They were all male?washboy said:it was @ a 50lbs squid or octopus, you could tell by the testicals.
Waxdude, I guess I'm just getting cranky in my old age; I don't want guys like that the next time he comes and I'm not there. I treat them with respect but if they bow up at all, they leave with the opinion that I'm a $%#@!, and they're very unlikely to return.Being onsite solves alot of this. We're staffed 6 days/ week at the detail shop and often 7 at the carwash, so we can often avoid messes.
One day a guy came in with a bulldozer covered in mud. And I mean caked. I just walked out and talked to him. I then took his $$ and set up a convenient spot for him to rinse mud from the tracks of the dozer. Problem solved and $$ made, the waxman way. Git R Dun.
You're doing a good job. I've always said that there's no definitavely right way to run a car wash. There what works for each owner with his unique situation. I've had that same arument with roofers who tend to think that their way is the only right way simply because they're successful.I hear ya Redbaron. I really do.
I guess I just am still green at this. I also employ several stress management techniques that seem to work for me at least 65% of the time.
There are two reasons this helps you: someone's there to take care of the mess right away so you don't have a bay down or many customers driving through and seeing it, and the fact that you're there stops a lot of the worst problems to begin with. We're also unattended for the most part, though I prefer to spend three hours a day at the wash at the busiest point of the day. I routinely see pickups pull in, see me and drive out. Sometimes they come back later when I'm not there - twice I jumped in my truck and went to the nearest wash and saw them there washing out their bed (Three if you count the guy with the flatbed trailer with 2" of sand on it who lied when I asked him if he was planning to wash it off; he said he was just going to wash his tires).Waxman said:Being onsite solves alot of this. We're staffed 6 days/ week at the detail shop and often 7 at the carwash, so we can often avoid messes.
Couldn't agree more with you and Red. Just this week a customer saw the mess I was cleaning up and he couldn't believe someone had left it. He complimented me on the wash and said that if he pulls into a wash and that is the only bay available or the wash bays are really messy, he doesn't bother to stop, he leaves and goes elsewhere. I've been in this business over ten years, and I've learned that most customer really apreciate a clean well run business, and those that don't I don't want.There are two reasons this helps you: someone's there to take care of the mess right away so you don't have a bay down or many customers driving through and seeing it, and the fact that you're there stops a lot of the worst problems to begin with. We're also unattended for the most part, though I prefer to spend three hours a day at the wash at the busiest point of the day. I routinely see pickups pull in, see me and drive out. Sometimes they come back later when I'm not there - twice I jumped in my truck and went to the nearest wash and saw them there washing out their bed (Three if you count the guy with the flatbed trailer with 2" of sand on it who lied when I asked him if he was planning to wash it off; he said he was just going to wash his tires).
I know I've said this before, but I'm totally with Red; I've built a reputation as a hardass, and business is great. I get routine compliments on the wash. It's not stressful either - I don't get mad, I explain the facts, and if they don't like it they're told to leave and not come back. The absolute best part is when they come back when I'm not there and "get caught" and apologize, practically begging to let them use the wash because it's the best one in town (their words).
I wouldn't go quite that far, but the ones I truly don't want are the ones who cause a problem that might cost me that good customer you described.Washmechanic said:I've learned that most customer really apreciate a clean well run business, and those that don't I don't want.
I'm with Red 100% on this. But when they act like a jerk I get real mad and give it right back to them with both barrels."The guy called me last night with hat in hand." And I guess that really is a bigger part of the story than anything. If a guy shows even a little respect, or remorse for creating a problem, I bend over backwards to be easy to get along with. It's when an idiot creates a problem then complicates it by being a jerk about it that creates a problem.
I'm like a pinata. You can beat the crap out of me long enough that after awhile you think nothing will happen. But if you smack me just one time too many, all kinds of crap is gonna fall on your head. lolI'm with Red 100% on this. But when they act like a jerk I get real mad and give it right back to them with both barrels.