For most plumbing contractors, the business started with the work. Years of early mornings, dirty jobs, and hard-earned reputation built customer by customer. And for a long time, that was enough. A good name in the right neighborhood kept the phone ringing and the trucks moving. But at some point, for many operators, the referrals plateau. The slow seasons get harder to weather. And the gap between the business they have and the business they want starts to feel wider than it should. That’s the problem Zach Rogers set out to solve. And the path that led him there wasn’t what anyone would have predicted.
Zach Rogers is not a plumber. He never ran a service call, pulled a permit, or replaced a water heater. What he is, and has been since he was young, is someone who thinks about how businesses grow, what makes them thrive in good seasons and survive in slow ones, and what separates the operators who scale from the ones who stay stuck. That curiosity led him to college for business. But it didn’t keep him there long.
Sitting in class one day, his professor asked a simple question: “Who here actually wants to own a business one day? Zach looked around the room. Nobody else raised their hand. If he was surrounded by people studying business with no real intention of building one, what was he doing there? He left shortly after, not out of frustration, but out of clarity. College wasn’t the path. Finding the right opportunity was.
He came home and got to work. Nothing glamorous at first, just staying busy, keeping his eyes open, and waiting for the right problem to solve. It didn’t take long for one to find him.
His uncle had been running a plumbing company for years. Good reputation, solid work, loyal customers. But the phone wasn’t ringing like it used to. Referrals came and went. Some months were strong. Others were slow enough to cause real stress. His uncle needed more business and didn’t have a clear way to get it.
Zach volunteered to help. He had no marketing background and no playbook, just a willingness to figure it out. He started running ads. The first attempts weren’t perfect. Some campaigns missed. Some money got spent on calls that went nowhere. But Zach kept adjusting, kept learning, and eventually the results started to show. The phone rang more consistently. The jobs came in more reliably. His uncle’s business stabilized.
Word spread the way it tends to in the trades, one contractor telling another. Other plumbers started reaching out, each one carrying a version of the same problem: a good business, a skilled crew, and not enough reliable incoming work to match their capacity. Zach kept saying yes. And what started as a favor for family quietly became something bigger.
What he noticed, talking to contractor after contractor, was that the problem was never the quality of the work. These were serious operators, guys who had built real businesses, trained real teams, and earned real loyalty from their customers. The problem was always the same thing: no reliable system for bringing in new work. They were dependent on referrals that came and went on their own schedule, seasonal spikes they couldn’t control, and Google reviews they had to constantly chase just to stay visible. When it worked, it worked. When it didn’t, there was nothing to fall back on.
That gap between the business’s quality and the pipeline’s consistency is exactly what The Plumber’s Collective was built to close. Not with generic marketing tactics borrowed from other industries, and not with vanity metrics that look good on a report but don’t translate to booked jobs. With a focused, practical system designed around how plumbing businesses actually operate and what their customers actually respond to.
Today, The Plumber’s Collective works with contractors who run three or more trucks and want more booked jobs, more consistency, and a business they can plan around rather than just react to. The contractors who come to Zach aren’t failing. They’re just ready to stop leaving growth up to chance.
To learn more, visit www.theplumberscollective.com.










