All the Tools You Need to

Install Permanent Christmas Lights

Master the Art of Permanent Christmas Lighting:

Essential Tools for Every Professional Installer

Welcome to the ultimate resource for your permanent Christmas lighting installation business!

Our carefully curated selection of tools is designed to provide you with everything you need to

build a successful and permanent lighting service, catering to both seasoned

professionals and those just starting in the industry.

Permanent light demo kit

50 FT Wire Fishing Kit

For running wire through walls, attics, crawl spaces, sub-floors and suspended ceilings, great insulating property, low friction design allows the tape to easily glide through the conduit without binding at turns, joints or couplings

invisilights 100 foot permanent light kit

50' Fiberglass Fish Tape Running Wire Cable Rods

Rods can be used individually or threaded together for desired length, can be extended up to 50 feet. The item is Strong flexibility, But do not bend too hard, or it will break

invisilights 150' permanent light kit

Boeray 11' Fiberglass Running Electrical Wire Cable Pulling Fish Tape Kit

Fiberglass better than Plated Carbon Steel, this fish tape will not break when folded, faster, easier pulls: low friction design allows the tape to easily glide through the conduit without binding at turns, joints or couplings;

invisilights 150' permanent light kit

Cougar Paws

Cougar Paws has been tested up to a 12/12 pitch; however, other measures must be taken for steeper pitches. The Peak Performer's 6" high uppers will protect you from rolling or stumbling as you make your ascent while still allowing the light coloration keep feet cool in hot sun conditions with asphalt roofs!

DEWALT Metal Shear/Cutter Drill Attachment

Cougar Paws Replacement Pads

These pads are an affordable way to get your cougar paws back!

DEWALT Metal Shear/Cutter Drill Attachment

DEWALT Metal Shear/Cutter Drill Attachment

The DEWALT DWASHRIR Impact Ready Shears Attachment is able to cut up to 18GA material with a 360-degree swivel head

Amazon Basics 3-Piece Aviation Snip Set - Left, Right and Straight Cut

Amazon Basics 3-Piece Aviation Snip Set - Left, Right and Straight Cut

3-piece set of aviation tin snips for easy cutting from any angle

Malco M2007 MAX2000 Bulldog 1-1/4-inch Cut Capacity 10-inch Right Cut Offset Aviation Snip

Malco M2007 MAX2000 Bulldog 1-1/4-inch Cut Capacity 10-inch Right Cut Offset Aviation Snip

Aviation style metal snip (green grip) with versatile offset handles for straight cuts and curved cuts to the right

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

The Goat Assist

The goat assist is a handy tool t

o get you up those tricky roofs.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Ridge Pro

The Ridge Pro can be used as an innovative roof anchor designed to work at the peak of a house.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Malco M2006 10 inch Left

Offset Snips

Malco Max2000 offset left cutting Aviation Snips features Euro-styled ergonomic handles and superior hardened blade edges for maximum cutting life.

Ladder Stabilizer Standoff Brackets with Foam Elbows

Ladder Stabilizer Standoff Brackets with Foam Elbows

These brackets can be slid into the rungs of most ladders

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Harness Kit

This harness kit is perfect for ensuring you don't fall off the roof with your Ridge Pro.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Personal Fall Arrest Protection

This retractable fall arrest is perfect for ensuring you don't fall off the roof with your Ridge Pro.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Quickclick Stabilizer

The stabilizer is a great way to keep your ladder from falling over

Ladder Stabilizer Standoff Brackets with Foam Elbows

Levelok ladder levelers

Ladder levelers are a great tool for any installer, especially those who work on roofs. The best part about them is that they can be used when the ground isn't perfectly flat or even at all!

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Little Giant Ladder

The remote control allows us to turn on and off the Christmas lights while keeping power supply for all connected devices. This will allow us to turn off the lights to cut the wires.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Ladder Protector

Ladder protectors can save your house from being torn by ladders.

Malco M2006 10 inch Left Offset Snips

Pitch Hopper

The pitch hopper is a unique tool that allows you to get on any roof, no matter how high or steep it may be. It has many different variations so users can find one suitable for their needs- whether they want something quick with little effort or more challenging than what's been done before!

Ladder Stabilizer Standoff Brackets with Foam Elbows

Extension Ladder

Hanging Christmas lights is a complicated task that requires the perfect ladder for your needs. The 28-foot, 32 foot or even 40 foot extension ladders are all great options to have in order hang up those beautiful strands of bulbs without any problem at all!

Elevate Your Permanent Christmas Lighting

Installations with Our Expert-Selected Tools

With these tools at your disposal, you're not just prepared to tackle any permanent installation challenge—you're equipped to excel. Our products are selected for their reliability, effectiveness, and ease of use, ensuring you can deliver exceptional, long-lasting results with every project. Whether you're expanding your services or just beginning your journey in the permanent Christmas lighting installation business, we're here to support your success every step of the way.

Christmas light installation business

Struggling to Grow? Here’s What’s Holding Your Business Back!

March 03, 202510 min read

In the competitive world of Christmas lights installation, many entrepreneurs find themselves struggling to grow beyond a certain point. Some installers reach $50,000 in their first season and plateau, while others push to $150,000, $500,000, or even seven figures. The difference isn't luck or market size—it's focus. The principle that "what you water grows" is fundamental to building a Christmas lights business that can scale to impressive heights.

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The Danger of Off-Season Diversification

As Christmas light installers, we face a unique challenge: the seasonal nature of our business. When January rolls around and the last lights come down, there's a natural temptation to immediately pivot to other services—pressure washing, landscape lighting, gutter cleaning—to maintain income throughout the year.

While diversification seems logical, it often leads to scattered focus. When you divide your attention between multiple service lines, none receives the concentrated energy needed to truly flourish. Just like dividing a gallon of water among ten plants instead of focusing it on one or two, your growth becomes stunted across all ventures.

Many of the most successful Christmas lights businesses have grown to seven figures by focusing intensely on Christmas lights year-round—not just during installation season.

The Year-Round Christmas Lights Business

Despite being a seasonal service, successful Christmas light installation businesses operate on a 12-month cycle:

  • January-February: Takedowns, inventory management, and beginning early commercial outreach

  • March-May: Active commercial client acquisition, HOA presentations, and system refinement

  • June-August: Residential pre-booking, staff recruitment, and inventory ordering

  • September-November: Installation season preparation, marketing execution, and hiring completion

  • November-December: Peak installation season

  • Year-round: Building relationships, refining systems, and planning growth

By treating Christmas lights as a year-round business rather than a seasonal side gig, you can develop the focus needed to scale beyond what most installers ever achieve.

Commercial Accounts: The Foundation of Scale

Residential installations can form the backbone of a starting Christmas lights business, but commercial accounts are typically the key to achieving substantial scale. HOAs, shopping centers, office complexes, and municipalities offer several advantages:

  1. Larger contract values ($10,000-$100,000+ per season)

  2. Earlier commitment (often booking 6-9 months in advance)

  3. Multi-year potential with annual renewals

  4. Less price sensitivity than residential customers

  5. Fewer decision-makers to manage (one property manager vs. dozens of homeowners)

Securing these accounts requires persistent effort. Successful installers often report making 15-25 outreach calls daily for weeks or months before landing significant commercial accounts. This persistence separates those who scale to six and seven figures from those who remain small.

The most effective approach is simple but demanding: identify potential commercial clients, make consistent contact through calls and emails, build relationships rather than pushing for immediate sales, and follow up persistently until you secure the opportunity to bid.

Commercial Christmas Lights business

The Power of Getting Off the Roof

A critical milestone in scaling any Christmas lights business is transitioning from installer to business owner. Many entrepreneurs hit an income ceiling because they're trapped performing $20-30 per hour installation tasks instead of focusing on $100-1000 per hour business development activities.

To grow beyond a one-crew operation, you must:

  1. Hire and train reliable installation teams

  2. Develop precise installation systems that maintain quality without your presence

  3. Focus your time on sales, marketing, and commercial relationship building

  4. Leverage your unique expertise for business growth rather than daily installation

This transition isn't easy—it requires overcoming fears about quality control and developing trust in your team. For many installers, the second season becomes the proving ground for this transition, allowing them to scale significantly in their third year.

Pricing for Profitability and Growth

One of the most common limitations to growth is inadequate pricing. Many Christmas lights installers undervalue their services, failing to account for the true costs of:

  • Equipment depreciation

  • Off-season business development

  • Takedown labor and logistics

  • Storage costs throughout the year

  • Warranty service and bulb replacements

  • Your time as the business owner and manager

Successful installers typically charge a minimum of $10 per foot for residential installations, with commercial pricing structured strategically based on scope and complexity. Remember that proper pricing:

  1. Attracts quality clients who value professional service

  2. Provides the capital needed to invest in growth

  3. Allows you to hire and retain excellent staff

  4. Funds your marketing and business development

Underpricing creates the illusion of success during installation season, but the reality becomes clear during takedown and off-season when cash flow tightens. Price appropriately from the beginning to fund sustainable growth.

Marketing with Precision and Persistence

Effective marketing for Christmas lights installation requires both precision and persistence. Rather than scattering efforts across numerous channels, successful businesses typically:

  1. Identify 2-3 marketing methods that work in their specific market

  2. Track results meticulously to understand return on investment

  3. Scale successful channels aggressively rather than constantly switching tactics

  4. Begin marketing campaigns months before the competition

For residential clients, this might include strategic yard signs with tracking numbers, targeted social media advertising, and proactive outreach to past clients. For commercial accounts, it typically involves direct outreach, relationship building with property managers, and strategic networking.

Whatever marketing approaches you choose, commit to them fully rather than abandoning them prematurely when instant results don't materialize. Marketing momentum builds over time, and consistency often determines success.

Christmas lights installation

Systems: The Foundation for Scaling

As your Christmas lights business grows beyond what you can personally oversee, systems become your critical path to success. These include:

  • Lead qualification: Efficiently identifying which prospects match your ideal client profile

  • Estimation: Standardized pricing and bidding processes that ensure profitability

  • Installation protocols: Step-by-step methods ensuring consistent quality across crews

  • Inventory management: Tracking materials, ordering efficiently, and minimizing waste

  • Client communication: Standard procedures for initial contact, installation day, and follow-up

  • Takedown coordination: Organized scheduling and execution of removals

  • Storage systems: Proper labeling, organization, and maintenance during off-season

  • Commercial relationship management: Structured follow-up and communication throughout the year

Without these systems, growth becomes chaotic and ultimately unsustainable. With them, you create a business that can scale predictably while maintaining quality and profitability.

Building the Right Team

Your ability to scale ultimately depends on building a reliable team. For Christmas lights installation, this presents unique challenges due to the seasonal nature of the work. Successful businesses address this through:

  1. Partnering with complementary seasonal businesses: Finding workers whose primary jobs slow during winter (roofers, landscapers, etc.)

  2. Creating exceptional seasonal compensation: Offering premium pay for quality seasonal work

  3. Developing clear advancement paths: Showing ambitious team members how they can grow with your company

  4. Focusing on culture and work environment: Making your company the best place to work during the season

  5. Building year-round core staff: Keeping key team members engaged in off-season planning and preparation

The quality of your team will ultimately determine your capacity for growth, so invest accordingly in finding, training, and retaining excellent people.

Finding Your "Why" Beyond Profit

The most sustainable motivation for building a successful Christmas lights business isn't money alone. The seasonal demands are too intense and the work too challenging to be driven solely by profit.

Successful installers are typically motivated by:

  • Creating a magical experience for clients during the holiday season

  • Building something their family can be proud of

  • Providing exceptional seasonal opportunities for their team

  • Transforming their communities during the holidays

  • Creating freedom and opportunity for themselves through entrepreneurship

When you connect your daily business activities to this deeper purpose, you'll find the resilience needed to overcome challenges and the passion required to truly excel in this industry.

Your Path to Scale

The path to building a six or seven-figure Christmas lights installation business isn't mysterious or complex, but it does require focused effort:

  1. Treat Christmas lights as your primary business focus year-round

  2. Build systems that enable quality without your constant presence

  3. Transition from installer to business owner by getting off the roof

  4. Pursue commercial accounts with persistent, professional outreach

  5. Price appropriately to fund sustainable growth

  6. Market consistently with emphasis on tracking and scaling what works

  7. Build a reliable team with clear systems and expectations

  8. Connect your work to a deeper purpose that sustains your motivation

By applying these principles with disciplined focus—truly watering what you want to grow—you can build a Christmas lights installation business that provides not just seasonal income, but true prosperity and fulfillment.

Christmas lights installation

1. How can I operate a Christmas lights business year-round?

Answer: Divide your year into strategic phases: January-February for takedowns and inventory; March-May for commercial client acquisition; June-August for pre-booking and staff planning; September-October for final preparation; and November-December for installations. By maintaining this cycle, you'll build momentum year-round rather than starting from scratch each season.

2. When should I stop doing installations myself?

Answer: Begin transitioning off the roof during your first season and aim to be primarily in a management role by your second season. Your time is more valuable in sales and business development ($100-1000/hour) than in installation work ($20-30/hour). Hire and train reliable crew members so you can focus on growth activities that only you can perform.

3. How do I secure commercial Christmas lights accounts?

Answer: Start early—ideally 6-9 months before installation season. Identify potential clients (HOAs, shopping centers, office complexes), make 15-25 calls daily during your acquisition phase, and focus on relationship building. Prepare professional proposals with photos of your best work, and follow up consistently. Most competitors wait until September to begin outreach, giving you a significant advantage by starting in March.

4. What should I charge for Christmas lights installation?

Answer: Charge a minimum of $10 per foot for residential installations, with premium options at $12-15+ per foot. Commercial pricing should be strategic based on scope and complexity. Account for all costs: materials, installation labor, takedown labor, warranty service, storage, and management. Proper pricing attracts quality clients while providing capital for growth and profitability.

5. How do I build a reliable seasonal installation team?

Answer: Partner with workers from complementary seasonal businesses (roofers, landscapers) whose work slows in winter. Offer premium pay ($25-45/hour) to attract reliable workers. Create documented systems that make training efficient. Build a positive culture that makes your company the best seasonal workplace. Maintain communication with top performers year-round and offer early commitment bonuses for returning crew members.

Christmas lights installation

6. What are the most effective marketing strategies for Christmas lights?

Answer: Focus on 2-3 channels and execute them exceptionally well: yard signs at active installations (with tracking numbers), strategic social media advertising starting in September, early-bird promotions for returning clients, and direct outreach to high-end neighborhoods. For commercial clients, begin marketing 6-9 months before season; for residential, 2-3 months before. Track results meticulously to identify your most profitable marketing channels.

7. How do I manage inventory efficiently?

Answer: Develop detailed takedown protocols where each client's lights are labeled and inventoried. Create a standardized storage system organized by client or product type. Assess inventory post-season and order new materials by June-July to avoid supply chain issues. Maintain a 20-30% buffer beyond projected needs for growth opportunities and replacements. Conduct mid-season inventory checks to prevent shortages during peak installation periods.

8. When should I expand beyond Christmas lights?

Answer: Wait until your Christmas lights business reaches at least $500,000 in annual revenue with strong systems in place. You should have reliable management, documented procedures, healthy profit margins, and clear capacity to handle additional complexity. Many successful businesses add complementary services like permanent landscape lighting only after fully maximizing their core business. Adding services prematurely typically dilutes focus and stunts growth.

9. How do I handle seasonal cash flow challenges?

Answer: Structure pricing to include 50% deposits at booking. Secure commercial contracts 6-9 months in advance. Offer early booking incentives that generate summer revenue. Build a substantial cash reserve during peak season (25-30% of annual revenue). Create careful monthly budgets for off-season expenses. Aim to secure 40-50% of your annual revenue through deposits before installation season begins, and manage takedown timing to collect final payments before major expenses in January.

10. What systems are essential for scaling beyond the owner?

Answer: Develop and document systems for: lead qualification, estimation, installation protocols, quality control, client communication, crew management, takedown coordination, inventory management, storage, and commercial relationship management. Start by documenting one system at a time, beginning with whichever process currently causes the most bottlenecks. As you add team members, these documented systems ensure consistency and quality while reducing your personal involvement in daily operations.

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Jason Geiman

Jason Geiman parlayed his early passion for festive lighting into a thriving Christmas décor installation company which he founded and grew for over 4 years before selling the business in 2018. Now, he draws from his experience scaling a holiday lighting venture to help other Christmas lighting companies maximize their success. Jason feels compelled to share shortcuts he learned running his decoration operation. Jason has made it his mission to enable both residential and commercial clients to execute jaw-dropping lighting displays more easily. He loves experimenting with the latest high-tech LED bulb innovations to incorporate into his instructional programs and resources for those running their own Christmas lighting businesses. After selling his original company, he reinvented himself - driven as ever to spread seasonal magic, but now by helping others grow their holiday lighting ventures successfully. Follow Jason for regular tips on taking your Christmas lights business to the next level!

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