Guest: Troy Daland — Owner, Air Zero
Guest Links: Website:
https://airzero.com | Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram: Troy Daland
Troy Daland spent 24 years in the Air Force as a CER specialist before launching Air Zero in Tampa, Florida. In this episode, he breaks down how military leadership principles translate directly into building an HVAC company that can scale, why "achieving the high ground" through technology and AI gives technicians an unfair advantage in the field, and the limiting beliefs that keep most owners stuck. The conversation also covers what private equity actually does better (and worse), why customer care drops as companies get bigger, and why being deeply involved in your local community is one of the hardest things for a corporate-owned HVAC company to replicate.
You'll learn:
- How 24 years of Air Force leadership translates into running a service business
- Why training tech proficiency early beats the old school "old guy teaches young guy" model
- Admiral Schumansky's "achieve the high ground" rule and how it applies to HVAC
- Why long-term thinking and knowing your numbers is also a form of high ground
- How AI tools (Claude, OpenAI, Service Titan) give field techs an unfair advantage
- The limiting beliefs that keep most owners stuck at their current revenue level
- Why you sell more when you're sold out for your own company
- Why Florida humidity makes dehumidification a real consultative sale
- What private equity does better: economies of scale, 401k, healthcare, capital
- What private equity does worse: customer care, tech rotation, people first culture
- Why family owned HVAC companies have an unbeatable community involvement advantage
- Why hoarding ideas closes you off from inflow (the sharing economy mindset)
- How being on local trade boards (RACA, Special Operations Memorial Foundation) builds business
- Why limiting beliefs are the most common diagnosis for stuck entrepreneurs