
Hot Tip - Triple Your Pet Sitting Profit | Ep. 11
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
Acerca de esta escucha
💸 Want to make more money on your pet sitting services?
LFG.
In this hot-take mini episode, I share one powerful pricing strategy that helped a pet care company I work with go from $35,000 in net profit to $150,000 in a single year, without increasing staff or adding complexity. (and yes - I said NET PROFIT.)
Whether you’re deep into pet sitting or just dabbling, this shift can dramatically improve your margins on this service line.
Inside this episode:
- The hidden costs within your pet sitting services
- A simple pricing change that adds pure profit to your bottom line
- The truth about after-hours fees (and how to roll them out without backlash)
- Real answers to your biggest FAQs - like whether to pass the fee to staff and if you need to announce it publicly
📊 This model isn’t about nickel-and-diming clients. It’s about protecting your margins and turning a high-effort service into a high-reward revenue line.
💥 Key Takeaways:
✅ Pet sitting often carries hidden operational costs
✅ Charge based on time, not service labels (IMO)
✅ Add $5–$10 after-hours fees for visits outside 9–5
✅ Clients rarely push back - and often shift to easier daytime windows
✅ Keep the fee - don’t pass it to staff
✅ No price increase announcement needed
✅ More money for the same labor = a win
📢 DON’T MISS THIS:
Join us at the DogCo Business Summit, Sept 26–28 in Winston-Salem, NC! Learn how to scale smarter, price better, and grow sustainably.
🎟 Get tickets at https://dogcosummit.com
🐾 Subscribe for weekly episodes that help you build a more profitable, people-first pet care company.
💬 Was this tip helpful? Let me know - tag @michelleckline on IG and share your takeaway.
🎯 Like + share with a pet sitter or solopreneur who deserves to keep more of their earnings.