Wholesale Pricing Presale Christmas Lights Minis
Pre-Season 50L 6" Spacing 5mm LED Mini Lights (Concave) 24/Case
AS LOW AS $6.95 Per STRAND!
50 Count 5mm Wide LED Lights: Each string features 50 high-quality LED bulbs spaced 6 inches apart on a 25-foot green wire. These lights are ideal for wrapping trees, bushes, and architectural features, providing a uniform and vibrant display that enhances any project.
High Connectivity for Large Installations: Connect up to 45 strings safely, allowing you to tackle large-scale installations with ease. This makes them perfect for professional installers managing multiple projects or expansive commercial properties.
Long-Lasting Performance: With a lifespan of up to 50,000 hours, these LED lights are built to withstand the rigors of professional use, ensuring they remain bright and reliable throughout the holiday season and beyond.
Patented One-Piece Construction: The innovative design prevents moisture-related corrosion, offering longer-lasting performance in all weather conditions. This durability is essential for outdoor installations where reliability is a must.
Energy Efficiency for Cost Savings: These LED mini lights consume up to 90% less energy than traditional incandescent bulbs, allowing you to reduce operational costs while maintaining a stunning display. This efficiency is especially important for large installations where energy consumption can quickly add up.
Virtually Unbreakable: The bulbs are engineered to be virtually unbreakable, with colors that won’t fade, chip, or crack. This durability means fewer replacements and more time to focus on new projects.
Pre-Balled for Efficient Setup: Time is money in professional installations, and these pre-balled lights ensure quick and easy setup, allowing you to complete projects faster and move on to the next job.
Meets UL 588 Safety Standards: Compliance with UL 588 safety standards ensures these lights are safe for both indoor and outdoor use, giving you peace of mind as you install them in various environments.
50-count 5mm wide Minleon LED lights, spaced 6″ apart on green wire, with a total length of 25ft.
Safely connect up to 45 strings, making large displays easy to create.
Lifespan up to 50,000 hours, ensuring your lights last season after season.
Energy-efficient LEDs, using up to 90% less energy than traditional lights.
Virtually unbreakable bulbs that won’t fade, chip, or crack over time.
Pre-balled for easy Installation, so you can set up quickly and hassle-free.
Meets all UL safety standards, ensuring your display is safe and reliable.
All White temperature match to the C7&C9 Minleon Bulbs
Pre-Season 70L 4" Spacing Concave LED Mini Lights - 24/Case
As Low as $7.92 per Strand
70 Count 5mm Wide LED Lights: With 70 LED bulbs spaced 4 inches apart on a 23.5-foot green wire, these lights offer a more concentrated and impactful look compared to 50L sets. The smaller spacing results in a denser display of lights, drawing more attention with brighter, more intense illumination.
High Connectivity: Safely connect up to 45 strings, making these lights ideal for extensive installations that require consistent, reliable lighting across large areas.
Long Lifespan: Enjoy up to 50,000 hours of bright, consistent light. These bulbs are built to last, reducing the need for frequent replacements and maintenance.
Patented One-Piece Construction: This design eliminates the risk of moisture-related corrosion, ensuring longer-lasting lights even in challenging outdoor environments.
Energy Efficient: LED technology allows these lights to use up to 90% less energy than traditional incandescent bulbs, lowering energy costs and enabling longer runs without overloading circuits.
Virtually Unbreakable Bulbs: The durable construction of these bulbs ensures they are virtually unbreakable, with colors that won’t fade, chip, or crack, keeping your displays vibrant year after year.
Pre-Balled for Quick Setup: These lights come pre-balled, making installation quick and easy, allowing you to complete projects faster and with less effort.
Meets UL 588 Safety Standards: These lights are certified for both indoor and outdoor use, meeting all safety standards and providing peace of mind during installation.
Pre-Season Minleon 70L Mini Lights - 24/Case
AS LOW AS $9.37 Per STRAND!
These bulbs are made of durable, multi-faceted plastic so they won't fade, chip, or break like incandescent bulbs
Reduce your power consumption by more than 90% compared with conventional incandescent bulbs)
0.58W and 0.66W actual power consumption, but use 2W for installation calculation purposes
Fits into any standard C7 socket; E12 base
Yes, these lights are built for both indoor and outdoor use. They meet UL 588 safety standards, ensuring they are safe and reliable in all environments.
The Minleon LED mini lights have an impressive lifespan of up to 50,000 hours, ensuring they remain bright and reliable for multiple holiday seasons.
You can safely connect up to 45 strings of Minleon LED mini lights, making them perfect for large-scale installations or extensive holiday displays.
Absolutely! The LED technology in these lights uses up to 90% less energy than traditional incandescent bulbs, helping you save on energy costs while still delivering a brilliant display.
The Minleon LED mini lights are designed with virtually unbreakable bulbs that are resistant to fading, chipping, or cracking, and they feature a patented one-piece construction that prevents moisture-related corrosion for longer-lasting performance.
These lights come pre-balled, making the setup process quick and hassle-free, so you can complete your installations faster and move on to the next job with ease.
What is the difference between concave vs convex
Concave Christmas lights feature a flat or slightly rounded top with a wider, bowl-shaped base. This design distributes light evenly in all directions, creating a bright, uniform glow visible from any angle. Professionals often choose concave lights for projects like wrapping trees because the even light distribution creates a sparkling effect as you move around the tree, adding depth and vibrancy to the display. In contrast, convex Christmas lights have a rounded or dome-shaped bulb that focuses light outward in a more directional manner. This creates a brighter, more concentrated point of light, making them ideal for installations requiring precise lighting placement, such as highlighting architectural features. Both designs offer unique benefits depending on the desired effect and application.

The Christmas lights installation industry sees a predictable pattern each year: new installers enter the market charging rock-bottom prices, struggle through a season or two, and quietly disappear. Meanwhile, premium-priced operators thrive, scale their businesses, and build sustainable six and seven-figure enterprises. Understanding why this happens—and how to avoid the cheap installer's fate—can mean the difference between building a real business and creating an exhausting, unprofitable job for yourself.
Recent training sessions demonstrate what separates successful installers from those who remain stuck. Eighteen attendees gathered for an intensive weekend focused not just on learning, but on immediate implementation. While some participants took notes and planned future action, one attendee created and posted 20 videos during the training itself. That's the difference between learning and doing—and doing is what generates results.
The weekend featured expert guest instruction on recruiting and leadership from someone who built and sold a $2.5 million business with over 50 employees. Attendees didn't just absorb information—they optimized LinkedIn profiles, sent connection requests, created videos, and posted content in real-time. One participant received a lead while still in the training session because he took immediate action rather than waiting for perfect conditions.
Google's automated ranking systems are designed to present helpful, reliable information that's primarily created to benefit people, and similarly, your business systems should prioritize serving customers over operational perfection. Action beats perfection every time.
"Endless Customers" deserves special mention as required reading for anyone serious about building a thriving installation business. However, reading without action produces zero results. The book provides frameworks and strategies, but implementation determines outcomes. If you're not willing to execute the concepts, save yourself the reading time.
The key is consistent action. Posting three videos and declaring "it didn't work" misses the point entirely. Success comes from sustained, consistent effort over weeks and months, not from sporadic attempts followed by quitting when immediate results don't materialize.
Understanding why cheap pricing creates a death spiral helps installers avoid this trap. The cycle follows a predictable pattern:
Low-priced operators buy the cheapest possible materials—often incandescent lights or bottom-tier LED products from unreliable suppliers. These materials fail frequently, creating callback nightmares that consume profit and damage reputation. When you're waiting for shipments from China with uncertain quality and delivery timelines, you can't serve customers reliably.
When charging $4-$6 per foot, there's no margin to pay competitive wages. Workers can earn $20 per hour at McDonald's without climbing ladders in freezing weather. Why would quality employees work for $10 per hour in dangerous conditions when easier options exist? The result: constant turnover, poor workmanship, and the owner doing most work themselves.
Without healthy margins, marketing becomes unaffordable. How do you invest in yard signs, Facebook ads, or professional branding when there's barely enough profit to cover materials and labor? The business becomes trapped—unable to generate leads without marketing, unable to afford marketing without better margins.
Cheap operators stay stuck doing everything themselves. There's no capital to invest in CRM software, hiring administrative help, developing training materials, or creating operational systems. The owner becomes the bottleneck, personally handling sales, installation, customer service, and takedown. This isn't a business—it's an exhausting, low-paying job.
After materials, labor (even underpaid labor), insurance (if they carry it), and minimal overhead, cheap installers earn little to nothing. Many don't even realize they're operating at a loss when accounting for their time and liability exposure. One installer charging $5 per foot and taking three hours per $1,000 job nets perhaps $2,000 daily—before expenses, insurance, and overhead. That's unsustainable.

Contrast the death spiral with how premium-priced operators build sustainable businesses:
Premium operators buy quality LED products with warranties from reliable suppliers offering two-day shipping. When equipment fails, warranty replacements arrive quickly. There's no worrying whether materials will arrive or if they'll work properly. This reliability alone justifies higher pricing.
Competitive wages attract quality employees who show up consistently, work safely, and treat customers professionally. When workers are paid well, they take pride in their work and become ambassadors for your brand. Internal customers (employees) who feel valued create better experiences for external customers (paying clients).
Content should demonstrate first-hand expertise and depth of knowledge, and when you invest in employee development, your team demonstrates that expertise to every customer they serve.
Ten percent of revenue allocated to marketing—a sustainable number at premium pricing—generates consistent lead flow. With healthy margins, spending $5,000-$10,000 monthly on marketing feels reasonable because the return justifies the investment. Knowing that 80% of customers return annually makes customer acquisition costs even more palatable.
Real profit—money left after all expenses, including proper owner compensation—funds business growth. Premium operators invest in CRM systems, safety equipment, training programs, and additional crews. Profit creates options: scale the business, take time off, invest in new equipment, or simply enjoy the rewards of entrepreneurship.
With adequate resources, premium operators develop systems and processes that allow the business to run without their constant involvement. Checklists, training manuals, CRM workflows, and standard operating procedures mean quality remains consistent regardless of which crew handles installation. Systems separate business owners from self-employed technicians.
Many installers obsess over competitors charging $2-$5 per foot while ignoring the economics of their ideal customer. Consider the typical premium customer profile:
The Stay-at-Home Mom in the Million-Dollar Home
Her mortgage payment: $8,000-$10,000 monthly. Her Cadillac Escalade or Yukon: $2,000 monthly payment. Daily Starbucks: $10 per day = $300 monthly = $3,600 annually. She spends more on coffee than many installers charge for complete installations.
Yet installers worry this customer won't pay $1,500-$3,000 for professional holiday lighting? The disconnect reveals the real problem: not customer unwillingness to pay, but installer unwillingness to believe they're worth premium pricing.
People in every market purchase luxury vehicles, designer accessories, and premium services daily. The money exists. The question is whether you believe your service deserves a portion of that discretionary spending.

Understanding why customers select premium-priced installers over cheap alternatives helps frame your value proposition:
Premium operators present professionally from first contact through project completion. Clean vehicles, uniformed crews, prompt responses, and clear communication signal competence and reliability.
When issues arise—and they occasionally do—premium operators respond immediately. Lights go out? They're fixed within 24 hours. Time for takedown? It happens on schedule without the customer chasing the installer. This reliability has real value.
Premium customers want peace of mind that if something goes wrong, they're protected. Proper insurance, safety equipment, and professional practices justify higher pricing because they transfer risk from customer to installer.
Jobs completed in 45-90 minutes rather than 3 hours reflect systems and training. One installer charging $5 per foot takes three hours per $1,000 job, earning $2,000 daily (before expenses). A premium operator charging $10 per foot completes similar jobs in 90 minutes, servicing 4-5 properties daily at higher margins. The difference? Systems, training, and experience.
The most common limiting belief sounds like: "Nobody in my area will pay more than $6 per foot." This reveals the real problem: you don't believe you're worth more, so you'll never charge more—or if you try, your lack of confidence kills the sale.
One installer insisted his market wouldn't support premium pricing. Everyone charged $5 per foot, he explained. When asked what he did for extremely steep roofs requiring lifts, he admitted raising prices to $10 per foot—and customers paid without objection. This proves customers will pay premium prices when value is properly presented.
The math is simple: raising prices from $6 to $8 per foot (a 33% increase) generates the same revenue from 25% fewer jobs. That's less wear on equipment, less risk exposure, less labor cost, and more profit. Raising from $6 to $10 per foot means doing 40% fewer jobs for the same revenue—and likely banking double the profit.
One installer couldn't understand why he closed so few jobs. During conversation, he said "um" twenty times in a few minutes. That verbal tick signals uncertainty and lack of confidence—exactly what customers don't want from someone they're hiring to work on their home.
If you say "um" 20-50 times during a sales conversation, customers subconsciously question your competence. They wonder: "If he's this uncertain about his service, why would I trust him on my roof?"
Eliminating filler words requires awareness and practice. Record yourself during practice calls. Count your "ums," "uhs," and "likes." Then deliberately slow down your speech, thinking before speaking. Within weeks, filler words decrease dramatically, and closing rates improve correspondingly.
This point deserves emphasis: answer your phone, or pay someone to answer it for you. Spending thousands on yard signs and Facebook ads while letting calls go to voicemail is self-sabotage. Every missed call represents lost revenue—potentially a $2,000-$5,000 job that goes to the competitor who answered.
If you're on the roof and can't answer professionally, that's the signal to hire someone for phone coverage. But you can't afford that hire if you're charging $5 per foot. Premium pricing funds the administrative support that allows you to stay on jobs while someone else handles incoming calls professionally.

When conducting in-person estimates, pre-qualifying prevents wasting time on price shoppers. However, avoid terms like "minimum" that create psychological resistance. Instead, frame it positively:
"Our packages start at just $900, which includes design, professional-grade LED lights, installation, maintenance, and takedown. Does that sound like the level of service you're looking for?"
Then stop talking. Listen. Their response tells you immediately whether to schedule the appointment. A "yes" means they're a qualified prospect. Hesitation or "that's way more than I expected" means they're probably not your ideal customer—and that's fine. Better to know before driving to their property.
Installers frequently complain that "the market is getting flooded with competitors." This reveals obsession with competition rather than customers. Ask these installers about their business metrics—average ticket, close rate, customer acquisition cost—and they draw blanks. But they can tell you everything about competitors: pricing, number of reviews, service areas, even personal details about the owners.
This backward focus guarantees failure. Instead of worrying about competitors, focus on serving customers exceptionally well. There are thousands of potential customers in any market. You don't need everyone—just 100-200 quality clients paying $1,500-$3,000 generates $150,000-$600,000 revenue.
Competitors charging $4 per foot aren't your competition. They serve price-sensitive customers who aren't your target market anyway. Premium customers actively avoid the cheapest option because they associate low prices with low quality and unreliability.
October sales typically run slower than November, creating anxiety for inexperienced installers. This is normal seasonal pattern, not a business problem. Unless you've executed strong marketing all year and developed excellent closing skills, expect modest October sales followed by November explosion.
Don't panic if bookings feel slow in mid-October. Weather changes trigger psychological shifts—as temperatures drop and Halloween approaches, holiday mindset activates. Customers who browsed websites in September suddenly become ready to commit. November typically delivers 60-70% of seasonal sales for most markets.
Use slower October periods for marketing intensification. Deploy yard signs aggressively, post daily on social media, engage on LinkedIn, and follow up with leads from earlier outreach. This groundwork positions you for November's surge.
Every successful installer shares one trait: massive action despite imperfect conditions. They post videos even when uncomfortable on camera. They deploy yard signs with "good enough" designs rather than waiting for perfect artwork. They close jobs before mastering every installation technique.
One training attendee had never created a video before the weekend. He volunteered to demonstrate something on camera despite nervousness. Then he downloaded CapCut (a video editing app) for the first time, edited his clip, and posted it during the training. That video generated 1,300 views within hours—simply because he took action instead of waiting for perfect skills or conditions.
That's the difference between winners and waiters. Winners act despite uncertainty. Waiters seek perfect conditions that never arrive.

Cheap pricing creates a death spiral: poor materials lead to callbacks, low margins prevent paying quality workers, no marketing budget stops lead generation, and absence of profit eliminates ability to invest in systems. Premium pricing funds quality materials, competitive wages, marketing budgets, and system development—creating sustainable, scalable businesses rather than exhausting jobs.
Aim for $8-$12 per foot as a baseline for quality service. Markets with strong economies and established customer bases support $10-$14 per foot or higher. Some installations reach $20 per foot when design complexity, difficulty, or customer expectations justify premium pricing. Never charge below $8 per foot—it's unsustainable long-term.
Recognize you're serving different market segments. Budget installers attract price-sensitive customers comparing quotes down to the penny. Premium operators attract quality-focused customers valuing professionalism, reliability, and peace of mind. Don't compete on price—compete on value, expertise, and customer experience. The customer objecting to your pricing probably isn't your ideal client anyway.
Never discount in October. Customers who book at discounted rates in October will expect the same pricing when they refer neighbors or rebook next year. If you're booked solid in October, raise prices or add crews—don't discount. Early bookings at full price train customers that your value justifies your pricing year-round.
Record yourself during practice calls and count filler words. Most people dramatically underestimate their usage. Once aware, deliberately slow your speech, pausing to think before speaking rather than filling silence with "um." Practice daily for 2-3 weeks and filler words decrease 70-80%, dramatically improving perceived competence and confidence.

A DBA (Doing Business As) costs $15-$20 and allows you to operate under a business name while remaining a sole proprietor. An LLC provides liability protection but costs $200-$500 to establish. For first-year operators testing the business, start with a DBA to keep a professional Christmas lights brand separate from other services like pressure washing. Upgrade to LLC once revenue justifies the investment.
Start with pitch hoppers ($115) and Cougar Paws roof boots. This combination handles most residential roofs safely and affordably. Add Goat Steep Assist ($600-$700) if you're uncomfortable on roofs and want something to hold onto, or if you frequently work on steep pitches above 8/12. Never cheap out on safety equipment—one fall costs infinitely more than proper gear.
Absolutely. Ask: "Our packages start at just $900, which includes professional design, installation, maintenance, and takedown. Does that sound like the service level you're looking for?" Their response immediately indicates whether they're a qualified prospect. This saves hours driving to appointments with price shoppers who'll never book at your rates.
Fear and lack of confidence. When you don't believe in your own value, you fixate on what competitors charge, thinking lower prices are why they succeed. In reality, most successful operators know little about competitor pricing because they're too busy serving customers. Focus on your metrics—average ticket, close rate, customer satisfaction—not competitor analysis.
Answer your phone professionally every single time, or pay someone to do it for you. Missed calls are lost revenue—potentially $2,000-$5,000 per call. If you can't answer while working, that's the signal to hire phone coverage. Everything else—marketing, training, equipment—becomes irrelevant if you're not converting incoming leads because calls go unanswered.
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