How to Build a Billion-Dollar Roofing Business Framework with J. Cron
The Billion-Dollar Bullseye: Aim at a Bigger Target
What if growing your roofing business didn’t require more leads, more ads, or more salespeople? In this powerful conversation, J. Cron reveals the real blueprint for growth. Drawing from his experience scaling Kajabi to a $2B valuation, he introduces the Seven Ps Framework — a practical and transformational model any roofing company can use to grow profitably.
1. Purpose: Internal vs. External Drivers
J. Cron breaks down purpose into two clear categories:
- Internal Purpose: Your personal “why” — the thing that gets you out of bed, whether it’s financial freedom or a flexible lifestyle.
- External Purpose: The transformation you create for customers. In roofing, this might be peace of mind and safety under a reliable roof.
He urges owners to stop forcing values down employees’ throats. Instead, let people align naturally with the company’s external mission while pursuing their own internal goals.
2. Profit: No Numbers, No Business
“If you don’t know your numbers, you don’t have a business — you have liability.”
You don’t need to become an accountant, but you do need to understand top-line revenue, job averages, and margins. Track them often. As Cron says, measure daily and you’ll only have bad days. Measure monthly, and you’ll suffer bad months. Don’t measure at all? Good luck.
3. Product: Could You Turn Off Marketing Tomorrow?
The most uncomfortable question for many roofing companies:
“If you stopped all marketing and sales efforts, would your business survive?”
If not, the real problem is your product. In a commoditized industry, product means experience. Are customers happy? Do they refer you? If they’re not, no ad in the world can save you.
4. Prestige: Become the Brand People Trust
Prestige is your reputation, and in home services, it’s everything. Cron advises owners to “experience their experience” — mystery shop your business. Call your own phone number, submit a lead, talk to customers post-job.
Did you know: Leads responded to in under 60 seconds are 8x more likely to convert. Are you hitting that mark?
And if your name (or your technician’s) shows up in online reviews, that’s real brand equity. Multiply that.
5. Promotion: Marketing That Educates
Promotion is Cron’s favorite — but he warns that it’s a trap for business owners who haven’t done the work in the previous Ps.
Great marketing educates buyers and helps them choose you by setting the buying criteria upfront. Show them why certifications, warranties, quality installs, and clean work sites matter. If your customers don’t know what to compare, they’ll default to price.
6. Persuasion: Ethical Sales and Confidence
“You have a moral responsibility to sell if you’re the best option.”
Sales is not about pressure — it’s about helping people make the right decision. If you know your team delivers top-tier roofing service, it’s your duty to guide customers away from cheap, risky competitors.
Cron emphasizes that confident walkaways are powerful. If a customer is hyper price-focused, don’t be afraid to say, “We’re probably not the right fit.” That confidence builds credibility.
7. People: Hire After You Build the Machine
Why are people last in the framework?
Because too many contractors hire before building systems. They bring on new reps or techs and drop them into chaos. That’s not delegation — it’s abdication.
People become force multipliers only after your business is dialed in. When the first six Ps are working, you’ll attract the right talent and keep them.
Closing Reflection
J. Cron’s Seven Ps framework is about creating aligned leverage — where every part of your business supports the others. When you dial in purpose, profit, product, prestige, promotion, persuasion, and people, you build a company that scales sustainably. A business that works even when you’re not chasing leads 24/7.