Launch Growth Pack

Help Scoop907 open your ZIP code.

Scoop907 launches like a route business: enough nearby customers, enough reliable workers, and clear property demand. The faster a ZIP shows both demand and coverage, the faster it becomes a real operating zone.

Facebook ready

Copy one. Post one. Then repeat.

These are real buttons, not tracker boxes. Start with the base housing post, then use the worker post after the first one is approved.

Base housing postOpen base groups
Base-access worker postOpen worker groups
Customers

Get your ZIP on the route board.

Book a cleanup or join the launch list with your ZIP, yard size, dog count, access notes, and photos. Recurring homes get priority because dense repeat routes are easier to staff reliably.

Start customer request
Workers

Join the local route roster.

Add the ZIPs you can cover, when you are available, and whether you can legally handle gated communities, bases, campuses, or badge-required sites.

Join worker roster
Properties

Turn pet-waste stations into monthly contracts.

Apartments, HOAs, and dog-friendly properties can request recurring station service, common-area sweeps, proof photos, and one vendor contact.

Request property quote

Route-Density Engine

Open ZIPs when the signals overlap.

Scoop907 can start with an Alaska proof market and still expand anywhere because the model is region-based: collect local demand, recruit local workers, anchor recurring stops, then activate the strongest ZIPs before spending hard on ads.

01Collect demand

Customers request cleanup or join the waitlist with ZIP, yard, dog count, access, and plan intent.

02Map coverage

Workers add the ZIPs they can cover, current availability, and gated or restricted-access capabilities.

03Anchor routes

Properties add station count, common-area needs, and recurring frequency so one stop can support more route value.

04Open by score

Ops activates ZIPs where demand, worker supply, booked value, trust proof, and source momentum overlap.

05Compound trust

Completed jobs create proof photos, private job notes, favorite-worker saves, reviews, and referrals.

Two-Sided Signup Flow

Get customers and workers moving in the same ZIP.

Flow comes from matching both sides locally, not from blasting the whole state. Seed worker coverage, pull customer demand into the same ZIPs, use properties as route anchors, then turn every completed job into proof and referrals.

Customer demandNeighborhood posts, Nextdoor, Google Business Profile, door hangers, and partner referrals

Send every lead to /book or the ZIP waitlist so source, ZIP, and price intent are tracked.

Worker supplyTwo qualified workers per target ZIP before paid demand gets pushed hard

Recruit from gig groups, local Facebook groups, base spouse networks where allowed, and referrals from early workers.

Property anchorsOne apartment, HOA, dog daycare, or pet-friendly rental lead in the route area

Use property quotes to create bigger monthly stops that make the residential route easier to staff.

Proof loopProof photo, private note, favorite worker, review ask, referral ask after every completed job

Turn completed work into trust, then reuse that trust in the same ZIP before expanding elsewhere.

Money Model

Make money from routes, not random jobs.

Scoop907 should make money from recurring residential revenue first, premium one-time resets second, and property contracts as the bigger monthly anchor. Paid ads stay small until ops can see which ZIPs can actually convert.

Recurring homes$79-$129/month weekly, $129-$219/month twice weekly, plus extra-dog and add-on revenue

This is the core margin engine because dense repeat routes lower travel and make worker supply predictable.

Premium resets$89 small, $119 medium, $149 large before rush, extra-dog, deodorizer, or CatBox add-ons

One-time cleanup brings cash in, but it stays priced high enough to push happy customers toward recurring plans.

Property contractsStation service from $149/month, two stations from $249/month, common-area sweeps quoted by layout

Properties become route anchors: fewer customers, larger recurring invoices, and better proof records.

Marketplace marginKeep worker payouts attractive while protecting roughly 25%-35% gross room before processing, support, and ads

Spend on ads only where ZIP demand and worker coverage already overlap, so CAC does not outrun route density.

Lazy Launch Board

Copy, open, post. That is the whole job.

These are the lowest-input launch moves. Copy the post, open the channel, paste it only where local rules allow service posts, and let the ops source map show what worked. For base pages, use the base-specific cards and keep the no-endorsement wording intact.

Step 1 | Customers

Dog owner group

Find one homeowner who will ask about weekly cleanup.

Dog people, I need your honest help: is anyone else tired of playing backyard minesweeper? Scoop907 is opening dog poop cleanup routes by ZIP code. You upload a few yard photos, pick weekly or twice-weekly service, and get upfront pricing before anyone is sent out. If enough homes in the same area raise their hand, that route gets built first. If your dog is creating job security in the backyard, start here: https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=facebook-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=dog-owner-post

https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=facebook-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=dog-owner-post
Step 2 | Customers

Neighborhood page

Test if nearby neighborhoods want recurring routes.

Neighbor question: would you pay someone local to make the dog poop disappear before your shoes find it first? Scoop907 is trying to build weekly cleanup routes by ZIP code. The form asks for yard size, dog count, photos, and gate/access notes so we can see where there is enough demand to run a reliable local route. If your yard has become a tiny crime scene, request cleanup here: https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=nextdoor&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=neighborhood-post

https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=nextdoor&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=neighborhood-post
Open Nextdoor
Step 3 | Base-adjacent customers

Base community page

Reach base-adjacent dog owners without implying endorsement.

Base-area dog owners: if your dog treats the yard like a full-time project, Scoop907 is testing cleanup routes near base housing and nearby ZIP codes. This is not an official base or military endorsement. It is just a practical local service for people who would rather not spend their free time doing poop patrol. If you are in a gated or access-controlled area, the form lets you add gate, badge, escort, or access notes so ops can match the right worker. Request cleanup here: https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=base-community&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-housing

https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=base-community&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-housing
Step 4 | Military families

Base housing spouse group

Get one base-housing cleanup conversation from a 1k+ member group.

Military families near base housing: quick reality check. Between schedules, kids, dogs, moves, and everything else, the backyard does not need to be another unpaid duty station. Scoop907 is testing outdoor dog poop cleanup routes by ZIP/base-adjacent area. This is not an official base or military endorsement. The form supports gate, badge, escort, and access notes so ops can route the right worker when access rules allow it. If you want the yard handled without making it a whole family event, request cleanup or show demand here: https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=military-spouse-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-housing

https://scoop907.com/book?utm_source=military-spouse-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-housing
Step 5 | Workers

Base-access worker post

Find workers who can legally handle gated/base-adjacent access.

Looking for practical route work that is outdoors, straightforward, and definitely not glamorous enough for anyone to lie about it. Scoop907 is building a worker roster for dog waste cleanup near base housing, gated communities, campuses, and badge-required areas. If you can legally access certain areas, follow notes, show up reliably, and upload proof photos, add your ZIPs and access capabilities here. Worker roster: https://scoop907.com/work?utm_source=base-worker-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-access-workers

https://scoop907.com/work?utm_source=base-worker-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=base-access-workers
Step 6 | Workers

Worker/gig post

Add backup worker coverage before demand stacks up.

Odd but honest local route work: Scoop907 is building a roster for outdoor dog waste cleanup. It is a good fit if you can cover specific ZIPs, follow access notes, upload proof photos, and handle recurring route work reliably. It is not fancy. It is just useful, local, and somebody has to save the shoes. Join the worker roster: https://scoop907.com/work?utm_source=craigslist&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=worker-roster

https://scoop907.com/work?utm_source=craigslist&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=worker-roster
Step 7 | Properties

Apartment or HOA DM

Start one property quote conversation for recurring waste stations.

Hi, I run Scoop907. We help dog-friendly properties avoid the classic resident complaint: mystery lawn surprises. We handle residential yards, apartments, HOAs, pet-waste stations, and shared dog areas. For properties, the goal is simple: recurring service, one vendor contact, and proof photos after visits so nobody has to guess whether it was done. If you manage a dog-friendly property and want a quote, send the property request here: https://scoop907.com/properties?utm_source=property-outreach&utm_medium=direct&utm_campaign=hoa-apartment

https://scoop907.com/properties?utm_source=property-outreach&utm_medium=direct&utm_campaign=hoa-apartment

Free Local Ads

Post where pet owners already ask for help.

Do not overbuild paid ads yet. The first win is proving which ZIPs have repeat demand and worker coverage using free local channels.

Neighborhood Facebook groupsNextdoor postsCraigslist local services and gigsDog park bulletin boardsApartment office flyersPet groomer and vet counter cardsLocal jobs and gig groupsHOA and property manager emails

Trackable Links

Every post should tell ops where money came from.

Add source tags to each post or flyer link. Scoop907 now rolls those into the ops source money map so we can see waitlist joins, bookings, workers, property leads, booked value, collected value, and ZIPs by channel.

Customer group post

/book?utm_source=facebook-group&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=zip-30301

Worker recruiting post

/work?utm_source=craigslist&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=worker-roster

Flyer or door hanger

/book?launch_channel=door-hanger&launch_zip=30301

Copy Blocks

Simple messages people can act on.

These are intentionally direct. Send people to Scoop907 pages instead of collecting scattered DMs that become hard to track.

Customer post

Dog owners: Scoop907 is opening dog poop cleanup routes by ZIP code. Upload yard photos, choose weekly or twice-weekly service, and see upfront pricing before dispatch. Start here: /book

Worker post

Scoop907 is building a local worker roster for short outdoor cleanup routes. Add your coverage ZIPs, availability, and access capabilities here: /work

Property message

Scoop907 supports apartments and HOAs with recurring pet-waste station service, common-area dog cleanup, one vendor contact, and proof photos. Request a quote: /properties

ZIP Activation Score

Open routes where the signals stack.

A ZIP is not launch-ready just because one person asks. It becomes launch-ready when customer demand, worker coverage, and repeat service can support a real route.

Customer demand5+ customer requests or waitlist joins in the same ZIP

Start posting weekly-plan offers and ask for yard photos.

Worker coverage2+ workers who can cover the ZIP or nearby ZIPs

Confirm availability, access capabilities, and proof-photo expectations.

Property demand1+ apartment, HOA, or pet-waste station quote request

Send a property outline and ask for station count, layout, and walkthrough window.

Route density3+ recurring homes close enough to service in one run

Prioritize weekly plans over one-time resets until the route is stable.

Fast Replies

Answer objections without writing from scratch.

Use these when people comment, DM, or ask if Scoop907 can already serve them. Keep the answer honest and route them back to the site.

Is this available in my area?

Scoop907 opens routes by ZIP density. Submit your request anyway because customer demand is how we decide which ZIPs get activated next.

Can you come today?

Same-day service is available when a worker and route slot line up, but recurring weekly plans get priority because they make the route reliable.

Do workers enter my home?

No. Scoop907 is built around outdoor service. CatBox Refresh only works when the box is staged in a porch, garage, mudroom, or agreed handoff area.

How do I know the job is done?

Scoop907 uses intake and proof photos so customers, workers, and ops all have a clear completion record.

Daily Launch Loop

One hour a day until the first route is dense.

The goal is not viral attention. The goal is enough repeated signal in one service area to dispatch cleanly and convert homes into weekly plans.

  1. Post one customer message in a local neighborhood, dog owner, or community group.
  2. Post one worker message in a local jobs, gigs, or community group.
  3. Send three property messages to apartments, HOAs, or dog-friendly rentals.
  4. Reply to every interested comment with the correct Scoop907 link.
  5. Track ZIP, source, customer leads, worker leads, bookings, and property leads.
  6. Prioritize ZIPs where customer demand and worker coverage overlap.

7-Day Sprint

Make the first route decision in one week.

Run this sequence manually before spending money on ads. By day seven, the strongest ZIP cluster should be obvious.

  1. Post in two neighborhood or dog-owner groups and track ZIPs.
  2. Post in two worker/gig groups and track coverage ZIPs.
  3. Send 10 property messages to apartments, HOAs, and dog-friendly rentals.
  4. Follow up with every interested customer and push weekly plans first.
  5. Follow up with every worker lead and confirm access capabilities.
  6. Pick the strongest ZIP cluster and post a route-opening update.
  7. Review bookings, workers, property leads, and decide the next ZIP push.

Ready Paths

Pick the lane that matches you.