spiraling
sales of associated equipment, has created a demand for firewood that's
almost impossible to fulfill!
A very important element: This demand has caused the price of firewood
to almost double over the past several years. Whatever the "going
price" for a cord of firewood in your area, you can expect it to increase
by 20 to 30 percent each year for the next ten years or so.
Your potential market is a varied as the weather; it is also somewhat
dependent on the weather. You'll find buyers among apartment dwellers
as well as home owners. The rich are buying firewood perhaps more
than the poor; those concerned with the purity of the environment and
the so-called "voluntary-simplicity' folk seeking a return to the "pioneering"
life are all part of your market.
And don't think for a minute that firewood sales are limited to the
colder northern states. People living in Sunny Southern California
and along the Gulf of Mexico buy and burn firewood for the same reasons
as people living in Minnesota or Montana.
One of the secrets of success in this business is understanding why
the people in your area burn firewood. Then it's a matter of learning
when and how often they need it, and positioning yourself to fill those
needs.
It doesn't take special education or training to become a successful
firewood supplier. Just for the record, the backgrounds of people
operating businesses of this kind range from farmers to unemployed
factory workers to doctors, lawyers, real estate salesmen and even
university professors.
The kind of equipment you'll need varies according to the type of
business you want to establish, and the kind of wood you will be supplying.
The first prerequisite to the establishment of your business is to
decide what kind of business - wholesale to retail outlets, or retail
to the general public - you want to operate.
Next, you'll have to decide on the type of firewood you will sell.
There are three major categories: l) mill ends or sawed up scrap lumber
and kindling, 2) whole logs for the buyer to cut according to his own
specifications, 3) fireplace and stove wood, cut and split according
to the general requirements of your market area.
Your next step is to line up a source of supply. Actually, it's best
to "lock in" a number of sources of supply. Later on, as your business
develops and grows, you may want to offer several different kinds of
firewood, that is, become a full-service dealer offering firewood to
meet everyone's needs and fancies for your area. We'll discuss different
categories of wood in demand, so that you can explore sources of supply
and costs.
MILL ENDS: Your best source of supply for this type of wood is the
sawmills in your area. If you live in a metropolitan area, take a
few weekend trips to the small towns in the wooded areas of your state.
With a little bit of initiative on our part, you should be able to
discover any number of small sawmill operations within a 200-mile radius
of most metropolitan areas in this country. What you'll want to do
is buy a truckload of mill ends,
take them home and package them into sacks of firewood. Thus, a load
of mill ends that you might buy for $50 would be broken down into perhaps
200 sackfuls that you sell for $5 per sack. Multiply these 200 sacks
of firewood times $5 each, and you have a gross
income of $1,000 for a load of wood costing you only $50. You wouldn't
have to be very smart to realize that's pretty good, providing your
sources of supply can keep up with the demand.
The beauty of mill ends is that they are clean, burn easily and fast,
put out a lot of heat, and when broken down into sackfuls are ideal
for apartment dwellers, as well as people in warmer climates needing
firewood for just a few cold spells each winter. Until you have a
large full-service firewood supply operation, it's suggested that you
leave the sale of truckload supplies of mill ends to the larger, more
established fire wood suppliers. My advice here is that you should
stay within your capabilities of supplying the buying demands of your
market, and further concentrate on selling what brings you the greatest
profit. However, as your operation grows, the supply of truck loads
of mill end firewood is definitely worth considering.
Other sources of supply for mill end lumber will be your local lumber
yards, wood working or furniture manufacturing firms, and home building
or remodeling contractors. In many instances, you can offer to stop
by these places about once a week and clean up the worksite by hauling
away the scrap lumber, and they'll let you have it without cost. It
is possible to even get paid for doing this. The only drawback will
be that you'll have to sort this wood, and then saw it up into the
size s you want for your bundles or sacks. This is no big deal, because
you can handle a pickup or trailer load with a power saw in just a
couple of hours.
When you have the wood ready to package into sacks, you'll save time
and in crease your profits by hiring a couple of high school students.
Contact the counselors at one of the local high schools, explain that
you need a couple of students for part time work sacking firewood,
and you'll have all the help you need.
As for how much to pay them, establish a pay rate for 100 full sacks.
Of two high school students, one would hold open a sack while the other
uses a scoop shovel to pick up the wood and dump it into the sack.
Between them, they can gather the top of the
sack and tie it with twine. The full sacks, of course, must be stacked
on a pallet or in an area ready for selling. Check the time it takes
two good students, working at a reasonably fast clip, to load 100 sacks.
Knowing the current minimum hourly wage rate, you can then determine
the labor value of 100 loaded sacks.
For a supply of burlap bags for use in sacking your wood, check with
a farmers' feed store. If you buy in quantity, you can get them at
a very reasonable price. You can purchase twine for tying the sacks
at the same place.
WHOLE LOGS: Many people have chain saws and fancy themselves as "do
it-yourselfers," but they don't have the time to go out into the woods
and bring back firewood. If you can supply these people with a location
not too far from home, where they can saw and split their own firewood,
you'll have a steady stream of customers. You'll need a large vacant
lot - about a half acre to a full acre - and preferably on the outskirts
of town. The first thing will be to put up a 6-foot cyclone fence
around your lot,
and then a small garden shed type building to serve as your office.
Contact a sawmill or logging operation not too far from where you
want to open your business. Arrange with them to deliver whole logs
(lumber rejects) to your wood lot. Your costs shouldn't run much more
than $10 per log, even for premium wood, but will depend upon the size
and number delivered in each load.
If you have the vehicle and the energy, you can also contact the Forest
Service or the Bureau of Land Management in your area for a permit
to Cut firewood in government preservation areas. Then you go out
into the woods, saw up downed tree s into eightfoot
lengths, load them into your vehicle and haul them to your woodlot.
Still another source of supply is the farmers in your area. Talk
with them and offer to "thin out" areas of standing timber, and the
downed trees. Oftentimes, you can get this wood at no cost other than
offering the land owner a share of the timber you take out. He may
even consider your "thinning" and hauling an even exchange for the
logs.
Don't forget about the road building construction companies, and commercial
and residential developers as sources of supply. Actually, once you
get into this business, you'll find sources of supply virtually unlimited,
and restricted only by your own initiative in making contact with the
property owners.
Once you have a supply of logs within your wood lot, there are many
things you can do to attract customers. Run an advertisement in your
local paper inviting "do-it-yourselfers" to come out and Cut their
own firewood. You charge them twice as much per log as your cost,
and they do the sawing, the splitting, the loading and provide their
own car or truck to take them home. You are there only to supervise
and receive payment.
You could also rent chain saws, axes, and the use of your power splitter.
Allow the customer to select the log of his choice, and then have the
hired help - high school students, perhaps - who would saw, split and
load this wood into the buyer's vehicle. The ultimate, of course, would
be to include delivery and stacking of this wood at the customer's
residence.
Once the customer has selected his log - at twice your cost and pays
you $5 for sawing it into the lengths he wants, plus $10 for splitting
it for him and another $10 for loading it onto his vehicle, you're
talking about $150 to $200 per cord of wood. The secret here is to
have your helpers working in teams, with the kind of efficiency that
means $l00 per hour for you.
FIREPLACE AND STOVE WOOD: In running a program of pre-cut and split
fire place and stove wood, you combine all the principles we've discussed
so far, into either a whole sale or retail firewood supply sales outlet.
The easiest and most profitable operating procedure is to set up a
wood lot where whole logs are delivered to your location. Part-time
workers saw these logs into 16 to 24 inch lengths for you. A couple
of people with chain saws should be able to cut two cords of wood per
hour. A couple of people working a power log splitter should be able
to keep up with the people on the chain saws. And a couple of other
people stacking this wood onto pallets as it's split, or for storage
until sold, would be all the help you need.
If you can set your business up along these lines, you'll realize
the greatest profits and not have to get involved in the physical part
of the business. The big thing to remember is that - as the business
owner and operator - your time should be devoted to selling the end
product.
If you decide to be a wholesale supplier, and sell to retailers, advertise
for and hire commission sales people to call on the retail outlets
in your area. You'll need help in covering all the possible opportunities
for retail sales of your firewood.
You should be selling sacks and pallet loads of firewood. Remember:
The more you can divide a basic cord of firewood into sacks or pallet
loads, the greater profit you're going to make from each cord of wood
you sell.
You'll find most people buying cords or truck-load quantities of firewood
before cold weather sets in, and after that, people will buy in quantities
only large enough to get by, or to last out a sudden cold snap. If
you should also sell bags and pallets of wood to the general public,
after setting up retail sales outlets, be sure that your prices at
least "average" those being charged by the retail sellers. Never "under
cut" the price your retail people are charging.
If you decide to do all the selling yourself - in other words, act
as your own retail outlet - you'll need to advertise.
Start out with a large three-column wide, by four-inch deep display
ad in your local paper. Unless you've had advertising experience,
at least contact the advertising instruction class at your local community
college for help in the layout and writing of this ad. If you're not
far from a large metropolitan area, you can often contact the advertising
agencies in that area, and get free-lance help to assist in the makeup
of your advertising.
Plan the appearance of this ad for a Saturday morning paper. Make
your opening a big event - much the same as a grand opening or special
anniversary sale - with free coffee, donuts and balloons for the children.
Ideally, the opening of this kind of business should be staged on a
weekend in late September or early October, and designed to acquaint
the people in your area with your firewood business.
Get the name, address and phone number of everyone who shows up.
This can be handled very unobtrusively by giving away free prizes requiring
the attendees to your event to fill out simple prize drawing forms.
The prizes can be a free cord of wood, dinner for two at a local restaurant,
or even movie passes.
The whole purpose of your grand opening show is to let people know
that you're open to serve their needs; to get them to discover your
location; and to implant in their minds the memory that you can supply
them with the means to keep warm when the weather turns cold.
Quite naturally, many will find your services to be more convenient,
time-saving and less bother than whatever methods they're currently
using. As you talk with your customers, listen to their "complaints"
about their present methods of fire wood procurement, and then alleviate
those problems with the services you provide.
After your grand opening, a small 2 by 4 inches display ad in the
yellow pages of your telephone directory plus the posting of advertising
circulars and business cards left with woodstove and fireplace suppliers,
insulation and remodeling contractors and lumber yards in your area
is about all the advertising you'll need to do. However, it would
be wise to follow the lead of the "snow tire" people, and whenever
the weather forecast shows a cold front or winter storm moving in,
again invest some money in radio and newspaper advertising.
Statistics prove that 20 percent of your potential market will prepare
for cold weather by purchasing before the cold weather sets in. Another
30 percent of the market will wait until the first cold snap hits,
then buy from the first supplier that comes to mind. Finally, the
remaining people will have to be "sold" via suggestion of the benefits
your business provides.
This is the period when you begin profiting from those names, addresses
and telephone numbers of people who turned out for your big opening
event. Simply set up a telephone selling program utilizing the services
of commission telephone salespeople, and
follow up on those who had registered.
You can conceivably operate this business from your home or backyard,
and definitely on a part-time basis, but the prospects of immediate
success, with outstanding profits are so great that it would be wise
to plan on a big operation from the start.
A receipt pad for taking orders, a "daily diary" or ledger type of
bookkeeping system, a calculator and a telephone should suffice for
office supplies and equipment. Until you're over the hump on the profit
side, you can keep your sales receipts in a shoebox or daily staple
together and store in chronological order.
A couple of other points to remember: Hardwood burns the longest
and gives off the most heat; firewood that has been cut in the spring
and seasoned through the sum mer is the kind most people will be willing
to pay premium prices for; and giving the customer a "little extra"
for his money will result in greater and longer-lasting success than
quick profit schemes.
Once you've got your basic firewood supply business on a profitable
basis and running smoothly, you'll find your facilities and business
expertise ideally suited to adding extra profit producing lines such
as the sale of firewood accessories, woodstoves, built-in fireplaces,
home insulation or weatherizing services, recycling and perhaps even
home remodeling.