I'm in a position where I can sell 3 rental properties to buy 3 self serve car washes within 10 minutes from each other. Each one revenue is $180-$220K a year.
The first question that pops into my mind is why you are considering getting out of the rental properties? Are you tired of the business? Are you trying to strike while the iron is hot? Are you the sort of entrepreneur that likes to establish a business, sell it and go to another one? Are there too many headaches?
I'm worried about how self serve business will be with all the crazy inflation and the express washes popping up left and right. I'm essentially trading in solid appreciating assets for businesses that may see a decrease in popularity in years to come.
The inflation part wouldn't deter me. I don't believe the inflation is going to last forever like this. As for the express washes, I don't see them as competition for self-serves. It's a different kind of customer.
[/quote]Do you see self serves still being around in 20-30 years?[/quote]
Yes. There are always going to be people who want to do it themselves.
Would you recommend getting into this business with absolutely 0 car wash or mechanical knowledge?
In your situation, I wouldn't recommend it. I would start small. Three car washes at once for a novice is too much. You have a lot of experienced people in the business who wouldn't never dream of acquiring a second location, and those with multiple locations who would never go with acquiring three at once.
Would you recommend getting into this business at all?
I do recommend getting into the business. The key is to smart small, then grow. You don't make your first run a marathon for instance. You do smaller runs
training and smaller races.
I'm also curious about what day to day is like for a self serve car wash owner?
Odds are, you're going to emptying out money multiple times per week. If you got employees, there is payroll to run. The place will need to be cleaned several times a week. Regular maintenance and mechanical breaks are going to happen. Make sure to test your equipment. Provide a car wash phone number and/or email address, and you'll be interacting with customers. If you choose to have a website and social media (both strongly recommended), you'll be doing things there.
There isn't a typical day. What's not working and customers will make sure of that.
Any advice is greatly appreciated.
Other advice:
Do these locations have
credit card acceptance? If not, they need to.
Do any of these locations have in-bay automatics? It may be worth looking into and is nice to have on cold days when customers may not be inclined to do it themsleves.
Try to get a part-time gig at a car wash to learn the ropes. Go to conventions. Read trade magazines to learn about new technology and trends. Keep coming here. I would say this is way better than solely relying on sales people and the trade magazines. Sales people are trying to sell you something. Everything's rosy. The trade magazines are great for industry trends and new technology. They're not going to tell you to avoid say for instance a certain product because that product may be a sponsor or a potential one.
Best of luck in whatever you decide.