GREAT storyThat's hard to say. Geography and demographics play into it greatly. I had an express open less than a mile down the same road from my 7&3. The town population about 11K, with three other autos and 7 more SS bays. My wash was well kept and established, and they were hardly a blip on my radar screen. A big factor IMO was that the main road into town is the east/west divider. I was about 1/4 mile west, them 1/4 mile east. The town is booming, but nearly all the growth is west of the divide. IMO, they are 1/4 mile from prosperity. They own a 4&2 on the other side of town. I practically got down on my knees and begged them to buy my washes (making them own every wash in town), but they wouldn't even meet with me. I'm guessing they felt the almighty express would siphon away all my business and they wouldn't need to. Anyway, I sold them to someone else that is upgrading some things, including membership plan. I feel they are regretting ignoring me about now.
Maybe you should grab a piece of land and do a 3 bay IBA and get the market before someone else.Just looks like a nice spot for a full service tunnel.
I’ve always said that rural people speak in miles, and metro people in minutes.I look at distance to competitors in minutes of drive time and not in miles. 10 minutes away could be only two miles or it could be 8.
I’m wondering why they were busy - but maybe none of them stood out enough to pull away from the others.Saturday I visited every SS in the Orlando area, and I was shocked at how neglected they were. Although still busy, but zero maintenance.
is this due to a decline in SS or just owners getting slacked?
my goal was to find any innovative ideas that I could incorporate. But nothing.
I was disappointed.
IMO this is the biggest issue with our segment of the industry. There are a lot of locations that are successful as the Best of the Worst.I was shocked at how neglected they were. Although still busy, but zero maintenance.
You must have missed mine, but that is Ok too so just stay away.Saturday I visited every SS in the Orlando area, and I was shocked at how neglected they were. Although still busy, but zero maintenance.
is this due to a decline in SS or just owners getting slacked?
my goal was to find any innovative ideas that I could incorporate. But nothing.
I was disappointed.
OK not every SS. I’m sure I missed yours.You must have missed mine, but that is Ok too so just stay away.
Yes - the three tunnels you can walk to are probably sharing the same customer base and pulling from each other more than you are pulling from them. And if you are the only SS game I town, or the only well-maintained one, it’s going to be good for you. Now if those tunnels did not exist, you most likely would have a bigger piece of the pie at your SS.I think SS is a niche market. Many don't want to put their car thru a tunnel. They want to wash it themselves or have someone hand wash it. I have a 5 bay SS and I can walk to three tunnels. One is a new Quick Quack. I bought my SS 4 years ago, it was run down, We now have a nice clean, great products in our bays car wash. We keep getting busier. I added credit card readers on everything, bays and vacuums. Vacums and bays are kept clean. We have music playing, tons of lighting, a very safe and visible SS. We have a free air and free wiper fluid station (the best marketing ever). Costs almost nothing and many people use it every day, some stay and some ask about our detail shop (the back 1/2 of the car wash). I think our biggest competition is with ourselves, not keeping our SS top notch constantly.