There’s a certain point every year when things stop ramping up and just … stay busy.
For many of you, April is that point. The phones don’t stop ringing and the service queue doesn’t clear. Days start earlier, end later and never feel long enough. It’s the season you prepare for, count on and rely on, but it’s also the one that demands the most from you.
And when everything is moving that fast, it’s easy to become focused on only what’s right in front of you. The next customer. The next repair. The next purchase going out the door.
I’ve found that in seasons like this — not just in this industry, but in life — it’s not usually the big things that get dropped: it’s the small ones. The quick check-ins. The conversations that don’t feel urgent. The moments that don’t have an immediate payoff. But those are often the things that matter most. Your customers are feeling the same pressure you are right now. They’re trying to keep crews running, schedules intact and jobs moving forward. A little extra communication, a little patience or even just acknowledging that shared urgency can make a bigger impression than you might think. It’s easy to treat busy season like a transaction period, but it’s harder — and often more valuable — to treat it like a relationship-building one.
The same goes for your partners: manufacturers, distributors and suppliers are all navigating the same surge. Things won’t always go perfectly this time of year, but how those moments are handled — the flexibility, the communication, the willingness to work through challenges — those are the things that build long-term partnerships. Internally, this time of year will test even the strongest teams. Long hours and constant demand don’t leave much room for missteps. A quick conversation, clear direction or simply recognizing someone’s effort can go a long way in keeping things moving in the right direction.
Then there’s the part that doesn’t get talked about as much this time of year. Everything outside of work.
This industry is built around helping customers maintain their properties, their businesses and their livelihoods. But during the busiest stretch of the year, it often leaves little time to maintain your own connections: family time gets pushed, plans get postponed and days blur together. This season is what it is. But even in the middle of it all, it’s so, so important to stay connected: a quick call, a shared moment or just a few minutes without distraction. That time spent on the relationships that matter most won’t change the pace of the season, but it can change how it feels.
Busy season will always demand your time. The question is what — and who — you make sure still gets it.
-Brian Ethridge