tehachapicarwash,
You've got a good start there and I think you've asked the right question. You need to be ready and willing to work hard. If you’ve got a day job, you’ll need to work evenings and weekends. If you put in the time I believe you will see results. You can do a lot without spending a lot of money and possibly prove to yourself and your dad that some additional investment would be worth the effort. As you work towards proving this, give some thought to how you will make your case to your dad. Increase in customers/traffic, additional gross revenue per month, additional net revenue per month, reduced expenses, etc. Take some before and after pictures as you fix things up to show some results to your dad. Patience is a big plus. You don’t need to be in a hurry. Improve your wash day-by-day and week-by-week….but keep improving it.
Post more pictures if/when you can.
DO NOT purchase any new equipment or do any renovations until you’ve addressed the small and inexpensive stuff. There are forum members who have refurbished very old equipment for a fraction of the cost it would take to buy new equipment. Check out posts from 2BIZ and the pictures on his Facebook site. Amazing to me what 2BIZ has accomplished at his wash.
Some thoughts to get started:
- Swap out the lights to CFLs. LED would be better, but costly. You can probably use your existing fixtures and bypass/remove the ballasts and capacitors. Check out 1000bulbs.com for some CFL bulb equivalents and prices and
http://www.energyusecalculator.com/electricity_cfllightbulb.htm to calculate cost savings. One of the senior members on this site (I'm not calling him old, but he is) suggested that to me a little over three years ago and it was the first thing I did. Went from 20 - 400 watt metal halide bulbs to 20 - 105 watt cfl bulbs. Total cost of the effort for me was a little less than $400. In three years one bulb has burned out and the savings has been between $2,000 and $2,500 per year in electricity costs. Putting $100 of so in your dad's pocket every month would be a nice start.
- Keep it clean and nice looking - scrape the stickers off of those meter boxes and replace them with new ones. For less than $100 total you can give those meter boxes a fresher look. Put a customer service number on the boxes and be responsive....repeat customers is very important.
- Clean the bay walls with clean wall or similar product from
kleen-rite. They offer free samples, so get one and try it out. The difference is amazing. Be careful with that stuff and wear safety glasses, respirator and protective clothing or hire someone to do it for you. Once you clean the walls touch up the paint where needed.
- You will hear this over and over from the knowledgeable operators on this site…. Make sure that everything works as well as it possibly can. I’ve followed that advice and the customers notice it and appreciate it. The vacs are easy to fix and get working properly. New gaskets, motors and bags for a vac will cost you about $125 per vac at
Kleen-Rite. New stickers on the vacs would help too. My customers like the dualer (search on
kleen rite’s site for it). Maybe keep that in mind as a future upgrade as it will cost about $150 per vac. Make sure that the chemical comes out of the wand/brush/gun as quickly as possible and in good quantity. Even if the output looks good to you, see if you can make it better. Once you get the hang of producing good quantity you can adjust things so you are not wasting chemicals.
- Once you’ve got everything working as well as possible I’d suggest making sure that anything a customer can touch is in good shape. Vac attachments, bay accessories,
coin changers, meter boxes (guns/wands, brush handles, etc.). Assuming you have Foam Brush and a High Pressure Gun/Wand you can update those bay accessories for about $125 per bay if it is needed.
To be continued...