Blog
Our Top Blog Posts

If you're running an established Christmas lights installation business, the question you're asking yourself right now isn't whether you can grow—it's how to grow strategically. After more than a decade working in this industry and helping thousands of business owners scale from small operations to six and seven-figure enterprises, I've identified the exact strategies that separate businesses making six figures from those struggling to break $50,000 annually.
The difference isn't the market. It's not your area. It's your strategy, your pricing, and most importantly, your mindset about what you can achieve.
When business owners ask about growth, they typically focus on a single question: "How do I get more phone calls?" This is the right question to ask, but it's only half the equation. The complete equation is: How do I consistently generate leads AND convert them at premium pricing?
Many established Christmas lights businesses are trapped in a pricing ceiling because they don't believe they can charge more. I've worked with business owners in Texas, Missouri, Kentucky, and throughout the country. The most common objection I hear is, "Jason, you can't get $8 per foot in my area." Yet when I dig deeper, I find that these same business owners occasionally land jobs at exactly that rate—they just don't believe it's repeatable.
Here's what you need to understand: Dallas-Fort Worth has 7.7 million people. Houston has over 7 million. Yet the entire state of Kentucky has only 4 million residents. If higher pricing is possible in lower-population areas, it's absolutely possible in yours. The limiting factor isn't your market—it's what exists between your ears.
After analyzing which marketing methods generate the highest return on investment, the data is clear. The top three money-makers for Christmas lights businesses are:
Yard signs are the most overlooked and underutilized marketing tool in the Christmas lights industry, despite delivering some of the strongest returns. Here's what the data shows:
Yard Sign Fundamentals:
They work consistently across different markets and seasons
The ROI is measurable and repeatable
I can show you over 100 business owners who've reached six figures using yard signs as their primary lead source
Your cost per sign is typically $3, making the barrier to entry low
Implementation Strategy: The key to yard sign success isn't simply buying 400 signs and distributing them sporadically. Instead, implement a structured deployment system:
Target 50-100 yard signs per week during your peak season
For a three-month campaign (March through May), plan to deploy 600-800 signs total
Focus distribution in specific neighborhoods rather than spreading too thinly across your entire service area
Maintain consistent replacement as signs get removed or weather deteriorates
Why Yard Signs Outperform Other Methods: Most business owners underestimate yard signs because they don't require ongoing monthly fees. You make a one-time investment, and the sign continues working. This means your ROI compounds over time. More importantly, yard signs create visual proof of your work—when potential customers see your sign in their neighborhood, they know that actual families in their area trust you.

Google Ads complement yard signs perfectly because they capture a different buyer psychology. While yard signs reach people passively (creating awareness), Google Ads reach people actively searching for Christmas lights installation.
Budget Allocation: If you have $10,000 to invest across your peak season (March through May), here's how I would structure it:
Yard Signs: $5,000 (800 signs at $3-5 per sign, plus distribution)
Google Ads: $5,000 (distributed across 20-60 days at $100-250 per day)
This allocation assumes you're managing your Google Ads properly. If you're hiring someone to manage them, reduce the ad spend by 20-30% to cover their fee.
Google Ads Best Practices:
Don't run ads seven days a week; focus on Monday through Saturday
Review campaigns daily to optimize bid amounts and keywords
Include location-specific keywords in your ad copy
Highlight your average price point to attract customers willing to pay premium rates
Test different messaging angles (curb appeal, safety, energy efficiency, professional installation)
Google Local Services Ads (LSA) are particularly effective for Christmas lights because they appear at the very top of Google searches and carry Google's endorsement. This builds immediate trust with potential customers.
Why LSA Works:
Appears above regular Google Ads
You only pay when someone calls you directly
Google handles the initial screening, reducing tire-kickers
Perfect for premium pricing because it attracts higher-budget customers
This is where mindset directly impacts revenue. I work with two Christmas lights installers in the same metropolitan area, both with equal experience and equipment. One operates at $1,200-1,500 per installation. The other operates at $3,000-4,000 per installation. The difference isn't skill—it's belief.
Most struggling Christmas lights businesses charge by the square foot: 25 cents per foot, 28 cents per foot, maybe 35 cents. This commoditizes your work and anchors customers to the lowest price. Instead, use package-based pricing with a tiered structure.
Recommended Package Structure:
The Minimum Package (Previously Called "Basic")
House outline only
Standard C9 LED lights
Professional installation
Price: $1,200-1,500
The Better Package (Previously Called "Standard")
House outline
Soffit line accent
Professional installation
Upgrade to premium warm-white LEDs
Price: $2,000-2,500
The Best Package (Previously Called "Premium")
Full house coverage
Accent lighting for landscaping
Roof peaks and details
Gutter line coverage
Premium warm-white LED lights
Price: $3,000-4,500
By naming your entry-level option the "Minimum Package," you psychologically position everything else as a bonus upgrade rather than a separate option. This simple language change increases average ticket value by 15-25%.
When customers ask about pricing, they're actually asking about value. This is where transparency becomes an authority signal. Rather than avoiding the pricing conversation, embrace it.
In your initial consultation, discuss:
What drives costs up (square footage, roof complexity, light type selection, installation difficulty)
What drives costs down (simple rectangular homes, ground-level installation, customer flexibility on dates)
Why premium lighting costs more (lifespan, energy efficiency, aesthetic quality)
What factors affect installation time and labor cost
This positions you as an expert who understands pricing, not as a business afraid to discuss money.
One of the most frequently asked questions is: "When should I start putting out yard signs?" The answer reveals an important principle about customer psychology.
The First Grass Mowing Rule: Customers don't think about their outdoor appearance until they're forced outside to confront it. The perfect time to launch your marketing is approximately one week before the first grass mowing of spring. When homeowners are outside mowing their grass and looking at their home's exterior, they see the dirt, the dullness, and the need for a fresh appearance.
In 2026, this timeline has shifted later than usual. Most markets won't see consistent grass mowing until early April due to weather patterns. This means your yard sign deployment and Google Ads should activate in late March to early April, not mid-March.
Regional Considerations:
Florida: Timing is less critical due to year-round outdoor activity
Northern states: First grass mowing may be late April or early May
Southern states: Typically late March through April
Monitor your area's weather patterns rather than assuming a fixed date
Success in 2026 requires a systematic approach to lead generation. This means:
Deploy yard signs on a regular schedule (50-100 per week during peak season)
Run Google Ads continuously across your entire peak season
Update your Google Business Profile three times per week
Respond to all leads within 2 hours during business hours
Track your phone calls by source:
How many from yard signs?
How many from Google Ads?
How many from Google Local Services?
How many from referrals?
Once you identify your highest-ROI channel, allocate more budget there. I've seen yard signs generate 40% of revenue from only 25% of marketing budget. That's a signal to increase investment, not decrease it.
Many business owners try to be everywhere: Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Google simultaneously. The result is mediocrity across all channels rather than excellence in any channel.
Instead, identify your top two channels and dominate them. For most established Christmas lights businesses, this means yard signs plus either Google Ads or Google Local Services. Once you're consistently generating more leads than you can handle, consider expanding.

In 2026, personal branding is as important as business branding—often more so. Customers don't hire businesses; they hire people they trust. This means:
Feature your team on your website with professional photos
Show your employees in clean, branded uniforms
Display before-and-after photos of completed installations
Post project photos on Google Business Profile weekly
Use LinkedIn to share industry insights and completed projects
Approximately 70-80% of customers requesting Christmas lights installation are women. Their primary concern isn't the technical quality of installation—it's safety. Do they trust this crew in their home? Will they treat the property with respect? Do they look professional and trustworthy?
When your website shows a professional team with clean uniforms, well-maintained vehicles, and quality work photos, you answer the trust question before the first conversation.
Paradoxically, charging premium prices actually builds trust. Customers assume that expensive services are expensive because they're superior. A Christmas lights installation at $3,500 suggests premium quality. An installation at $500 raises questions about quality.
This doesn't mean being expensive in absolute terms—it means being expensive relative to your competitors, which signals confidence in your work.
The path from $50,000 annual revenue to $100,000+ is straightforward:
Current State: $50,000 revenue typically means 40-50 installations at $1,000-1,200 average Target State: $100,000 revenue means 30-35 installations at $2,800-3,300 average
You need fewer jobs at higher prices. This is achieved through:
Better lead qualification: Not every lead is a good fit
Premium positioning: Target neighborhoods with higher home values
Consultative selling: Spend more time understanding customer desires, less time pitching cheap options
Package emphasis: Lead with your premium package, not your minimum package
Confidence in pricing: If you hesitate when quoting, so will your customer
$10,000 across five channels = $2,000 per channel = insufficient to see results in any channel $10,000 concentrated in two channels = $5,000 per channel = enough budget to test, measure, and optimize
Putting out 50 yard signs once and expecting results is like running Google Ads for two weeks and expecting sustained lead generation. Marketing compounds. Consistency is non-negotiable.
Every market has someone cheaper. You cannot win a price war. Instead, win on quality, service, presentation, and trust. These cannot be undercut.
"I want to make more money" isn't a strategy. "I want to generate $100,000 in revenue in 2026" is. Once you have a number, you can work backward: How many jobs? What average price? What lead volume is required?
Month 1 (January):
Audit your current marketing channels and ROI
Set specific revenue goals for the year
Order yard signs and plan distribution schedule
Set up Google Ads if not already running
Update Google Business Profile with 2025 photos
Month 2 (February):
Begin yard sign deployment
Launch or optimize Google Ads
Implement package-based pricing structure
Train team on consultative selling approach
Update website with professional team photos
Month 3+ (March onward):
Execute consistently on your two primary marketing channels
Track and measure results by source
Adjust budget allocation based on performance
Scale what's working
Respond to all leads within 2 hours

Answer: For a three-month peak season campaign, order 600-800 signs. This allows for 50-100 signs deployed per week with replacements as signs are removed or damaged. If you're uncertain about demand, start with 400 and reorder after measuring results.
Answer: Realistically, you need $1,500-2,000 per month during peak season to gather sufficient data. At $100 per day across 20 days, you'll receive enough calls to measure ROI. Start with $2,500 across your first month (March) and adjust based on cost-per-lead and conversion rates.
Answer: Use both if your budget allows, but if choosing one, start with Google Search Ads. LSA has higher per-call costs but better quality leads. Many businesses use Google Search Ads to capture high-volume searches, then use LSA to boost visibility during peak weeks.
Answer: Keep it simple. Include your company name, a phone number in large text, and 1-2 benefit statements ("Professional Installation" or "Licensed & Insured"). Avoid cluttering with too much text. Bright lime green with black text provides good contrast but avoid green if your target area has lots of grass—neutral colors often perform better.
Answer: Competitive doesn't mean cheapest. Research 3-5 competing installers in your area and note their starting prices. Position yourself in the middle to upper range if your work quality justifies it. Remember: premium positioning attracts serious customers; cheap pricing attracts price-shoppers.
Answer: Don't stop; reduce your spend. Continue at 25-30% of your normal budget to maintain lead flow for next season and to fill cancellations. Restarting campaigns from zero is more expensive than maintaining consistent presence.

Answer: Not necessarily. Most established Christmas lights businesses see better ROI from Google Ads and yard signs than from social media. If social media is taking away from your focus on these two channels, skip it. Consistency beats breadth.
Answer: Don't compete on price; compete on value. In your estimate, show exactly what's included: professional installation, premium LED technology, warranty coverage, post-season removal, and professional project management. Explain why each element costs what it does. Let the customer choose quality or price—don't apologize for choosing quality.
Answer: Create a three-step follow-up sequence: Day 1 (within 24 hours) send a thank-you email with photos of recent work, Day 4 send a customer testimonial highlighting similar project types, Day 7 send a special offer if you're offering seasonal discounts. Most jobs are booked on the second or third contact, not the first.
Answer: Yard signs take 2-4 weeks to generate calls due to the time it takes for visibility and customer decision-making. Google Ads begin generating immediate results but need 2-3 weeks of data to optimize. Most marketing initiatives require at least 30 days of consistent execution before ROI becomes clear. Don't adjust too frequently.
Your success in 2026 isn't determined by the market, your competition, or your location. It's determined by your willingness to execute consistently on proven strategies and your belief that you deserve premium pricing for premium work.
Focus on getting the phone to ring (through yard signs, Google Ads, and Google Local Services) and answering that phone with confidence (through great service and premium positioning). Master these fundamentals before chasing new marketing channels. This is the path to scaling from $50,000 to $100,000+ in annual revenue.
Start today. Consistency is the only variable you control.

If you're running an established Christmas lights installation business, the question you're asking yourself right now isn't whether you can grow—it's how to grow strategically. After more than a decade working in this industry and helping thousands of business owners scale from small operations to six and seven-figure enterprises, I've identified the exact strategies that separate businesses making six figures from those struggling to break $50,000 annually.
The difference isn't the market. It's not your area. It's your strategy, your pricing, and most importantly, your mindset about what you can achieve.
When business owners ask about growth, they typically focus on a single question: "How do I get more phone calls?" This is the right question to ask, but it's only half the equation. The complete equation is: How do I consistently generate leads AND convert them at premium pricing?
Many established Christmas lights businesses are trapped in a pricing ceiling because they don't believe they can charge more. I've worked with business owners in Texas, Missouri, Kentucky, and throughout the country. The most common objection I hear is, "Jason, you can't get $8 per foot in my area." Yet when I dig deeper, I find that these same business owners occasionally land jobs at exactly that rate—they just don't believe it's repeatable.
Here's what you need to understand: Dallas-Fort Worth has 7.7 million people. Houston has over 7 million. Yet the entire state of Kentucky has only 4 million residents. If higher pricing is possible in lower-population areas, it's absolutely possible in yours. The limiting factor isn't your market—it's what exists between your ears.
After analyzing which marketing methods generate the highest return on investment, the data is clear. The top three money-makers for Christmas lights businesses are:
Yard signs are the most overlooked and underutilized marketing tool in the Christmas lights industry, despite delivering some of the strongest returns. Here's what the data shows:
Yard Sign Fundamentals:
They work consistently across different markets and seasons
The ROI is measurable and repeatable
I can show you over 100 business owners who've reached six figures using yard signs as their primary lead source
Your cost per sign is typically $3, making the barrier to entry low
Implementation Strategy: The key to yard sign success isn't simply buying 400 signs and distributing them sporadically. Instead, implement a structured deployment system:
Target 50-100 yard signs per week during your peak season
For a three-month campaign (March through May), plan to deploy 600-800 signs total
Focus distribution in specific neighborhoods rather than spreading too thinly across your entire service area
Maintain consistent replacement as signs get removed or weather deteriorates
Why Yard Signs Outperform Other Methods: Most business owners underestimate yard signs because they don't require ongoing monthly fees. You make a one-time investment, and the sign continues working. This means your ROI compounds over time. More importantly, yard signs create visual proof of your work—when potential customers see your sign in their neighborhood, they know that actual families in their area trust you.

Google Ads complement yard signs perfectly because they capture a different buyer psychology. While yard signs reach people passively (creating awareness), Google Ads reach people actively searching for Christmas lights installation.
Budget Allocation: If you have $10,000 to invest across your peak season (March through May), here's how I would structure it:
Yard Signs: $5,000 (800 signs at $3-5 per sign, plus distribution)
Google Ads: $5,000 (distributed across 20-60 days at $100-250 per day)
This allocation assumes you're managing your Google Ads properly. If you're hiring someone to manage them, reduce the ad spend by 20-30% to cover their fee.
Google Ads Best Practices:
Don't run ads seven days a week; focus on Monday through Saturday
Review campaigns daily to optimize bid amounts and keywords
Include location-specific keywords in your ad copy
Highlight your average price point to attract customers willing to pay premium rates
Test different messaging angles (curb appeal, safety, energy efficiency, professional installation)
Google Local Services Ads (LSA) are particularly effective for Christmas lights because they appear at the very top of Google searches and carry Google's endorsement. This builds immediate trust with potential customers.
Why LSA Works:
Appears above regular Google Ads
You only pay when someone calls you directly
Google handles the initial screening, reducing tire-kickers
Perfect for premium pricing because it attracts higher-budget customers
This is where mindset directly impacts revenue. I work with two Christmas lights installers in the same metropolitan area, both with equal experience and equipment. One operates at $1,200-1,500 per installation. The other operates at $3,000-4,000 per installation. The difference isn't skill—it's belief.
Most struggling Christmas lights businesses charge by the square foot: 25 cents per foot, 28 cents per foot, maybe 35 cents. This commoditizes your work and anchors customers to the lowest price. Instead, use package-based pricing with a tiered structure.
Recommended Package Structure:
The Minimum Package (Previously Called "Basic")
House outline only
Standard C9 LED lights
Professional installation
Price: $1,200-1,500
The Better Package (Previously Called "Standard")
House outline
Soffit line accent
Professional installation
Upgrade to premium warm-white LEDs
Price: $2,000-2,500
The Best Package (Previously Called "Premium")
Full house coverage
Accent lighting for landscaping
Roof peaks and details
Gutter line coverage
Premium warm-white LED lights
Price: $3,000-4,500
By naming your entry-level option the "Minimum Package," you psychologically position everything else as a bonus upgrade rather than a separate option. This simple language change increases average ticket value by 15-25%.
When customers ask about pricing, they're actually asking about value. This is where transparency becomes an authority signal. Rather than avoiding the pricing conversation, embrace it.
In your initial consultation, discuss:
What drives costs up (square footage, roof complexity, light type selection, installation difficulty)
What drives costs down (simple rectangular homes, ground-level installation, customer flexibility on dates)
Why premium lighting costs more (lifespan, energy efficiency, aesthetic quality)
What factors affect installation time and labor cost
This positions you as an expert who understands pricing, not as a business afraid to discuss money.
One of the most frequently asked questions is: "When should I start putting out yard signs?" The answer reveals an important principle about customer psychology.
The First Grass Mowing Rule: Customers don't think about their outdoor appearance until they're forced outside to confront it. The perfect time to launch your marketing is approximately one week before the first grass mowing of spring. When homeowners are outside mowing their grass and looking at their home's exterior, they see the dirt, the dullness, and the need for a fresh appearance.
In 2026, this timeline has shifted later than usual. Most markets won't see consistent grass mowing until early April due to weather patterns. This means your yard sign deployment and Google Ads should activate in late March to early April, not mid-March.
Regional Considerations:
Florida: Timing is less critical due to year-round outdoor activity
Northern states: First grass mowing may be late April or early May
Southern states: Typically late March through April
Monitor your area's weather patterns rather than assuming a fixed date
Success in 2026 requires a systematic approach to lead generation. This means:
Deploy yard signs on a regular schedule (50-100 per week during peak season)
Run Google Ads continuously across your entire peak season
Update your Google Business Profile three times per week
Respond to all leads within 2 hours during business hours
Track your phone calls by source:
How many from yard signs?
How many from Google Ads?
How many from Google Local Services?
How many from referrals?
Once you identify your highest-ROI channel, allocate more budget there. I've seen yard signs generate 40% of revenue from only 25% of marketing budget. That's a signal to increase investment, not decrease it.
Many business owners try to be everywhere: Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Google simultaneously. The result is mediocrity across all channels rather than excellence in any channel.
Instead, identify your top two channels and dominate them. For most established Christmas lights businesses, this means yard signs plus either Google Ads or Google Local Services. Once you're consistently generating more leads than you can handle, consider expanding.

In 2026, personal branding is as important as business branding—often more so. Customers don't hire businesses; they hire people they trust. This means:
Feature your team on your website with professional photos
Show your employees in clean, branded uniforms
Display before-and-after photos of completed installations
Post project photos on Google Business Profile weekly
Use LinkedIn to share industry insights and completed projects
Approximately 70-80% of customers requesting Christmas lights installation are women. Their primary concern isn't the technical quality of installation—it's safety. Do they trust this crew in their home? Will they treat the property with respect? Do they look professional and trustworthy?
When your website shows a professional team with clean uniforms, well-maintained vehicles, and quality work photos, you answer the trust question before the first conversation.
Paradoxically, charging premium prices actually builds trust. Customers assume that expensive services are expensive because they're superior. A Christmas lights installation at $3,500 suggests premium quality. An installation at $500 raises questions about quality.
This doesn't mean being expensive in absolute terms—it means being expensive relative to your competitors, which signals confidence in your work.
The path from $50,000 annual revenue to $100,000+ is straightforward:
Current State: $50,000 revenue typically means 40-50 installations at $1,000-1,200 average Target State: $100,000 revenue means 30-35 installations at $2,800-3,300 average
You need fewer jobs at higher prices. This is achieved through:
Better lead qualification: Not every lead is a good fit
Premium positioning: Target neighborhoods with higher home values
Consultative selling: Spend more time understanding customer desires, less time pitching cheap options
Package emphasis: Lead with your premium package, not your minimum package
Confidence in pricing: If you hesitate when quoting, so will your customer
$10,000 across five channels = $2,000 per channel = insufficient to see results in any channel $10,000 concentrated in two channels = $5,000 per channel = enough budget to test, measure, and optimize
Putting out 50 yard signs once and expecting results is like running Google Ads for two weeks and expecting sustained lead generation. Marketing compounds. Consistency is non-negotiable.
Every market has someone cheaper. You cannot win a price war. Instead, win on quality, service, presentation, and trust. These cannot be undercut.
"I want to make more money" isn't a strategy. "I want to generate $100,000 in revenue in 2026" is. Once you have a number, you can work backward: How many jobs? What average price? What lead volume is required?
Month 1 (January):
Audit your current marketing channels and ROI
Set specific revenue goals for the year
Order yard signs and plan distribution schedule
Set up Google Ads if not already running
Update Google Business Profile with 2025 photos
Month 2 (February):
Begin yard sign deployment
Launch or optimize Google Ads
Implement package-based pricing structure
Train team on consultative selling approach
Update website with professional team photos
Month 3+ (March onward):
Execute consistently on your two primary marketing channels
Track and measure results by source
Adjust budget allocation based on performance
Scale what's working
Respond to all leads within 2 hours

Answer: For a three-month peak season campaign, order 600-800 signs. This allows for 50-100 signs deployed per week with replacements as signs are removed or damaged. If you're uncertain about demand, start with 400 and reorder after measuring results.
Answer: Realistically, you need $1,500-2,000 per month during peak season to gather sufficient data. At $100 per day across 20 days, you'll receive enough calls to measure ROI. Start with $2,500 across your first month (March) and adjust based on cost-per-lead and conversion rates.
Answer: Use both if your budget allows, but if choosing one, start with Google Search Ads. LSA has higher per-call costs but better quality leads. Many businesses use Google Search Ads to capture high-volume searches, then use LSA to boost visibility during peak weeks.
Answer: Keep it simple. Include your company name, a phone number in large text, and 1-2 benefit statements ("Professional Installation" or "Licensed & Insured"). Avoid cluttering with too much text. Bright lime green with black text provides good contrast but avoid green if your target area has lots of grass—neutral colors often perform better.
Answer: Competitive doesn't mean cheapest. Research 3-5 competing installers in your area and note their starting prices. Position yourself in the middle to upper range if your work quality justifies it. Remember: premium positioning attracts serious customers; cheap pricing attracts price-shoppers.
Answer: Don't stop; reduce your spend. Continue at 25-30% of your normal budget to maintain lead flow for next season and to fill cancellations. Restarting campaigns from zero is more expensive than maintaining consistent presence.

Answer: Not necessarily. Most established Christmas lights businesses see better ROI from Google Ads and yard signs than from social media. If social media is taking away from your focus on these two channels, skip it. Consistency beats breadth.
Answer: Don't compete on price; compete on value. In your estimate, show exactly what's included: professional installation, premium LED technology, warranty coverage, post-season removal, and professional project management. Explain why each element costs what it does. Let the customer choose quality or price—don't apologize for choosing quality.
Answer: Create a three-step follow-up sequence: Day 1 (within 24 hours) send a thank-you email with photos of recent work, Day 4 send a customer testimonial highlighting similar project types, Day 7 send a special offer if you're offering seasonal discounts. Most jobs are booked on the second or third contact, not the first.
Answer: Yard signs take 2-4 weeks to generate calls due to the time it takes for visibility and customer decision-making. Google Ads begin generating immediate results but need 2-3 weeks of data to optimize. Most marketing initiatives require at least 30 days of consistent execution before ROI becomes clear. Don't adjust too frequently.
Your success in 2026 isn't determined by the market, your competition, or your location. It's determined by your willingness to execute consistently on proven strategies and your belief that you deserve premium pricing for premium work.
Focus on getting the phone to ring (through yard signs, Google Ads, and Google Local Services) and answering that phone with confidence (through great service and premium positioning). Master these fundamentals before chasing new marketing channels. This is the path to scaling from $50,000 to $100,000+ in annual revenue.
Start today. Consistency is the only variable you control.
Terms of Service / Privacy Policy
Have questions or need assistance?
Contact us at (855)619-LITE