Uncle Sam
Member
Much has been said and published about the gross sales per month of vending products at a wash whether from drop shelves or from the newer computer-based vending machines. In order to prioritize decisions about what new technology or equipment to invest in at a store site, one should know what each major sales component of the wash store contributes to the bottom line, i.e. bays, vacs, vending, shampoo, mat cleaning, etc.
We are going to confine ourselves here to the vending component of the total store sales. There have been posts on the Forum stating that vending sales from drop shelves as a percentage of total store sales are in the 8-9% range depending on how many drop shelf units are installed and where they are located. Experience has proven that the more drop shelf units one has installed, the higher the total vending sales. Unless these sales are compared to the total store sales, how does one know that the total investment in drop shelf units (especially electronic drop shelves) really contribute much to the bottom line?
The proponents of computer-controlled, see-thru window vending machines have always claimed that the increase in total sales from these machines should be 200-400%; this number has been pretty reliable for those that have made the investment in the new technology. The big concern for these new vending machines has been security in the car wash environment (not that drop shelves don’t have their security issues). New security designs for the machines and video surveillance have made these security issues go away.
We have just received numbers from an operator that has our vendors installed on 3 different store sites that we consider high sales volume stores. Two stores have decreased vending sales (-18% and -14%) and one store had increased sales (+11). Same stores sales were -11%, -6%, and +19%. Translating these numbers into vending sales versus total store sales as a percentage are 14.5%, 9.2%, and 11.8%. Profit margins for vending are 60%+ for this operator
There is good money to be made in vending; one just has to make the proper investments in equipment.
Uncle Sam
We are going to confine ourselves here to the vending component of the total store sales. There have been posts on the Forum stating that vending sales from drop shelves as a percentage of total store sales are in the 8-9% range depending on how many drop shelf units are installed and where they are located. Experience has proven that the more drop shelf units one has installed, the higher the total vending sales. Unless these sales are compared to the total store sales, how does one know that the total investment in drop shelf units (especially electronic drop shelves) really contribute much to the bottom line?
The proponents of computer-controlled, see-thru window vending machines have always claimed that the increase in total sales from these machines should be 200-400%; this number has been pretty reliable for those that have made the investment in the new technology. The big concern for these new vending machines has been security in the car wash environment (not that drop shelves don’t have their security issues). New security designs for the machines and video surveillance have made these security issues go away.
We have just received numbers from an operator that has our vendors installed on 3 different store sites that we consider high sales volume stores. Two stores have decreased vending sales (-18% and -14%) and one store had increased sales (+11). Same stores sales were -11%, -6%, and +19%. Translating these numbers into vending sales versus total store sales as a percentage are 14.5%, 9.2%, and 11.8%. Profit margins for vending are 60%+ for this operator
There is good money to be made in vending; one just has to make the proper investments in equipment.
Uncle Sam