Blog
Our Top Blog Posts

The week of Thanksgiving represents the single most critical revenue opportunity in the Christmas lights installation business. This isn't hyperbole—years of business data consistently show that more customers book installations during this seven-day window than any other period of the season. After months of preparation, marketing investment, and strategic planning, everything converges into these crucial days when homeowners suddenly realize Thanksgiving is imminent and their homes remain undecorated.
This comprehensive guide reveals why Thanksgiving week generates maximum revenue, how to capitalize on the urgency customers feel, strategies for closing outstanding quotes worth thousands of dollars with a single text message, and the operational tactics that separate six-figure businesses from struggling installers during the final push of the season.
Thanksgiving creates a psychological deadline in customers' minds. Throughout October and early November, Christmas lights remain a "someday" project. But when Thanksgiving week arrives, that vague intention transforms into immediate urgency.
Pre-Thanksgiving Mindset: "I should probably get Christmas lights this year. I'll look into it soon."
Thanksgiving Week Mindset: "Oh my God, Thanksgiving is in three days and my house has no lights. Everyone else's neighborhood looks festive. I need this done NOW."
This shift from consideration to urgency eliminates price shopping behavior. Customers who spent weeks comparing quotes suddenly care about one thing: availability before the holiday.
When Thanksgiving falls late in November (like November 27th), it creates unique dynamics:
Advantage: Extended lead generation period through most of November generates more total prospects.
Challenge: Compressed installation window between Thanksgiving and Christmas creates capacity constraints.
This year's late Thanksgiving means the week of November 18th-24th becomes absolutely critical. After Thanksgiving weekend, December 1st arrives on Monday—historically when demand begins sharp decline. You essentially have Thanksgiving week plus one additional week of strong demand before the season ends.
Timeline breakdown:
November 18th-27th (Thanksgiving week): Peak urgency, maximum bookings
December 2nd-8th: Secondary wave of installations
December 9th-24th: Minimal demand except last-minute stragglers willing to pay premium rush fees
After December 10th, the season is effectively over for new bookings.
Success during Thanksgiving week requires executing multiple high-impact tactics simultaneously. Installers who treat this week like any other leave massive revenue on the table.
If you're holding yard signs in reserve for "later in December," you're making a critical strategic error. December demand doesn't justify saving inventory—Thanksgiving week does.
Deployment strategy:
Deploy 200-300 signs Thursday-Saturday before Thanksgiving
Target affluent neighborhoods ($500,000+ homes) exclusively
Place signs at high-visibility intersections, school drop-off zones, hospital parking areas, and subdivision entrances
Don't worry about signs getting pulled—even 24-48 hours of visibility generates calls
One installer deployed 300 signs the Friday before Thanksgiving after initially planning to save them. Result: overwhelming phone volume requiring turning away customers due to capacity constraints.
Why this works: Families driving to Thanksgiving gatherings, grocery shopping, and running holiday errands are in "Christmas mode" mentally. Yard signs hit them exactly when they're thinking about holiday preparation.
This single tactic consistently generates $5,000-$10,000 in immediate bookings when executed properly during Thanksgiving week.
The process:
Compile every quote you've sent this season that hasn't closed (including quotes from last year's prospects who didn't move forward)
Send a text message tomorrow morning (not 9:30 PM tonight—wait until 8:00-9:00 AM when people are checking phones)
Message template: "Hi [Name], Thanksgiving is just days away! We have 1-2 installation slots remaining this week if you'd like your home decorated before the holiday. Your quote is ready—just reply YES to secure your spot or call [number] if you have questions."
Why this works:
Scarcity: "1-2 slots remaining" creates urgency even if you have more availability
Timing: Thanksgiving week deadline feels real and immediate
Low barrier: Simple "YES" response makes action easy
Reminder value: Many prospects forgot about their quote or got busy—this reminds them at the perfect moment
Multiple installers report closing $5,000-$10,000 in a single day using this exact approach. You've already paid acquisition costs for these leads (Facebook ads, yard signs, etc.)—following up costs $20-$50 in text message fees but generates thousands in revenue.
Tools: Use TextMagic or similar bulk SMS platforms to send messages to your entire prospect database simultaneously. Most CRMs (Jobber, ServiceTitan, etc.) also have built-in texting capabilities.
Don't choose between text and email—do both. Different customers prefer different communication channels.
Email strategy:
Send within 2-4 hours of text campaign
Subject line: "Last chance: Thanksgiving installation availability"
Include professional mockup or photo of previous installation
Emphasize limited availability and holiday deadline
Make reply/booking process simple (one-click calendar link or simple "reply YES")
Combined text + email approach typically increases response rates 30-40% compared to single-channel outreach.

This is not the week to reduce posting frequency because you're "too busy installing." This is the week to increase volume dramatically.
Posting schedule:
10-15 posts daily across Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok
Mix content types: installation progress videos, before/after photos, customer testimonials, tips, behind-the-scenes content
Join and post in 10-15 local Facebook neighborhood groups
Post in mom groups (70% of Christmas lights buyers are female)
Use personal Facebook page, not just business page
One successful installer posts 15 times daily during peak season and generates 100+ monthly leads organically with zero advertising spend. Another posts twice weekly and wonders why the phone doesn't ring.
Content ideas for Thanksgiving week:
"Getting homes ready before families arrive for Thanksgiving!"
Time-lapse videos of installations
Customer reaction videos
"Last chance before Thanksgiving" urgency posts
Countdowns: "3 days until Thanksgiving—book today!"
Speed-to-lead determines conversion more than any other factor during high-urgency periods like Thanksgiving week.
The data: Leads responded to within 60 minutes convert at 3-5x the rate of leads responded to after 24+ hours. During Thanksgiving week when customers are urgently seeking availability, this gap widens dramatically.
Implementation strategies:
Option 1: Hire a virtual assistant or part-time employee dedicated solely to answering phones and sending quotes during peak hours
Option 2: Use your CRM's automated quote generation to send preliminary estimates within minutes, then follow up with customized proposals
Option 3: Batch installation work into specific days, reserving other days for sales calls and quote generation
Never do this: Let calls go to voicemail while on roofs, then return calls hours later. By then, prospects have called three competitors and booked with whoever answered first.
Thanksgiving week often brings rain in many regions. Rain causes more service callbacks than any other factor, and callbacks during your busiest week destroy profitability and capacity.
Primary cause: Water infiltration in male/female connectors
When male plugs dangle into gutters, rainwater fills gutters and submerges connections. Water creates electrical shorts that trip GFCI outlets or breakers.
Secondary cause: Ground-level connections in landscaping
Male/female connections at ground level near tree bases or shrub areas get submerged in puddles during heavy rain, causing identical shorting issues.
Tertiary cause: Mini lights with compromised insulation
Mini lights are particularly susceptible to water infiltration. Once water enters the wire insulation or socket connections, shorts occur.
Clip all male/female connections: Never let connections dangle. Always secure them in clips attached to gutters, siding, or fascia boards. This keeps connections elevated above water.
Split the wire before insertion: Carefully separate the two wires on male plugs about 1-2 inches. Insert both wires into the female socket holes. This creates deeper connection and reduces water infiltration risk. (Note: Use caution to avoid nicking wires with cutting tools.)
Elevate ground-level connections: For tree lighting and landscape connections, route wiring to elevated connection points. If unavoidable at ground level, use waterproof connection covers (available at electrical supply stores).
Use electrical tape as secondary protection: While not foolproof, wrapping male/female connections with electrical tape adds a water barrier layer. This works best combined with clipping connections in elevated positions.
Test all lights before leaving: Install with lights turned ON. This allows immediate identification of loose bulbs or connection issues. A loose bulb that works during dry installation will fail during first rain if not properly seated.
When customers report lights tripping during rain:
Step 1: Unplug everything at the main connection point Step 2: Plug in one section at a time, identifying which section causes the trip Step 3: Inspect that section's connections for water infiltration Step 4: Check for connections in gutters filled with water Step 5: Examine ground-level connections in puddled areas Step 6: Look for nicked wires where insulation is compromised
Typically, one bad connection causes the entire circuit to trip. Systematic isolation identifies the problem quickly.

Thanksgiving week creates temptation to discount prices to "close more deals." This is backwards thinking that costs you thousands in profit.
Customer psychology during urgency: When Thanksgiving is three days away and homes remain undecorated, customers care about:
Availability (can you do it before Thanksgiving?)
Reliability (will you actually show up?)
Quality (will it look good?)
Price becomes a secondary concern. Customers in urgent need will pay premium rates for guaranteed availability.
If you're already booked for Thanksgiving week, implement rush pricing:
Standard pricing: $10 per foot for installations scheduled the following week Rush pricing: $12-$14 per foot for installations completed before Thanksgiving Emergency pricing: $15-$18 per foot for installations completed within 24-48 hours
Frame this positively: "Our standard schedule is filling up, but I can prioritize your installation before Thanksgiving for our rush service rate. That would be $14 per foot instead of our standard $10, but guarantees completion before your family arrives."
Most customers gladly pay the premium when it's framed as availability rather than penalty.
Some installers panic when Thanksgiving week arrives without full schedules and consider dropping prices to $6-$7 per foot to "stay busy."
This is catastrophic thinking. Consider:
Scenario A: 5 jobs at $6 per foot, 150 feet average = $4,500 revenue, approximately $1,200-$1,500 net profit
Scenario B: 3 jobs at $10 per foot, 150 feet average = $4,500 revenue, approximately $2,400-$2,700 net profit
Same revenue, 80% more profit, 40% less work, dramatically fewer potential problems from bargain-hunting customers.
If your schedule isn't full, the problem is lead generation (not enough marketing), not pricing (charging too much). Double down on yard signs and social media—don't slash pricing.
After Thanksgiving, you have approximately 7-10 days of viable installation season remaining.
December 1st-5th: Secondary wave of customers who procrastinated past Thanksgiving or whose original installers failed to show up. These customers are often willing to pay premium rates.
December 6th-10th: Sharp decline in demand. Most customers who wanted lights already have them installed.
December 11th-24th: Minimal demand. Occasional last-minute customers willing to pay significant premiums (consider $18-$25 per foot for Christmas Eve installations).
After December 10th, shift energy from new installation sales to 2026 pre-bookings:
Call current-year customers offering 10% discount for pre-paying 2026 installation
Collect deposits securing 2026 schedule
Generate referrals: "Who else in your neighborhood would love this display?"
Request Google reviews while experience is fresh
Photograph every installation for 2026 marketing materials
The most successful installers generate 30-50% of next year's revenue through early-booking strategies during December and January.

Demand remains strong through approximately December 5th-8th, then drops precipitously. After December 10th, expect minimal new bookings except occasional last-minute customers. This timeline varies slightly based on when Thanksgiving falls—late Thanksgivings (like November 27th) compress the strong demand period more than early Thanksgivings. Plan for essentially two weeks of viable season after Thanksgiving: the final days of November plus the first week of December.
No—do the opposite. Thanksgiving week urgency justifies premium pricing, not discounts. Customers who need installations completed before the holiday arriving in 2-3 days will pay 20-30% premiums for guaranteed availability. If your schedule isn't full, the problem is insufficient marketing/lead generation, not pricing. Deploy more yard signs and increase social media activity rather than slashing prices that destroy profitability.
Clip all male/female connections in elevated positions—never let them dangle into gutters or rest on ground level. Consider splitting male plug wires before insertion to create deeper connection depth. Elevate ground-level connections near trees/landscaping above puddle level. Install with lights turned ON to identify loose bulbs immediately. Most rain-related trips result from water-submerged connections in gutters or landscaping puddles—keeping connections elevated eliminates 90% of rain callbacks.
Yes—this tactic consistently generates $5,000-$10,000 in immediate bookings. You've already paid acquisition costs for these leads. Following up costs $20-$50 in bulk SMS fees but converts prospects who forgot, got busy, or are now experiencing Thanksgiving urgency. Send the text tomorrow morning (8:00-9:00 AM, not late evening) with simple message emphasizing limited pre-Thanksgiving availability. Multiple installers report this single action generating their most profitable day of the season.
During peak season, follow up 5-7 times over 10-14 days using multiple channels (text, email, phone call). November leads go cold faster than October leads—if you haven't closed within 72 hours, they're likely choosing competitors or abandoning the project. However, the Thanksgiving week urgency text can resurrect leads from weeks or even months ago who are suddenly motivated by the holiday deadline. Don't give up after one "no"—most sales require multiple touches.
Deploy everything immediately—don't save signs for December. December demand doesn't justify holding inventory. The Friday-Saturday-Sunday before Thanksgiving generates more calls from 200-300 deployed signs than an entire December will. Even if signs only stay up 24-48 hours before being pulled, the visibility during peak urgency period generates maximum ROI. One well-placed sign can generate $20,000-$50,000 in revenue during Thanksgiving week.

Ask qualifying questions: "Have you used Christmas lights services before? What did you like and dislike about them?" Often, customers mentioning cheap competitors are complaining about no-shows, poor quality, or installers who never returned to remove lights. Emphasize your differentiators: insurance protecting their property, reliable callback service, professional appearance, and guaranteed satisfaction. If they're purely price-shopping, let them go—they become problem customers generating negative reviews. Target affluent neighborhoods where customers value quality over lowest price.
Facebook groups and yard signs are your only viable options this late. Join 10-15 local neighborhood Facebook groups and post 10-15 times daily showing beautiful installations and emphasizing limited Thanksgiving week availability. If you can get yard signs delivered within 2-3 days, deploy 200-300 immediately in affluent neighborhoods. Door-knocking also works—wear Santa hat and Christmas gear, knock 100+ doors in target neighborhoods, carry professional business cards and portfolio photos on tablet. Speed and volume overcome late start during peak urgency period.
At $8-$12 per foot, expect 15-25% close rates. If you're closing 30%+ of quotes, you're underpriced—premium services rarely exceed 30% because you're intentionally filtering out price shoppers. If you're below 10% close rate, you're either targeting wrong customers ($150,000 homes instead of $500,000+ homes), presenting unprofessionally (no reviews, cheap website), or executing sales poorly (selling features instead of emotional benefits). The goal isn't maximum close rate—it's maximum profit per job closed.
Never work solo on roofs—multiple installers have fallen this season, with one survivor saved only by his Apple Watch's fall detection feature alerting his wife. Beyond safety, hiring help increases capacity during the highest-revenue week of the year. Paying a helper $20-$25/hour to complete 3-4 jobs daily at $10 per foot (average 150 feet per job = $1,500 revenue per job) generates $4,500-$6,000 daily revenue. After paying helper $200 for the day, you still net significantly more than working solo completing 1-2 jobs daily. Safety and capacity both favor hiring help during peak season.
Thanksgiving week represents the culmination of every marketing effort, strategic decision, and operational preparation you've made since August. This is when yard signs deployed in October generate calls, Facebook ads finally convert, and prospects who've been "thinking about it" suddenly become urgent buyers.
The installers who treat this week like any other—answering phones casually, responding to quotes slowly, posting sporadically on social media—leave $10,000-$50,000 on the table depending on their market size. The installers who execute the strategies outlined here—deploying every yard sign, texting every outstanding quote, posting 10-15 times daily, answering every lead within 60 minutes, and maintaining premium pricing—capitalize on the year's highest-urgency buying window.
You have approximately 72-96 hours until Thanksgiving. Then you have roughly 7-10 days of viable season remaining before demand collapses after December 10th. This is fourth-quarter, final-five-minutes, everything-on-the-line time.
Answer your phone. Send that text to every outstanding quote. Deploy those yard signs. Post constantly on social media. Stay safe on roofs. Close jobs at premium pricing.
This is go week. Make it count.



The week of Thanksgiving represents the single most critical revenue opportunity in the Christmas lights installation business. This isn't hyperbole—years of business data consistently show that more customers book installations during this seven-day window than any other period of the season. After months of preparation, marketing investment, and strategic planning, everything converges into these crucial days when homeowners suddenly realize Thanksgiving is imminent and their homes remain undecorated.
This comprehensive guide reveals why Thanksgiving week generates maximum revenue, how to capitalize on the urgency customers feel, strategies for closing outstanding quotes worth thousands of dollars with a single text message, and the operational tactics that separate six-figure businesses from struggling installers during the final push of the season.
Thanksgiving creates a psychological deadline in customers' minds. Throughout October and early November, Christmas lights remain a "someday" project. But when Thanksgiving week arrives, that vague intention transforms into immediate urgency.
Pre-Thanksgiving Mindset: "I should probably get Christmas lights this year. I'll look into it soon."
Thanksgiving Week Mindset: "Oh my God, Thanksgiving is in three days and my house has no lights. Everyone else's neighborhood looks festive. I need this done NOW."
This shift from consideration to urgency eliminates price shopping behavior. Customers who spent weeks comparing quotes suddenly care about one thing: availability before the holiday.
When Thanksgiving falls late in November (like November 27th), it creates unique dynamics:
Advantage: Extended lead generation period through most of November generates more total prospects.
Challenge: Compressed installation window between Thanksgiving and Christmas creates capacity constraints.
This year's late Thanksgiving means the week of November 18th-24th becomes absolutely critical. After Thanksgiving weekend, December 1st arrives on Monday—historically when demand begins sharp decline. You essentially have Thanksgiving week plus one additional week of strong demand before the season ends.
Timeline breakdown:
November 18th-27th (Thanksgiving week): Peak urgency, maximum bookings
December 2nd-8th: Secondary wave of installations
December 9th-24th: Minimal demand except last-minute stragglers willing to pay premium rush fees
After December 10th, the season is effectively over for new bookings.
Success during Thanksgiving week requires executing multiple high-impact tactics simultaneously. Installers who treat this week like any other leave massive revenue on the table.
If you're holding yard signs in reserve for "later in December," you're making a critical strategic error. December demand doesn't justify saving inventory—Thanksgiving week does.
Deployment strategy:
Deploy 200-300 signs Thursday-Saturday before Thanksgiving
Target affluent neighborhoods ($500,000+ homes) exclusively
Place signs at high-visibility intersections, school drop-off zones, hospital parking areas, and subdivision entrances
Don't worry about signs getting pulled—even 24-48 hours of visibility generates calls
One installer deployed 300 signs the Friday before Thanksgiving after initially planning to save them. Result: overwhelming phone volume requiring turning away customers due to capacity constraints.
Why this works: Families driving to Thanksgiving gatherings, grocery shopping, and running holiday errands are in "Christmas mode" mentally. Yard signs hit them exactly when they're thinking about holiday preparation.
This single tactic consistently generates $5,000-$10,000 in immediate bookings when executed properly during Thanksgiving week.
The process:
Compile every quote you've sent this season that hasn't closed (including quotes from last year's prospects who didn't move forward)
Send a text message tomorrow morning (not 9:30 PM tonight—wait until 8:00-9:00 AM when people are checking phones)
Message template: "Hi [Name], Thanksgiving is just days away! We have 1-2 installation slots remaining this week if you'd like your home decorated before the holiday. Your quote is ready—just reply YES to secure your spot or call [number] if you have questions."
Why this works:
Scarcity: "1-2 slots remaining" creates urgency even if you have more availability
Timing: Thanksgiving week deadline feels real and immediate
Low barrier: Simple "YES" response makes action easy
Reminder value: Many prospects forgot about their quote or got busy—this reminds them at the perfect moment
Multiple installers report closing $5,000-$10,000 in a single day using this exact approach. You've already paid acquisition costs for these leads (Facebook ads, yard signs, etc.)—following up costs $20-$50 in text message fees but generates thousands in revenue.
Tools: Use TextMagic or similar bulk SMS platforms to send messages to your entire prospect database simultaneously. Most CRMs (Jobber, ServiceTitan, etc.) also have built-in texting capabilities.
Don't choose between text and email—do both. Different customers prefer different communication channels.
Email strategy:
Send within 2-4 hours of text campaign
Subject line: "Last chance: Thanksgiving installation availability"
Include professional mockup or photo of previous installation
Emphasize limited availability and holiday deadline
Make reply/booking process simple (one-click calendar link or simple "reply YES")
Combined text + email approach typically increases response rates 30-40% compared to single-channel outreach.

This is not the week to reduce posting frequency because you're "too busy installing." This is the week to increase volume dramatically.
Posting schedule:
10-15 posts daily across Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok
Mix content types: installation progress videos, before/after photos, customer testimonials, tips, behind-the-scenes content
Join and post in 10-15 local Facebook neighborhood groups
Post in mom groups (70% of Christmas lights buyers are female)
Use personal Facebook page, not just business page
One successful installer posts 15 times daily during peak season and generates 100+ monthly leads organically with zero advertising spend. Another posts twice weekly and wonders why the phone doesn't ring.
Content ideas for Thanksgiving week:
"Getting homes ready before families arrive for Thanksgiving!"
Time-lapse videos of installations
Customer reaction videos
"Last chance before Thanksgiving" urgency posts
Countdowns: "3 days until Thanksgiving—book today!"
Speed-to-lead determines conversion more than any other factor during high-urgency periods like Thanksgiving week.
The data: Leads responded to within 60 minutes convert at 3-5x the rate of leads responded to after 24+ hours. During Thanksgiving week when customers are urgently seeking availability, this gap widens dramatically.
Implementation strategies:
Option 1: Hire a virtual assistant or part-time employee dedicated solely to answering phones and sending quotes during peak hours
Option 2: Use your CRM's automated quote generation to send preliminary estimates within minutes, then follow up with customized proposals
Option 3: Batch installation work into specific days, reserving other days for sales calls and quote generation
Never do this: Let calls go to voicemail while on roofs, then return calls hours later. By then, prospects have called three competitors and booked with whoever answered first.
Thanksgiving week often brings rain in many regions. Rain causes more service callbacks than any other factor, and callbacks during your busiest week destroy profitability and capacity.
Primary cause: Water infiltration in male/female connectors
When male plugs dangle into gutters, rainwater fills gutters and submerges connections. Water creates electrical shorts that trip GFCI outlets or breakers.
Secondary cause: Ground-level connections in landscaping
Male/female connections at ground level near tree bases or shrub areas get submerged in puddles during heavy rain, causing identical shorting issues.
Tertiary cause: Mini lights with compromised insulation
Mini lights are particularly susceptible to water infiltration. Once water enters the wire insulation or socket connections, shorts occur.
Clip all male/female connections: Never let connections dangle. Always secure them in clips attached to gutters, siding, or fascia boards. This keeps connections elevated above water.
Split the wire before insertion: Carefully separate the two wires on male plugs about 1-2 inches. Insert both wires into the female socket holes. This creates deeper connection and reduces water infiltration risk. (Note: Use caution to avoid nicking wires with cutting tools.)
Elevate ground-level connections: For tree lighting and landscape connections, route wiring to elevated connection points. If unavoidable at ground level, use waterproof connection covers (available at electrical supply stores).
Use electrical tape as secondary protection: While not foolproof, wrapping male/female connections with electrical tape adds a water barrier layer. This works best combined with clipping connections in elevated positions.
Test all lights before leaving: Install with lights turned ON. This allows immediate identification of loose bulbs or connection issues. A loose bulb that works during dry installation will fail during first rain if not properly seated.
When customers report lights tripping during rain:
Step 1: Unplug everything at the main connection point Step 2: Plug in one section at a time, identifying which section causes the trip Step 3: Inspect that section's connections for water infiltration Step 4: Check for connections in gutters filled with water Step 5: Examine ground-level connections in puddled areas Step 6: Look for nicked wires where insulation is compromised
Typically, one bad connection causes the entire circuit to trip. Systematic isolation identifies the problem quickly.

Thanksgiving week creates temptation to discount prices to "close more deals." This is backwards thinking that costs you thousands in profit.
Customer psychology during urgency: When Thanksgiving is three days away and homes remain undecorated, customers care about:
Availability (can you do it before Thanksgiving?)
Reliability (will you actually show up?)
Quality (will it look good?)
Price becomes a secondary concern. Customers in urgent need will pay premium rates for guaranteed availability.
If you're already booked for Thanksgiving week, implement rush pricing:
Standard pricing: $10 per foot for installations scheduled the following week Rush pricing: $12-$14 per foot for installations completed before Thanksgiving Emergency pricing: $15-$18 per foot for installations completed within 24-48 hours
Frame this positively: "Our standard schedule is filling up, but I can prioritize your installation before Thanksgiving for our rush service rate. That would be $14 per foot instead of our standard $10, but guarantees completion before your family arrives."
Most customers gladly pay the premium when it's framed as availability rather than penalty.
Some installers panic when Thanksgiving week arrives without full schedules and consider dropping prices to $6-$7 per foot to "stay busy."
This is catastrophic thinking. Consider:
Scenario A: 5 jobs at $6 per foot, 150 feet average = $4,500 revenue, approximately $1,200-$1,500 net profit
Scenario B: 3 jobs at $10 per foot, 150 feet average = $4,500 revenue, approximately $2,400-$2,700 net profit
Same revenue, 80% more profit, 40% less work, dramatically fewer potential problems from bargain-hunting customers.
If your schedule isn't full, the problem is lead generation (not enough marketing), not pricing (charging too much). Double down on yard signs and social media—don't slash pricing.
After Thanksgiving, you have approximately 7-10 days of viable installation season remaining.
December 1st-5th: Secondary wave of customers who procrastinated past Thanksgiving or whose original installers failed to show up. These customers are often willing to pay premium rates.
December 6th-10th: Sharp decline in demand. Most customers who wanted lights already have them installed.
December 11th-24th: Minimal demand. Occasional last-minute customers willing to pay significant premiums (consider $18-$25 per foot for Christmas Eve installations).
After December 10th, shift energy from new installation sales to 2026 pre-bookings:
Call current-year customers offering 10% discount for pre-paying 2026 installation
Collect deposits securing 2026 schedule
Generate referrals: "Who else in your neighborhood would love this display?"
Request Google reviews while experience is fresh
Photograph every installation for 2026 marketing materials
The most successful installers generate 30-50% of next year's revenue through early-booking strategies during December and January.

Demand remains strong through approximately December 5th-8th, then drops precipitously. After December 10th, expect minimal new bookings except occasional last-minute customers. This timeline varies slightly based on when Thanksgiving falls—late Thanksgivings (like November 27th) compress the strong demand period more than early Thanksgivings. Plan for essentially two weeks of viable season after Thanksgiving: the final days of November plus the first week of December.
No—do the opposite. Thanksgiving week urgency justifies premium pricing, not discounts. Customers who need installations completed before the holiday arriving in 2-3 days will pay 20-30% premiums for guaranteed availability. If your schedule isn't full, the problem is insufficient marketing/lead generation, not pricing. Deploy more yard signs and increase social media activity rather than slashing prices that destroy profitability.
Clip all male/female connections in elevated positions—never let them dangle into gutters or rest on ground level. Consider splitting male plug wires before insertion to create deeper connection depth. Elevate ground-level connections near trees/landscaping above puddle level. Install with lights turned ON to identify loose bulbs immediately. Most rain-related trips result from water-submerged connections in gutters or landscaping puddles—keeping connections elevated eliminates 90% of rain callbacks.
Yes—this tactic consistently generates $5,000-$10,000 in immediate bookings. You've already paid acquisition costs for these leads. Following up costs $20-$50 in bulk SMS fees but converts prospects who forgot, got busy, or are now experiencing Thanksgiving urgency. Send the text tomorrow morning (8:00-9:00 AM, not late evening) with simple message emphasizing limited pre-Thanksgiving availability. Multiple installers report this single action generating their most profitable day of the season.
During peak season, follow up 5-7 times over 10-14 days using multiple channels (text, email, phone call). November leads go cold faster than October leads—if you haven't closed within 72 hours, they're likely choosing competitors or abandoning the project. However, the Thanksgiving week urgency text can resurrect leads from weeks or even months ago who are suddenly motivated by the holiday deadline. Don't give up after one "no"—most sales require multiple touches.
Deploy everything immediately—don't save signs for December. December demand doesn't justify holding inventory. The Friday-Saturday-Sunday before Thanksgiving generates more calls from 200-300 deployed signs than an entire December will. Even if signs only stay up 24-48 hours before being pulled, the visibility during peak urgency period generates maximum ROI. One well-placed sign can generate $20,000-$50,000 in revenue during Thanksgiving week.

Ask qualifying questions: "Have you used Christmas lights services before? What did you like and dislike about them?" Often, customers mentioning cheap competitors are complaining about no-shows, poor quality, or installers who never returned to remove lights. Emphasize your differentiators: insurance protecting their property, reliable callback service, professional appearance, and guaranteed satisfaction. If they're purely price-shopping, let them go—they become problem customers generating negative reviews. Target affluent neighborhoods where customers value quality over lowest price.
Facebook groups and yard signs are your only viable options this late. Join 10-15 local neighborhood Facebook groups and post 10-15 times daily showing beautiful installations and emphasizing limited Thanksgiving week availability. If you can get yard signs delivered within 2-3 days, deploy 200-300 immediately in affluent neighborhoods. Door-knocking also works—wear Santa hat and Christmas gear, knock 100+ doors in target neighborhoods, carry professional business cards and portfolio photos on tablet. Speed and volume overcome late start during peak urgency period.
At $8-$12 per foot, expect 15-25% close rates. If you're closing 30%+ of quotes, you're underpriced—premium services rarely exceed 30% because you're intentionally filtering out price shoppers. If you're below 10% close rate, you're either targeting wrong customers ($150,000 homes instead of $500,000+ homes), presenting unprofessionally (no reviews, cheap website), or executing sales poorly (selling features instead of emotional benefits). The goal isn't maximum close rate—it's maximum profit per job closed.
Never work solo on roofs—multiple installers have fallen this season, with one survivor saved only by his Apple Watch's fall detection feature alerting his wife. Beyond safety, hiring help increases capacity during the highest-revenue week of the year. Paying a helper $20-$25/hour to complete 3-4 jobs daily at $10 per foot (average 150 feet per job = $1,500 revenue per job) generates $4,500-$6,000 daily revenue. After paying helper $200 for the day, you still net significantly more than working solo completing 1-2 jobs daily. Safety and capacity both favor hiring help during peak season.
Thanksgiving week represents the culmination of every marketing effort, strategic decision, and operational preparation you've made since August. This is when yard signs deployed in October generate calls, Facebook ads finally convert, and prospects who've been "thinking about it" suddenly become urgent buyers.
The installers who treat this week like any other—answering phones casually, responding to quotes slowly, posting sporadically on social media—leave $10,000-$50,000 on the table depending on their market size. The installers who execute the strategies outlined here—deploying every yard sign, texting every outstanding quote, posting 10-15 times daily, answering every lead within 60 minutes, and maintaining premium pricing—capitalize on the year's highest-urgency buying window.
You have approximately 72-96 hours until Thanksgiving. Then you have roughly 7-10 days of viable season remaining before demand collapses after December 10th. This is fourth-quarter, final-five-minutes, everything-on-the-line time.
Answer your phone. Send that text to every outstanding quote. Deploy those yard signs. Post constantly on social media. Stay safe on roofs. Close jobs at premium pricing.
This is go week. Make it count.


Terms of Service / Privacy Policy
Have questions or need assistance?
Contact us at (855)619-LITE