admiralclean said:
I've been around these boards a long long time. I have met or talked over the phone to more cleaners than I can name. I've picked up on a few things that are related to this topic that I want to share.
Yes, it is possible to get those high prices ... 50 to 70 cents a s.f. No, I have never actually met anyone doing that yet, but I know people and I know the psychology that drives people to do unusual things. There is no doubt that there are a certain number of people in every market represented by cleaners here who will pay those high prices. The question is, how many?
I have more stories than I can remember of cleaners lying to me regarding their pricing, standard of living, size of their business and just about anything else you can name. Most times they don't even realize they have given themselves away because they can't keep up with the lies they tell. Several of the cleaners who have reported to me over the years that they get high prices and only clean for those willing to pay for quality have gone by the way side. Most were liers ... that's just a fact. A few that I know are actually getting those prices, but only run one van with themselves doing the cleaning, and they do very few jobs each week. I have yet to meet a successful mulit-truck, profitable carpet cleaning business that charges more than the normal rate for their market.
Pricing is just like vacuuming. I remember the first time I went to summerfest. I went to van after van of cleaners who posted high prices and/or prevacuuming on every job. I did not see one single vacuum cleaner on a van and the vans looked like their owners couldn't afford to do even minor repairs ... much less replace anything major.
The folks who truly make the money in this business are those companies who charge at the standard rate for their markets, market heavily, upsell on evey job and run more than 5 trucks.
The rest of us single operators can brag and lie all we want on the internet. We might as well, because this is the only place we'll get any respect.
That becomes the challenge.
I would love to be able to charge 40/sf, or even 30. But I could never take the time I do to actually clean the carpet.
One other thing you won't find with most, if not all, multitruck companies. The guys clean so fast they leave a lot of soil in the carpet. They clean for appearance. Mind you, they do a good job, the customer is satisfied, however, the carpet really hasn't been cleaned.
Witha MT comp, its volume, how many jobs can they get through in a day. They charge a normal rate, and stay busy because they leave the carpet "looking" clean and leave the customers "happy".
So, lets say these guys spend about 2hrs in the average house. As an owner operator I can't even do everything in 2hrs that they do with 2 guys. I average 3-4 hrs in the average house.
In order to make a profit I need to charge more.
So, do we clean for appearance and make LOTs of profit, or actually take the time to clean it properly and make a moderate profit?