Kickstart Your Christmas Lights Installation Business
with Our All-Inclusive Premium Starter Kits
The Christmas Lights starter pack is a comprehensive kit that provides everything you need to get started with your holiday lighting project. It includes all the necessary components, such as clips, male and female plugs, and an extra extension cord.
The 1000 foot starter pack C9 15' spacing package includes the following items:
800 C9 LED Bulbs: These energy-efficient bulbs are the main component of your lighting display, providing bright and vibrant illumination.
800 Best Clips: These clips are designed to securely attach your light strings to various surfaces, ensuring a stable and professional-looking installation.
1000' Green 15" Spacing Socket Spool: This spool contains 1000 feet of green wire with sockets spaced every 15 inches, allowing for even distribution of your C9 bulbs.
250' Green Lamp Cord: This additional lamp cord provides extra length for your lighting setup, enabling you to cover larger areas or create extended displays.
50 Green Male Plugs: These plugs are used to connect your light strings to power sources or to join multiple strings together.
50 Green Female Plugs: These plugs are used to create a seamless connection between your light strings, allowing for a continuous and uninterrupted display.

On average, a 1000 foot starter pack is sufficient to light up approximately 5 to 6 houses, depending on the size and layout of each property.
This estimation is based on the standard components included in the starter pack, such as the 800 C9 LED bulbs and the 1000 feet of socket spool.Headline
However, it's important to keep in mind that every project is unique, and the actual number of houses you can illuminate with a single starter pack may vary.
Factors such as the complexity of the designs, the distance between installation points, and the specific requirements of each client can all impact the coverage of the starter pack.
To ensure a smooth installation process and to accommodate any additional wiring needs, it's always a good idea to have some extra lamp cord on hand for extension purposes.
You may also want to stock up on extra female plugs to facilitate connections between multiple strands of lights or to create custom lengths as needed.
By being prepared with these additional components, you can easily adapt to the specific demands of each project and ensure that you have the flexibility to create stunning and professional-looking lighting displays, regardless of the number of houses you're working on.


The transition from one year to the next represents the most critical planning period for Christmas lights installation businesses. While competitors rest on their laurels or procrastinate until spring, successful installers use December and January to analyze what worked, identify growth opportunities, and create strategic plans that will double their revenue in the coming year.
This isn't theoretical advice—it's the proven methodology that has helped installers grow from zero to $1.2 million in three years, from $150,000 to $300,000 in a single season, and from struggling solo operators to multi-crew operations generating six and seven figures annually. The difference between businesses that double and businesses that stagnate comes down to strategic planning executed during the off-season.
This comprehensive guide reveals how to analyze your 2025 performance to identify growth levers, set realistic goals and work backwards to create actionable plans, determine marketing investments that generate predictable returns, increase average tickets through packaging and pricing strategies, and build systems that enable scaling beyond solo operations.
Growth without analysis is gambling. Before setting 2026 goals, successful installers conduct thorough post-season analysis identifying exactly what drove revenue and what held them back.
Average ticket: What was your average job value? If it was $1,000 for Christmas lights, you needed 100 jobs to reach $100,000. If competitors averaged $2,000, they only needed 50 jobs for identical revenue—half the installations, callbacks, and headaches.
Lead sources: Where did your customers come from? Yard signs? Facebook ads? Google Business Profile? Referrals? One installer discovered 60% of his revenue came from yard signs costing $4,000, while Facebook ads costing $8,000 generated only 15% of revenue. The analysis was clear: triple yard sign investment, eliminate Facebook ads.
Close rates by source: Yard sign leads might convert at 30% while Facebook leads convert at 12%. This reveals lead quality differences that impact marketing allocation.
Revenue per lead: Calculate total marketing cost divided by customers acquired. If you spent $10,000 on marketing and acquired 50 customers, your cost per customer was $200. At $2,000 average ticket, that's a 10:1 return—excellent. At $1,000 average ticket, it's 5:1—marginal.
Jobs per installation day: How many jobs did crews complete daily? If averaging one job per day, operational inefficiency is destroying profitability. Premium installers complete 2-3 jobs daily through neighborhood clustering and efficient systems.
One installer generated $150,000 annually spending $10-$20 daily on Google Ads. After analyzing lead sources and calculating ROI, he discovered Google Ads generated his highest-quality leads at lowest cost per customer.
His 2026 strategy: increase Google Ad spend from $20 daily to $100-$200 daily. Result: revenue jumped to $300,000—not from working harder, but from strategic investment in what already worked.
Another installer discovered yard signs generated 70% of his revenue despite representing only 40% of marketing spend. In 2026, he shifted budget allocation to match results: 70% on yard signs, 30% on everything else. Revenue increased 85% year-over-year.
The lesson: Double down on what works, eliminate or reduce what doesn't. Most installers spread budgets evenly across channels without analyzing which channels actually drive revenue.
Vague goals like "grow my business" or "make more money" produce vague results. Specific goals like "generate $200,000 revenue" create actionable roadmaps.
For Christmas lights at $2,000 average ticket:
$100,000 revenue = 50 jobs
$200,000 revenue = 100 jobs
$500,000 revenue = 250 jobs
$1,000,000 revenue = 500 jobs
For Christmas lights at $1,000 average ticket:
$100,000 revenue = 100 jobs
$200,000 revenue = 200 jobs
$500,000 revenue = 500 jobs
The difference is stark. Doubling average ticket from $1,000 to $2,000 cuts required job volume in half for identical revenue. Fewer installations mean fewer callbacks, less employee management, reduced material costs, and dramatically higher profit margins.
Industry standard: invest 10% of revenue goal in marketing to achieve that goal consistently.
$100,000 revenue goal = $10,000 marketing investment
How to allocate $10,000:
Yard signs (1,000 signs): $3,000-$4,000
Google Ads/Local Service Ads: $3,000-$4,000
Facebook ads or organic social media: $2,000-$3,000
Miscellaneous (door hangers, vehicle wraps, networking): $1,000
$200,000 revenue goal = $20,000 marketing investment
Scale proportionally, but concentrate investment in proven channels identified during post-season analysis.

The psychological research is clear: writing goals increases achievement probability by 42%. Reviewing written goals daily increases probability to 76%.
The Think and Grow Rich methodology (referenced in multiple successful installer stories):
Write specific revenue goal: "I will generate $200,000 in Christmas lights revenue in 2026"
Write specific actions required: "I will deploy 1,000 yard signs, maintain 100+ Google reviews, post 5x daily on social media, hire two crew members"
Read goals aloud morning and night with emotion and belief
Visualize achievement: picture yourself completing 100 jobs, depositing $200,000, celebrating success
This isn't mysticism—it's neuroscience. Repeated visualization and affirmation create neural pathways that influence behavior, decision-making, and risk tolerance. Installers who visualize success act differently than installers who visualize struggle.
The fastest path to doubling revenue isn't doubling job volume—it's doubling average ticket while maintaining or slightly increasing job volume.
Two successful approaches exist:
Approach 1: Comprehensive line-item proposals (recommended for in-person quotes)
List every possible service separately:
Front rooflines: $800
Ridge caps: $600
Ground stakes (walkway): $300
Tree wrapping (2 trees): $400
Column wrapping (4 columns): $400
Wreaths (3): $300
Garland (door): $200
Total: $3,000
This approach works when sitting at customer tables explaining each element. Friends and family present create social pressure to accept recommendations. The installer acts as trusted advisor: "Your house needs this, and this would look amazing here."
Approach 2: Tiered packages (recommended for online quotes)
Basic Package ($1,500): Front rooflines and peaks only
Premium Package ($2,500): Rooflines, peaks, ridge caps, ground stakes
Ultimate Package ($4,000): Everything included—rooflines, ridges, trees, columns, wreaths, garland
Customers naturally select middle option (Premium), driving average tickets to $2,500 instead of $1,500 basic package.
Installers closing 50-75% of quotes are dramatically underpriced. Premium services targeting affluent customers close 15-25% of leads—higher rates indicate you're not filtering out price shoppers.
The uncomfortable truth: If everyone says yes, you're leaving massive profit on the table. The customers paying $1,000 would have gladly paid $2,000, but you never asked.
One installer increased pricing from $6/foot to $8-$12/foot and discovered: "I was shocked how many people still said yes. I closed fewer total jobs but made way more money with less work."
Another jumped from $800 to $1,600-$2,000 average ticket and completed fewer jobs than previous year while doubling revenue: "Same leads, less work, double the money."

Solo installers max out at $75,000-$100,000 revenue regardless of how hard they work. Physics limits how many installations one person completes daily. Scaling beyond $100,000 requires systems enabling delegation.
System 1: CRM for customer management
Jobber or similar CRM becomes non-negotiable above $50,000 revenue. Benefits:
Centralized customer database accessible by entire team
Automated appointment reminders reducing no-shows
Digital quotes sent in minutes, not hours
Payment processing integrated (critical for collecting money efficiently)
Job history tracking enabling upsells and repeat business
System 2: Quality control and SOPs
Create standard operating procedures for every installation scenario:
Pre-installation safety checklist
Step-by-step installation process for different property types
Post-installation quality inspection checklist
Customer communication templates
Callback prevention checklist
Document everything. Film training videos showing proper techniques. Test employees on knowledge before allowing independent work.
System 3: Neighborhood scheduling
Cluster jobs geographically. Don't send crews zigzagging across service areas. Schedule all jobs in Northwest neighborhoods on Mondays, Northeast on Tuesdays, etc. This reduces drive time, increases jobs per day, and enables crews to help each other when problems arise.
System 4: Communication systems
Automated customer updates prevent 90% of "where are you?" calls:
Confirmation text when job scheduled
"We're on our way" text 30 minutes before arrival
Completion photo with "We're finished" message
Payment request with easy tap-to-pay link
Follow-up request for Google review
System 5: Financial tracking
Know your numbers. Track:
Revenue per lead source
Cost per customer acquired
Average ticket by neighborhood/property type
Material costs per foot installed
Labor costs per foot installed
Net profit per job after all costs
Without financial tracking, you're flying blind. One installer thought he was profitable at $6/foot until careful analysis revealed actual costs left him at $0.75/foot net profit—unsustainable.
You cannot scale while installing personally. Period. Your highest-value activities are:
Sales and quoting ($200/hour value)
Marketing strategy and execution ($150/hour value)
Hiring and training quality employees ($150/hour value)
Quality control and customer service ($100/hour value)
Every hour spent installing ($40-$60/hour value) costs you $100-$160 in opportunity cost from neglected high-value activities.
The hiring timeline for growth:
At $50,000-$75,000: Hire first installation crew member, focus your time on sales and marketing
At $100,000-$150,000: Hire second crew member enabling complete crew, focus on quality control and hiring crew #2
At $200,000-$300,000: Hire office support (phone answering, quote generation, scheduling), add crew #2
At $400,000-$500,000: Hire operations manager coordinating all crews and logistics, focus entirely on sales and strategic growth
Most installers resist hiring because "I can't afford it." Reality: you can't afford NOT to hire. Paying a crew member $25/hour who completes $4,000 in installations daily while you close $10,000 in new sales generates $14,000 daily revenue. Working solo installing generates $2,000-$4,000 daily revenue.
Two major trends will dominate 2026: video content creation and personal branding over corporate branding.
AI is fundamentally changing how Google and social platforms surface content. Written content increasingly competes with AI-generated summaries. Video content remains difficult for AI to replicate authentically.
The installers winning in 2026:
Post daily video content (long-form, short-form, or both)
Show installation process, customer reactions, behind-the-scenes content
Answer common customer questions on video
Demonstrate expertise through educational content
Create personal connection impossible with text alone
One installer committed to daily video (shorts on Instagram/TikTok, long-form on YouTube) and generated 100+ monthly leads organically with zero advertising spend. Another posts 2x weekly and struggles to generate 20 monthly leads despite $2,000 in Facebook ads.
The difference: consistent video creates omnipresence. Potential customers see you repeatedly, building trust before ever contacting you.
The fastest-growing installer businesses in 2024-2025 built personal brands, not corporate brands. Bobby Duncan generates $750,000 annually posting primarily on personal Facebook page. Customers hire "Bobby" who happens to run a Christmas lights business—not "ABC Christmas Lights Company."
Why personal branding works:
Humans trust humans, not corporations
Personal posts generate higher engagement than business page posts
Personal connections create loyalty resistant to price competition
Personal brands weather algorithm changes better than corporate pages
The 2026 strategy: Build both personal and business presence, but emphasize personal content showing your face, personality, and expertise.

Most installers double revenue in 1-2 seasons with strategic execution. The keys: increase average ticket from $1,000-$1,500 to $2,000-$2,500 (achievable through package selling and premium pricing), increase marketing investment from $10,000 to $20,000 focused on proven channels, hire first crew member enabling you to focus on sales instead of installation, implement CRM and systems enabling efficient operations. One installer jumped from $150,000 to $300,000 in single season by increasing Google Ad spend from $20 daily to $100-$200 daily—same market, same competition, just strategic investment in what already worked.
Yes—the 10% rule applies regardless of current revenue. If your goal is $100,000 and you're currently at $30,000, invest the full $10,000 (not 10% of $30,000). This feels uncomfortable but is necessary. The alternative is incremental growth over 5-10 years instead of 1-2 years. However, invest strategically: don't spend $10,000 on unproven channels. Start with yard signs ($3,000-$4,000 for 1,000 signs) and Google Local Service Ads ($3,000-$4,000), track results religiously, then scale what works.
You're not trying to increase existing customer tickets—you're attracting different customers. Target affluent neighborhoods with $500,000-$1,000,000 homes instead of $150,000-$300,000 homes. Present comprehensive packages showing rooflines, ridge caps, ground stakes, tree wrapping, columns, wreaths, and garland—not just basic roofline installation. Use professional mockups showing complete vision instead of basic quotes. Price at $10-$12 per foot instead of $5-$7 per foot. You'll close fewer total leads (15-25% instead of 40-50%) but average tickets will be $2,000-$3,000 instead of $1,000-$1,500. Same or better revenue, fewer jobs, higher profit.
No universal answer—analyze YOUR results from 2025. However, consistently successful channels across multiple markets: yard signs (highest ROI when deployed in affluent neighborhoods, 200-400 signs minimum), Google Local Service Ads (high-intent leads, pay per lead not per click), organic social media (daily posting on personal Facebook page generating engagement and referrals), Google Business Profile optimization (100+ photos, daily posts during season, systematic review collection). Video content will increase in importance throughout 2026 as AI changes search landscape.
Hire when you're consistently working 60+ hours weekly or when you're scheduling 10+ jobs weekly. Calculate opportunity cost: if hiring someone at $25/hour enables you to close additional $10,000 weekly in sales (just 5 additional $2,000 jobs), they generate $10,000 while costing $1,000 in wages—10:1 ROI. Most installers think "I'm making $30/hour, I can't afford to pay someone $25/hour." Wrong math. Correct math: "Paying someone $25/hour to install frees me to sell. I'll close $50,000 monthly in sales while they complete $30,000 in installations—total revenue $80,000 vs. $30,000 working solo."
You don't compete with them—you target completely different customers. Installers charging $4-$6 per foot serve price-shopping customers in lower-income neighborhoods. You serve value-focused customers in affluent neighborhoods who prioritize quality, reliability, and convenience over lowest price. Differentiate through: professional vehicle wraps, 50+ five-star Google reviews, professional mockups, comprehensive packages, superior customer service, systematic communication, guaranteed callbacks. Market exclusively in $500,000+ home neighborhoods through targeted Facebook ads, strategic yard sign placement, and neighborhood-specific content. Never mention competitors' pricing—present your value confidently at your pricing.

Depends on your sales process. For in-person quotes (sitting at customer tables), line-item everything separately and walk through each element explaining value and recommendations. This maximizes upsells and creates $3,000-$5,000 jobs from customers who called for "basic lighting." For online quotes (email/text proposals without in-person meetings), use tiered packages: Basic ($1,500), Premium ($2,500), Ultimate ($4,000). Customers naturally select middle option, driving average tickets to $2,500. Line-item online quotes often result in customers selecting only cheapest items, creating $1,000 jobs instead of $2,500 jobs.
Invest in these four systems immediately: CRM (Jobber recommended—manages customers, quotes, scheduling, payments, job history), quality control checklists (pre-installation safety, installation procedures, post-installation inspection preventing callbacks), financial tracking (know cost per customer, revenue per lead source, profit per job), communication automation (appointment confirmations, "we're on our way" texts, completion photos, payment requests, review requests). Without these systems, growth creates chaos. With these systems, growth becomes manageable and sustainable. Budget $2,000-$3,000 for annual CRM subscription and system setup.
Everyone hates their first 50-100 videos—that's normal. Your perceived flaws matter far less than you think. Customers care about expertise and authenticity, not Hollywood production value. Start with simple content: installation time-lapses (no talking required), customer reaction videos (focus on customer, not you), before/after transformations, answering common questions (written captions, minimal talking). Post daily for 30 days—you'll become dramatically more comfortable. One installer posts 15 times daily and generates 100+ monthly leads organically. Another avoids video and struggles to generate 20 monthly leads despite $2,000 ad spend. Video isn't optional in 2026—it's required for growth.
Thinking small and believing limiting beliefs. The installer convinced "my area won't pay more than $6 per foot" never charges $10 per foot regardless of market reality (installers in same market successfully charge $10-$15 per foot). The installer believing "I need more customers" when real problem is $1,000 average ticket (raising to $2,000 doubles revenue with identical customer count). The installer saying "I can't afford to hire" while working 80 hours weekly at $25/hour equivalent instead of hiring help and focusing on $200/hour sales activities. Change thinking, change results. The fastest path to doubling revenue is believing it's possible, then executing strategies proven by installers who already doubled.
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