Hi all,
I'm looking for tried and true solutions for reducing costs at the carwash. If you have tips/tricks for cutting back expenses related to labor, maintenance, utilities, advertising, etc., I'd love to include them in the March issue of PC&D.
You can e-mail me, PM, or reply to the thread here. Thanks in advance for all of your help!!
Kate,
In all of my year's and all of my careers, or feilds, business alway go to labor first to cut expenses. During "good times" as business prosper an owner, feeling benilivent (sp?) usually raises incomes or pads labor. As times get tougher labor is alway the first and easiest to cut. Saying this, automation is a key at reducing labor while cash flow is good.
The last thing that the "government" want us to do now is layoff or cut wages, but this is what I see must happen first. It is what begins the "first round" of a tightened labor market during a down turn in an economy. While this initally makes it worse locally, it will preserve a business (like a hot air balloon throwing over ballist to stay aloft).
Labor in traditional Full Service wash account for up to 40%-50% of expenses. It is the largest "budgeted item" so it only makes sence to start there. Then go down from the next largest budgeted "non-fixed" item... utilities. Water saving idea, power saving suggestions, turning off blowers motor on lower selected washes, Changing Metal halide lights to fluresent, decresing timers on signs at night. Next cutting uniform cost, advertising, auto expenses, rentals, entertainment, shopping around for insurance to lower premiums 6 months before they are due.
But labor cost are by far the largest in flex and full service. EE have more fixed cost and less varibles to work with... more susceptible to market down turns IMO.
One big way to cut cost, which is not dishonest, but I don't generally suggest it, is to "float" chemical cost. That is to "switch" suppliers often on a rolling basis (I won't do this... I have been with Simoniz for 6 years). You drag out you payments into a 90 day payment "defering" expenses. Many larger business will do this to shift expenses off the books into another year to make a "fiscal year" look more attractive.
Cont.