Starting out on the cheap

Mark Saiger

Mr Happy!
Joined
Dec 26, 2006
Messages
11,197
Location
Grand Rapids, MN
Name
Mark Saiger
Somewhat lucky. Family been in the business so long that gave an advantage... Because family before me made more of the mistakes.

Grew up with old stainless steel portables... And the family made and sold them...

Family went to Truckmounts in 70's when they were coming out with some power.

Restart up bought one of the old family Butlers.

Used one year interest free credit card to finance (took a chance but was confident) and paid off early so no interest paid.

Restart was still teaching and hustling everyday to get things going.

Set out knowing invest and look good... Or go sit on the porch with the other Goobers.
 
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Mikey P

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Oct 6, 2006
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112,308
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The High Chapperal
Painter...yes in a minivan...happens more often than you think. They can do good job..

Plumber and electrician, lot of them have a very old banged up promaster with peeling decals and wrap...

Yet I see an all the time at high end area... where at I parked at too in my mini van. Funny thing is that is that the neighbors would wave me down to ask for my business because they can't stand American housekeeping or the fancy looking window cleaning company..

Sometime people wants to hire someone to do the damn job right..


So, you half right and half wrong with a strong note of assumption and conjectures.


Your comment of never wanting to own a home the other day told me something..

You're not willing to take chances.
Thats not a good trait to have if you want to succeed with your buisness.


Your wife and son deserve more than 100k gross Derrick.


Go "rent" a truckmount and van.
Quit doubting yourself, you have the skills and passion, now show your customers your commitment.
 

jcooper

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Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
3,232
Location
IL
Name
Jerry Cooper
When you get t the point that using a portable is keeping you from getting done as quick as you want/need to be done it's truckmount time.

At some point(as you grow with more clients) you will simply not be able to spend 3+ hours doing a two hour job. You will burn out, give up or never be home before 7pm!

Don't get me wrong, big bills are stressful. But Mike is right, you are generating 75k with a porty... That's kicking ass!

Get a van first, pay it off then finance the tm if money is tuff.
 
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DAT

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Apr 3, 2017
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Nevada
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Bill Cheryl
lease, or make payments, wont matter much

You'll never look back and you income will grow like you can't imagine, yet.





Don't be mad at me for having more faith in you, than you.

How could I be mad at you?

I was planning on it by the end of this year hopefully...can't build a castle on sand, ya know...
 

steve_64

Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2012
Messages
13,371
Going from the bane to the WM woke me up and made me a better cleaner. Raised prices and increased workload.
 
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Jim Pemberton

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Oct 7, 2006
Messages
12,021
Name
Jim Pemberton
I'd be mad at him. I'd actually call him some bad names under my breath.


But then I'd thank him for being such an asshole to me, once I saw the fruitage from it.

A younger me never liked men like Mikey and Larry Capitoni. They weren't back slappers and didn't have anything resembling a good bedside manner. I left their company often feeling stung and annoyed at how bluntly they delivered their thoughts about me or a path I had chosen.

An older me realizes that it was men like them were who gave me the best advice in my life, and most of the good in my life now has come from following the advice (however unpalatable at the time) men like that gave me.

I can't tell you how many times I found myself listening to observations like this one when I was young, naive, and more than a bit self righteous.

 

Mama Fen

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Joined
Jun 20, 2017
Messages
27
Location
Charlotte NC
Name
Amy Barnes
Of all the cleaners we service in this area, the biggest and most successful run truckmounts. There's no denying that.

BUT.

Of the dozens of startups I see every year, the guys who spend more time learning, taking it slow, and honing their skills rather than depending on the biggest baddest fire-belching machine to do it all for them have the highest success rate.

Two of my most successful guys (and by successful I mean their business increases substantially every year and they constantly fire cheap customers) had full-time jobs and picked up portables on the side. They spent a full year (or two) learning how to make that porty perform miracles before they jumped into the carpet cleaning industry full-time. Then, when they got their truckmounts, they were already experts at cleaning chemistry and the various tricks to get rid of the stuff the other guys couldn't.

If you can clean it with 160-degree water and 200 psi, you can make it SCREAMINGLY clean with better equipment. The biggest difference lies not in the power of the equipment, but moreso in the skill and experience of the user.

I am notorious for saying that a professional with a Rug Doctor can outclean a neophyte with a truckmount, and I stand by that statement.

No two business models are the same - some guys are happiest being a one-man show and would frankly drive themselves insane trying to let someone else clean under their name. Others want to grow fast, have multiple trucks, and spend their days in the office answering phones and collecting checks. There's no "one good fit" that guarantees success when it comes to starting up. If you've got enough reserve capital to get you through emergencies during the first 12-18 months, then you base your investment (porty versus TM) more on your long-term plans, not your short-term needs. If you don't have that reserve set aside, you're starting behind the 8-ball anyway and NO equipment is going to save you if your plans go sideways.
 

Cleanworks

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Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
26,927
Location
New Westminster,BC
Name
Ron Marriott
Of all the cleaners we service in this area, the biggest and most successful run truckmounts. There's no denying that.

BUT.

Of the dozens of startups I see every year, the guys who spend more time learning, taking it slow, and honing their skills rather than depending on the biggest baddest fire-belching machine to do it all for them have the highest success rate.

Two of my most successful guys (and by successful I mean their business increases substantially every year and they constantly fire cheap customers) had full-time jobs and picked up portables on the side. They spent a full year (or two) learning how to make that porty perform miracles before they jumped into the carpet cleaning industry full-time. Then, when they got their truckmounts, they were already experts at cleaning chemistry and the various tricks to get rid of the stuff the other guys couldn't.

If you can clean it with 160-degree water and 200 psi, you can make it SCREAMINGLY clean with better equipment. The biggest difference lies not in the power of the equipment, but moreso in the skill and experience of the user.

I am notorious for saying that a professional with a Rug Doctor can outclean a neophyte with a truckmount, and I stand by that statement.

No two business models are the same - some guys are happiest being a one-man show and would frankly drive themselves insane trying to let someone else clean under their name. Others want to grow fast, have multiple trucks, and spend their days in the office answering phones and collecting checks. There's no "one good fit" that guarantees success when it comes to starting up. If you've got enough reserve capital to get you through emergencies during the first 12-18 months, then you base your investment (porty versus TM) more on your long-term plans, not your short-term needs. If you don't have that reserve set aside, you're starting behind the 8-ball anyway and NO equipment is going to save you if your plans go sideways.
Great post
 

Mama Fen

Member
Joined
Jun 20, 2017
Messages
27
Location
Charlotte NC
Name
Amy Barnes
I run a very small, localized distributorship, so my customer base is also my own life's blood. If my local guys don't succeed, neither does my own company. Every one of them, from the small part-time porty guy to the six-rig monster apartment cleaning company, is important.

And as such, I don't always please them when I tell them hard truths. I serve them, which isn't the same thing at all.

They are my great big squabbling dysfuctional family, and I love them all.
 

Cleanworks

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Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
26,927
Location
New Westminster,BC
Name
Ron Marriott
I run a very small, localized distributorship, so my customer base is also my own life's blood. If my local guys don't succeed, neither does my own company. Every one of them, from the small part-time porty guy to the six-rig monster apartment cleaning company, is important.

And as such, I don't always please them when I tell them hard truths. I serve them, which isn't the same thing at all.

They are my great big squabbling dysfuctional family, and I love them all.
Kind of like Mikey's board, the squabbling part anyway.
 

Bob Pruitt

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Joined
May 22, 2016
Messages
2,677
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earth
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Robert Pruitt
I am notorious for saying that a professional with a Rug Doctor can outclean a neophyte with a truckmount, and I stand by that statement.
You will need both... but you don't need both to start. Well maintained used will also work just fine for starting. My first machine was a used red old style Rug Doctor rental. Got me started well over 30 years ago.
 
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Mama Fen

Member
Joined
Jun 20, 2017
Messages
27
Location
Charlotte NC
Name
Amy Barnes
Well-maintained used can be hard to find sometimes - I tell them if the seller isn't willing to get it vetted at the local shop before taking your money, walk away no matter how good the deal sounds. Hereabouts we get "sneaky freezes" sometimes in the winter (last year we had a particularly brutal run of single-digit nights) and a freeze-damaged truckmount is a right royal pain. Not to mention a money pit.

But a used porty, even damaged, can often be made functional for less than the cost of a new one.
 

Russ T.

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Joined
Sep 26, 2008
Messages
3,556
Location
Slater, IA
Name
Russ Terhaar
I still count the Chem Tex Panther 20 among the most expensive mistakes we’ve made.

I threw 28k CASH at it, along with a used Chevy 1500 van.

I should have thrown 10k down on a new Butler and gotten serious about marketing much sooner.

We’d be in a different spot.

But I wouldn’t be as tough.

Great thread, Mike.
 

Bob Pruitt

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May 22, 2016
Messages
2,677
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earth
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Robert Pruitt
I once paid 2.5k for a used van with hydra master cds. On eBay. Never looked at it until it was delivered. Owned several new ones before. Worked fine for 4 years until I sold it as part of the business my first time living in Florida. Porty is half the production of TM so that should be factored into cost. And a back brace plus Chiropractor visits.
 

TomKing

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Joined
Sep 18, 2012
Messages
1,125
Location
Indianapolis
Name
Tom
The age old advice of getting a portable or low moisture gadget to get by with until you can afford a truckmount is horrible advice if you ask me.

It's the equivalent to telling a guy who wants to open a restaurant to just sell microwave'd burritos from the truck of his car until he can afford to rent a building and equipment.

In your first few years it's beyond critical to blow the doors off of each precious customer that you'll more than likely be paying a fortune for. Guess what, you wont be blowing anything but the chance to make them a repeat with your portable and undeveloped skills....

GO BIG or save up longer.


and be smart, work for others for a couple years if you can, get some skills on someone else's dime.




How did you all start up with equipment and what would you do differently now?

The age old advice of getting a portable or low moisture gadget to get by with until you can afford a truckmount is horrible advice if you ask me.

It's the equivalent to telling a guy who wants to open a restaurant to just sell microwave'd burritos from the truck of his car until he can afford to rent a building and equipment.

In your first few years it's beyond critical to blow the doors off of each precious customer that you'll more than likely be paying a fortune for. Guess what, you wont be blowing anything but the chance to make them a repeat with your portable and undeveloped skills....

GO BIG or save up longer.


and be smart, work for others for a couple years if you can, get some skills on someone else's dime.




How did you all start up with equipment and what would you do differently now?
Start up
2006 We bought 3 janitorial accounts for $1,000
2007 We bought a $1,500 used Bane Clean, $2,500 used Ford Van. All in we had about $8,500 in the truck mount, van, Chem and tools.
Bill Yeadon came to my house and showed me how to use it. My wife would only allow us to clean one room in the basement. I sat through 2 days of IICRC carpet cleaning instruction.
We busted our ass because the equipment was under-powered and couldn't do what I was capable of selling us into.
We used to hook up a water otter so we could clean tile with the Bane.

Today I would
Buy a full package Hydramaster, Chevy Van and all the toys. I would want to be able to clean anything we could sell.
20/20 is always better. We all know a $900 van payment is cake to make a payment on.

I would not change it. 11 years later. We have the finest rug plant in the state, 4 fully loaded carpet trucks and a retail furniture, flooring and rug store. We employee 15 people, Both my sons , my wife and myself are all able to make a living. We are living the american dream.

That $1,500 Bane Clean started the ball rolling. It's better to get started than not, but if you can get some coaching do. Bill helped point us in the right direction. Gear & Juice are important but not the key things that brought us to this place. It takes so much more than the right truck mount to build a successful company. Great equipment just makes it easier!
 

DAT

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Joined
Apr 3, 2017
Messages
6,485
Location
Nevada
Name
Bill Cheryl
Of all the cleaners we service in this area, the biggest and most successful run truckmounts. There's no denying that.

BUT.

Of the dozens of startups I see every year, the guys who spend more time learning, taking it slow, and honing their skills rather than depending on the biggest baddest fire-belching machine to do it all for them have the highest success rate.

Two of my most successful guys (and by successful I mean their business increases substantially every year and they constantly fire cheap customers) had full-time jobs and picked up portables on the side. They spent a full year (or two) learning how to make that porty perform miracles before they jumped into the carpet cleaning industry full-time. Then, when they got their truckmounts, they were already experts at cleaning chemistry and the various tricks to get rid of the stuff the other guys couldn't.

If you can clean it with 160-degree water and 200 psi, you can make it SCREAMINGLY clean with better equipment. The biggest difference lies not in the power of the equipment, but moreso in the skill and experience of the user.

I am notorious for saying that a professional with a Rug Doctor can outclean a neophyte with a truckmount, and I stand by that statement.

No two business models are the same - some guys are happiest being a one-man show and would frankly drive themselves insane trying to let someone else clean under their name. Others want to grow fast, have multiple trucks, and spend their days in the office answering phones and collecting checks. There's no "one good fit" that guarantees success when it comes to starting up. If you've got enough reserve capital to get you through emergencies during the first 12-18 months, then you base your investment (porty versus TM) more on your long-term plans, not your short-term needs. If you don't have that reserve set aside, you're starting behind the 8-ball anyway and NO equipment is going to save you if your plans go sideways.


YES! THIS!
 

Bob Pruitt

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Joined
May 22, 2016
Messages
2,677
Location
earth
Name
Robert Pruitt
Suppose it depends on your TM setup
ss-upc-ea_1.jpg I use this with my Butler on medium and the heat turned down a little...works great.
 

Hack Attack

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Joined
Dec 19, 2017
Messages
5,620
Location
further south than you
Name
Dan
Im running an aircooled slide in, I cant run the engine slower without compromising the engines cooling
20180707_131805.jpg
What TM heat and vacuum has done to 1 of my PMF tools, reluctant to buy a high flow tool as that means more heat ...
 
Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
18,834
Location
Benton KY USA
Name
Lee Stockwell
Suppose it depends on your TM setup

The air howl through the tool when I do use my TM on greasy microfibre has me wearing airplugs.
I have thought about putting another vacuum relief inline to cut the noise and vacuum.

How do you address the excess vacuum?
Everything is adjustable, temp, pressure, rpm, vacuum relief.

Easy peasy.
 

Jim Pemberton

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Oct 7, 2006
Messages
12,021
Name
Jim Pemberton
Everything is adjustable, temp, pressure, rpm, vacuum relief.

Easy peasy.

If you have the ability to do everything Lee just said (some "super units" can't be cooled down enough for delicate upholstery), you can do most anything with the truck mount.

You get fabric dryer when you clean with a truck mount for two reasons;

1. More vacuum (obvious)

2. Less humidity (not so obvious). Portables exhaust humid air into the work airspace, and the higher humidity slows down drying.

There are a few hypersensitive things out there that might be tricky to do with a truck mount, but for anything that sensitive, hand cleaning is a safer option than a portable.

Do watch what you are running through your truck mount too. Not everyone has the discipline to "switch" solutions back at the unit.
 

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