Envious Eric
New member
wash, filler wax, folex on interior carpets, APC the plastics, UV protection on plastics, condition leather...take about 2.5 hours for me alone, 1.5 with help! Knock out 6 in a day and you are making some good money!
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vtec92civic said:the problem is small things like cleaning the rims and tires can take a little bit of time.
As for complete interior are you extracting or just vacuum, spot clean, dress interior and done.
What about other things such as leather cleaning/conditioning?
Sorry for all the questions but i want to make sure i know what to include when i send him that e-mail.
I don't want a case where i get a call to do a car and i need to fully work over the leather because i might not have specified that something like that was not included. I want to make sure i include as close to everything when i send him the e-mail and the price figure.
MichaelM said:I've never been able to grasp this concept. How does volume make up for a discounted rate? Low margins are low margins, no matter the volume.
todd@bsaw said:Wholesale volume makes up for the price margin only when higher retail sales are not there to supplement your gross sales.
EcoAutoCT said:...volume from a wholesale account provides a continuous workload.
MichaelM said:That is what i'm driving at, the fact that it's busy work. Yes, as Mr. Fermani often points out, you can make good money doing this kind of work, IF you're set-up to do so. IMO 90% of the "businesses" in this forum who cater to retail work are not set-up properly for wholesale and may find it to be too time consuming for the reward. It may sound great to pick up a $40,000 account from a dealer but if say you're only making a 10% margin on the work is it worth the trouble to only make $4,000 profit on that $40k? That's a question you need to ask yourself before you start.
FWIW I think there is a great benefit to picking up account work for a retail based operation. Aside from the extra revenue, doing low margin/profit work will force you to re-evaluate your processes to gain efficiency. That will translate over to your retail work and make you more profitable there as well.
vtec92civic said:Thanks Todd i got the e-mail you sent me with the contract and man that is some serious cut throat stuff you got there. I wonder if that is to much?
todd@bsaw said:As far as profit margin, I think you are not taking into consideration the majority of a detailers expenses are almost negligible per detail. The expenses using bulk products on 5 cars isn't any more than boutique products on one car.
todd@bsaw said:in a dealer/wholesale setting the XC90 would not be getting any addition buffing work on the exterior. If it was asked of, that would be charged extra just like any other detail.
tssdetailing said:sticky-worthy thread for sure!
Just adding my 2¢ Is it out of line, or possbile to believe that at signing the dealer will hand the buyer your business card as part of the contract? Not something you could really monitor, but maybe next year that car could come back to you for a full detail w/out going through the dealer.
MichaelM said:The thing is if you hand a sales manager an invoice for the month with 25 vehicles detailed and 12 up-charges over the base price for this and that you're opening up yourself to a great deal of questioning and comparison shopping on their part. Even if you have some kind of agreement in place about pricing they can choose to stop giving you work at any time. IME this is how it works around here.
MichaelM said:I'd be real interested to hear how David Fermani had his pricing set-up with his accounts.
MichaelM said:Thanks for the info! It'd be nice to see a shop set-up like you had in action. I don't know of any local to me.
todd@bsaw said:Thanks for the great advice and for giving us a smidge of your wisdom, David!
dmw2692004 said:A lot of great advice here. Just be weary of "the guy down the street" otherwise known as your local competition that is willing to cut their prices so low that you have to either drop yours lower or give up. This has happened to me 3 times already with bodyshops sending me 3-5 cars a week at $80 a car. I went in to pick up a car and they told me that the guy down the street would do it for $60. I told them to knock themselves out, three times(all three body shops were on the same street). Turns out the guy down the street pays his son to crank out garbage jobs and run the touch less wash/bays.
moral of the story: kiss as much *** as possible and if "the guy down the street" starts invading your territory, go have a chat with him about what his prices are doing to the local detailing market.