Why Young Entrepreneurs Get Underestimated, And How Nolan Buchanan Proved Everyone Wrong
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There's something powerful about sitting across from someone and realizing they've already figured out things it took most people decades to understand.
That's the feeling I walked away with after this conversation with Nolan Buchanan.
Nolan is the founder of Northlake Pressure Washing out of the greater Cleveland area, and he started this business at 15 years old. Not as a summer side hustle. As a real company, with SOPs, a training program, a performance pay structure, and a vision for what it looks like in five years.
What we talk about in this episode:
It starts the way a lot of great things do, a grandfather, a power washer, and a weekend visit to Kentucky. Nolan takes us back to the moment the business became possible, and then walks through exactly how he turned possibility into a paying operation with no driver's license and no budget. His first marketing move? Free jobs for Google reviews and a Facebook post in the local community group. Simple. Deliberate. Effective.
We get into the competitive reality of the pressure washing industry, an unlicensed field where anyone can show up with a machine and cause thousands of dollars in damage to your siding, your concrete, or your roof. Nolan explains the difference between high-pressure and soft wash techniques, and why Northlake's commitment to doing it right is what separates them.
Then we talk about something that I think is the mark of a genuinely sophisticated operator: building a team the right way. Nolan built a McDonald's-style training SOP before most people his age have their first resume together. Two-week shadowing periods, a 10-point accountability system, and a performance pay model designed to build careers, not just fill shifts.
We also talk about something I noticed watching Nolan navigate the professional world: the challenge of being young in rooms full of people who assume you need their advice. I called it "age-splaining." He called it "finding the loophole." Either way, it's a dynamic he's handled with a lot more grace than I would have at his age.
The LEAP framework that drives Future Proof is about knowing where you've been, where you are, and where you're going, and protecting the dream that gets you there. Nolan has that in abundance.
If you're a business owner, a parent of a young entrepreneur, or just someone who finds it energizing to watch someone get it right, this episode is for you.