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Jordan Claims 204-Pound Weight Loss Triggered $72 Million Revenue Breakthrough in Plumbing Business

Dropping Bombs · Highest Paying Blue Collar Business Making Millionaires in 2026 · May 27, 2026
Jordan Claims 204-Pound Weight Loss Triggered $72 Million Revenue Breakthrough in Plumbing Business
Dropping Bombs
Dropping Bombs
Highest Paying Blue Collar Business Making Millionaires in 2026
"When I started losing all the weight, right? When I really was like, enough's enough, that's when I really had a breakthrough and we started just growing like crazy. So I was mediocrely successful, right? I had an okay business, but it wasn't anything massive. Not what it is today."
Ben Jordan, owner of Action Plumbing with $72 million in annual revenue, attributes his business explosion directly to losing 204 pounds. He claims the shift in mindset and daily disciplines from his weight loss transformed his plumbing business from mediocre to high eight figures across four states. Jordan swam daily, ate only 1,000 calories of protein and vegetables, and cut all soda for five years, which he says translated directly into business performance.

About this episode

In this episode of Dropping Bombs, host Bradley Roth interviews Ben Jordan, co-owner of Action Plumbing, a multi-state home services company generating $72 million annually. Jordan and his six brothers operate plumbing, HVAC, and electrical businesses across Colorado, Idaho, Arizona, and Utah. The central revelation of the conversation is Jordan's claim that his 204-pound weight loss directly triggered his business transformation from mediocre revenue to high eight figures. He attributes the breakthrough to a mindset shift catalyzed by daily swimming, strict 1,000-calorie dieting, and eliminating soda for five years. Jordan argues that his physical discipline translated into business discipline, enabling him to scale rapidly. He revealed that private equity firms pursuing his company routinely see 80 to 90 percent employee turnover post-acquisition, which has deterred him from exiting despite multiple offers. Jordan also exposed systemic failures in the home services industry, claiming 85 percent of companies lack formal sales training and rely on technicians who cannot close deals. He disclosed that lead costs have surged from $70 to as high as $600, forcing companies to own customers across multiple trades or fail. Jordan now coaches other home services businesses, emphasizing process over individual talent, and advocates for a faith-family-finance-fitness framework. The episode also covered his early career buying a one-man plumbing operation, his missionary background in Spain, and his mother's death from cancer when he was 13. Jordan plans to exit his operating businesses within 24 to 36 months and scale his training organization to become the largest in the trades.

Key takeaways

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