Entrepreneur Crush of the Week is Jeremiah Jarrell of Jack of Some Trades, LLC.
Jack of Some Trades continues to operate across a range of residential and commercial properties, with work spanning from smaller residential neighborhoods to larger coastal properties. The structure of the business reflects a progression from part time work that began in 2012 to a full time operation established in 2020, supported by years of accumulated field experience in both law enforcement and exterior maintenance work.
Jeremiah’s work is defined by a consistent emphasis on preparation, process, and property protection. In practice, that means each project is approached with the same sequence of evaluation and setup regardless of property size. Landscaping is protected and rinsed prior to treatment, sensitive exterior fixtures are accounted for before chemicals are applied, and post-treatment rinsing is used to ensure surrounding plant life is preserved. The technical side of the work involves measured chemical application tailored to surface type, which is especially important in soft washing, where effectiveness depends on control rather than force.
Over time, this approach has positioned his business around reliability and repeat service rather than one-time results. His client base spans a wide range of property types, but the process remains consistent, with each job requiring the same level of preparation and attention to detail. That consistency has translated into long-term relationships with customers who continue to call on his services for ongoing maintenance rather than isolated projects.
Beyond field work, Jeremiah also contributes to industry training through an annual course in Panama City Beach hosted by Panhandle Power Wash Supply. The training focuses on property and plant protection, with emphasis on minimizing damage during exterior cleaning through proper preparation, chemical handling, and equipment use. His involvement in instruction reflects a practical extension of his field experience, applied especially toward improving standards within the trade.
Jack of Some Trades operates on a level of repeat reliability that comes from the way Jeremiah handles both people and process. The work moves from conversation to setup to completion without shortcuts showing up in between, and that continuity is what carries through his client relationships over time. A defining part of his approach is the discipline he applies to preparation, particularly in how much of each job is completed before any visible cleaning begins. Landscaping protection, surface-specific planning, and controlled application methods are all treated as essential steps rather than preliminary tasks. That attention to process is what allows the outcome to remain consistent across different property types and conditions. The result is a service that does not rely on presentation or promotion to stay active, but on the simple fact that the work is structured, repeatable, and accountable from start to finish.