It's official

steve_64

Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2012
Messages
13,371
Let me tell you the hell Servpro went through at my moms house. Fire was in April and still dealing with it. Took that. I like the 2 or 3 hour jobs and done.

Loving our shop.
 
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Cleanworks

Moderator
Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
26,983
Location
New Westminster,BC
Name
Ron Marriott
I would lean towards setting up a rug shop. Even if you started with $3 per sqft. and $50 for pickup/delivery, you could make some decent money with less headaches. You don't need to have the latest equipment right away. A portable wash pit, a Zipper for extraction, some overhead poles for drying and some fans.
 

steve_64

Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2012
Messages
13,371
We just needed heated storage space for winter. Only took 2 years to outgrow the house.

Signed a two year lease and am looking to buy something before then. Already filling our shop up.
 

steve_64

Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2012
Messages
13,371
Lowes had nice metal shelving on sale a few weeks ago. $120 for 7 ft wide 6 high and 2 deep. Easy to assemble. We bought 3 of those.

Got some rugs to finish up today maybe lol. Definately loving all the space.
 

Bob Savage

Member
Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
1,288
Location
Dayton, Ohio
Name
Bob Savage
Loved it when I built our shop 20 some years ago. It's behind our house - 1600 sq. ft with upstairs, 10'ceiling, heated, A/C, 100amp electrical service, and a bathroom.

It needs a good straightening up right now though, which will be this winter's project.

Congrats!
 

Kenny Hayes

Member
Joined
Apr 17, 2009
Messages
7,950
Location
Yukon, Oklahoma
Name
Kenny Hayes
Loved it when I built our shop 20 some years ago. It's behind our house - 1600 sq. ft with upstairs, 10'ceiling, heated, A/C, 100amp electrical service, and a bathroom.

It needs a good straightening up right now though, which will be this winter's project.

Congrats!
That’s just what old carpet cleaners do. I waited till retirement age to build mine🤷🏼‍♂️
 

BIG WOOD

MLPW
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
13,243
Location
Georgia
Name
Matt w.
Damon, I think the hardest thing in the restoration part of this business you'll find is not how to dry a facility, find the money to buy equipment, or even get the time to do an emergency job. The hardest thing you'll encounter is learning the software to present to the insurance adjusters. It was one of the main reasons I dropped out of it.

  1. The monthly cost of Xactimate was stupid high when I called them. Over $500/month is what they told me back in 2012.
  2. Just learning it intimidated me. So I found a third party to write up the Xactimate invoices and just paid them $100 each job I had. I suggest you do the same until you find some extra office staff employees to devote their time to learning that part of your business.
 

BIG WOOD

MLPW
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
13,243
Location
Georgia
Name
Matt w.
Keep in mind, I am an idiot. So it might not be as complicated as I stated above. It's just taking the time to learn everything while I'm wearing all the other hats in the business is what makes it very intimidating. I'd like to see other owner/ops speak up on whether or not they are successful with this.

But when several companies have a division just for filling out Xactimate invoices...there's a reason for that. And when the insurance adjusters told me they won't even talk to me, unless I use Xactimate, that's a frustrating cause.
 

Desk Jockey

Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2006
Messages
64,833
Location
A planet far far away
Name
Rico Suave
Damon, I think the hardest thing in the restoration part of this business you'll find is not how to dry a facility, find the money to buy equipment, or even get the time to do an emergency job. The hardest thing you'll encounter is learning the software to present to the insurance adjusters. It was one of the main reasons I dropped out of it.

  1. The monthly cost of Xactimate was stupid high when I called them. Over $500/month is what they told me back in 2012.
  2. Just learning it intimidated me. So I found a third party to write up the Xactimate invoices and just paid them $100 each job I had. I suggest you do the same until you find some extra office staff employees to devote their time to learning that part of your business.
Its $120.00 a month. Not hard to learn unless you are doing fire damage or reconstruction. WDR is easy, in fact you build macros and it's even faster because you just update what was used.

The hard part is trying to process the emergency calls while maintaining your regular schedule.
 

Cleanworks

Moderator
Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
26,983
Location
New Westminster,BC
Name
Ron Marriott
Keep in mind, I am an idiot. So it might not be as complicated as I stated above. It's just taking the time to learn everything while I'm wearing all the other hats in the business is what makes it very intimidating. I'd like to see other owner/ops speak up on whether or not they are successful with this.

But when several companies have a division just for filling out Xactimate invoices...there's a reason for that. And when the insurance adjusters told me they won't even talk to me, unless I use Xactimate, that's a frustrating cause.
That's one of the reasons I got out of the insurance business. I still do a little water damage but only for private parties. I charge what I feel is reasonable and if they don't like it, they can go somewhere else. I work a little for property mgrs when they don't want to make an insurance claim. Small jobs usually from $1000-$3000.
 
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Old Coastie

Supportive Member
Joined
Jun 29, 2015
Messages
7,504
Location
Heart of Dixie
Name
Stephen
Go to Atlanta and learn how to restore color, then be the N CA expert.

I think Udy is mopping up in Jacksonville.
 

BIG WOOD

MLPW
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
13,243
Location
Georgia
Name
Matt w.
Its $120.00 a month. Not hard to learn unless you are doing fire damage or reconstruction. WDR is easy, in fact you build macros and it's even faster because you just update what was used.

The hard part is trying to process the emergency calls while maintaining your regular schedule.
That's weird. I wonder why they told me $500. I was in a different time in my business back in 2012. $500 every month was not in my budget. If they told me $120, I would've signed up.
 
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Josh Almanza

Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2016
Messages
193
Location
Houston, Tx.
Name
Josh Almanza
“Quick Baconator” Lol!!!
 
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dealtimeman

Everyday is Saturday.
Joined
Sep 20, 2008
Messages
10,878
Location
Fort Worth , Texas
Name
Michael
Water damage ain’t nothing but a thaing.

Setup correctly it should at some point overtake your carpet cleaning side of your biz.

You need a helper for sure at least many part timers that can be called in.

Don’t go signing a loan for the equipment unless you want to increase your chances of failure.

The losses come in bunches it seems, and at other times a while in between.

I am on most of our water losses as I really enjoy it and have learned to document, document, document everything as that makes the billing/collection/receipt of payment easier.

Don’t try to work out of a van as you will quickly learn to hate the work,as you have to work so much harder to achieve the same results,

Get a 16ft to 20ft trailer at least to start with, then a box truck with a lift gate.

Find subs (other carpet cleaners) in your area that can extract for you at a rate of 100 an hour or so depending your area.

Get as much education as you can and remember what they teach in the class will be nothing like you see in the field, but you must use it for reference to dot your i’s and cross your t’s.


To start I suggest 3 large Dehus and 16-20 air movers. At least 1 air scrubber. You will need multiple moisture meters even if you buy all in ones you still need redundancy as they will fail at 2am.

Much more but start here.

The most important part is to perform the job the same as you would eat an xlarge pizza, 1 slice or part at a time or it will be too much to take in.
 

Nomad74

Boy Sprout
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
23,505
Location
Redding
Water damage ain’t nothing but a thaing.

Setup correctly it should at some point overtake your carpet cleaning side of your biz.

You need a helper for sure at least many part timers that can be called in.

Don’t go signing a loan for the equipment unless you want to increase your chances of failure.

The losses come in bunches it seems, and at other times a while in between.

I am on most of our water losses as I really enjoy it and have learned to document, document, document everything as that makes the billing/collection/receipt of payment easier.

Don’t try to work out of a van as you will quickly learn to hate the work,as you have to work so much harder to achieve the same results,

Get a 16ft to 20ft trailer at least to start with, then a box truck with a lift gate.

Find subs (other carpet cleaners) in your area that can extract for you at a rate of 100 an hour or so depending your area.

Get as much education as you can and remember what they teach in the class will be nothing like you see in the field, but you must use it for reference to dot your i’s and cross your t’s.


To start I suggest 3 large Dehus and 16-20 air movers. At least 1 air scrubber. You will need multiple moisture meters even if you buy all in ones you still need redundancy as they will fail at 2am.

Much more but start here.

The most important part is to perform the job the same as you would eat an xlarge pizza, 1 slice or part at a time or it will be too much to take in.
Thank you! Let the adventure begin..... I think.
 

bob vawter

Grassy Knoller
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
43,721
Location
La La Land
Name
bob vawter
Soooooooo then....you water people....
What happens when you get served legal
Papers on the house that is destroyed by the mold and mildew that YOU missed?
 

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