When I bought my established, underperforming wash the first changes I made was in presentation. Didn't really have the money to do a total revamp, so I wrote a list of things I wanted to do and made a plan. Two years later I'm still adding and working on this list.
Some cheap things I did first was:
- Pressure wash EVERYTHING. Building, bays, parking lot, curbs, parking bumps, ceilings, fences, dumpster...
- Tweaked the chemicals I already had working. Shaving cream FB, milky HP
soap..
- Lights. Replaced bulbs and ballasts for bays, exterior, building and signage.
- Landscape. I didn't spend any money, just raked and pulled weeds.
- Polished/Cleaned my
tokens. Threw them in buckets with soapy water to make them shiny again.
- Peeled old and worn decals. Actually went plain stainless steel for meter boxes with simple, clean looking decals. Looks new.
- Changed the voicemail greeting and made a list to follow up with every phone call.
- Website.
- Yelp, Facebook, Twitter... Free. Pictures, pictures, pictures. People love pictures and it was almost an overnight boost to my wash.
*I stress FREE. So many online chasers from the other coast or even other countries will call and tell you they are preferred or affiliated with Google or Yelp. You don't need them, they are just ripping you off. You can do everything yourself from your cell phone. I did. Google Adwords is the only thing I pay for only to spend on the amount of clicks I want and any technical help from actual Google is free. Watch for the third party companies.*
The above suggestions didn't really cost me much, just some time and elbow grease but it made a huge difference when it all added up. Plus, I was constantly on the property doing area beautification and customers saw that. As Waxman said, just being there I have earned people's trust. I'm out there pulling weeds and see someone walking to the
token machine go out of their way to pick up a can and throw it in the trash. It's a nice feeling when people take that ownership and work with you.
Here are some things that cost a little more, but make a big difference. (At least I thought they did)
- Change all hoses with new colors.
- New guns, brushes, handles.
- Change spray tips.
- New vacuum domes with different colors.
- New decals.
- New signage.
- If you have an auto, perhaps new recipes and packages. NEW signage to reflect this.
- Paint building, worn parking spot lines and light poles.
- Landscaping.
- More lighting.
- Cameras. People notice and like the added feeling of security. Post signs they are on camera.
- CryptoPay (or any CC)
- Add scent to your chemicals. Cherry for wax, people will notice it and smell is the strongest trigger for memory.
- Pay someone $300 to build a legit website. Have it link to your Facebook and Yelp.
- Make an
app for your place. It can link to you social media. You can send push notifications to their phones about specials or equipment back up and running.
- New pics with a fancy DSLR. I believe an online presence is critical and better to have it looking the best you can.
I hope some of these things will help you. Sorry for the ramble. Just a culmination of things I've learnt from this forum that shouldn't cost a whole lot. I've found some of my ideas would be productive and lucrative. While others only make sense to me, not the customer. Good luck.