Post a new topic
12 Replies Last post: Aug 24, 2008 10:11 PM by snowball

Laundromat Business

Oct 25, 2007 5:36 PM

Click to view LUCKIEST's profile SCORE LUCKIEST 7,935 posts since
Aug 6, 2007
Can you really make money in the laundry business?
Report as inappropriate
Click to view Ed O'Gee's profile Mogul Ed O'Gee 215 posts since
Oct 25, 2007
1. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 25, 2007 5:41 PM
Not sure about laundry by you can make tons of money in the dry cleaning business. I once heard there are more America millionaires made from dry cleaners than any other business.
Click to view LT Lawn Care's profile Authority LT Lawn Care 36 posts since
Oct 4, 2007
2. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 26, 2007 9:02 AM
I also heard the same thing about dry cleaners, but when you think about it, it makes sense. Most people don't do their own dry cleaning, so it is a business which really has no slow period. If you find a good spot you can make real good money!
Click to view Score133's profile SCORE Score133 34 posts since
Aug 14, 2007
3. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 26, 2007 9:31 AM
You can make money in ANY business! You just have to have the right plan. Your first step has to be to create a comprehensive business plan. If you don't already have one, just go to http://www.score.org or http://www.sba.gov and download a business plan format. It's really a "roadmap" to get you from where you are to where you want to be. Without a plan, you'll be tempted to make decisions that may not be in the best interest of the business and will get your off focus. The business plan will enable you to evaluate your location, your demographics, your competiiton and most importantly, your financial situation. Can you survive until those quarters are coming in by the bagful? Yes, if you plan it properly. I'd also like to suggest you visit the SCORE Association website and look for a good (free) business counselor who has experience in the coin-operated laundromat business. Good luck!
Click to view DomainDiva's profile Mogul DomainDiva 1,732 posts since
Oct 10, 2007
4. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 26, 2007 3:19 PM
You can make a lot of money in the laundromat business as well as the dry cleaning business..... Remember location...location....location.
Click to view WEBillions's profile Mogul WEBillions 154 posts since
Oct 10, 2007
5. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 26, 2007 10:43 PM
in response to: DomainDiva
Yes, location is key. If there are already several laundry facilities in the area, you are going to have a hard time making money unless you have something your competitors don't, perhaps entertainment while waiting? Plus, try to find out how many people don't have their own washer and drier.
Click to view Sunkist's profile Professional Sunkist 14 posts since
Oct 29, 2007
6. Re: Laundromat Business Oct 29, 2007 11:07 AM
I have a client that makes a killing offering wash dry fold services. About 40% from drying cleaning and the rest from Wash/Dry/Fold.
Click to view Laundry101's profile Professional Laundry101 8 posts since
May 28, 2008
7. Re: Laundromat Business May 28, 2008 2:11 PM
in response to: Score133
Thanks Score133 for all the good info. will be sure to use it.
Click to view Laundry101's profile Professional Laundry101 8 posts since
May 28, 2008
8. Re: Laundromat Business May 28, 2008 2:13 PM
in response to: DomainDiva
Thanks, this laundromat is in a great location, it`s the only one in the vencinity and it up and running.
Click to view Laundry101's profile Professional Laundry101 8 posts since
May 28, 2008
9. Re: Laundromat Business May 28, 2008 2:15 PM
in response to: Ed O'Gee
Just looking to be financially free, and this laundromat is the only one in the area, and it`s already up and runnig.
Click to view Laundry101's profile Professional Laundry101 8 posts since
May 28, 2008
10. Re: Laundromat Business May 28, 2008 2:18 PM
yes you can, I am form a small town and most people are renters and the laundromat is the only one in the area and makes about 3.000.00 a week right. will make more once I upgrade it.
Click to view PeoplePawn's profile Mogul PeoplePawn 28 posts since
May 28, 2008
11. Re: Laundromat Business May 28, 2008 9:55 PM
+I'll probably be the first any only person to talk about this subject from an actual owner/operator perspective rather than the "speculative assumption" perspective. I actually created and developed a fresh multi-unit brand (++www.DarciesLaundry.com++) here in the Seattle area several years ago.+

www.DarciesLaundry.com was my second successful multi-unit retail start-up. I experienced a successful exit strategy after working very hard on building the brand and the retail stores for almost 5-years. The brand is still alive and profitable for its new owners today.

I will start by saying..."proceed with caution". The laundromat industry and the dry cleaning industry are 2 separate consumer industries. There is an opportunity for overlap, but fundamentally a laundromat and dry cleaners have differentiating customer profiles.

Risk factors with laundromats:
*Increasing utility costs
*Ongoing maintenance costs
*Internal theft
*Internal property damage
*High store build out costs
*To "staff" or not to "staff" - the self-service risk!
*High lease costs for prime locations expressed as % revenues

Risk factors with dry cleaners:
*Increasingly difficult to find landlords that allow dry cleaning on site - due to EPA guidelines
*High labor costs - most items require individual preparation and hand finishing
*Risk level for item damages is high

That said...like any other retail business the "secret sauce" to this industry like any other retail business is the store location as well as the market size. Laundromat customers need longer opening hours, more adjacent parking and are price sensitive. Dry cleaning customers are service sensitive. I built the www.DarciesLaundry.com brand incorporating dry-cleaning into the laundry business model. I also differentiated the brand from competitors by building big, bright and beautiful stores in high traffic retail corridors, with trained and uniformed staff on site every hour the stores were open, as well as offering all customers a no-coin automated branded pre-paid card system.....all equipment was brand new commercial size for customer convenience and we offered free TV, spotless bathrooms. a Kid's corner. free internet and monthly customer promotions.

If done right, you should receive a potential 30% net profit on revenues and a potential positive exit strategy. Just today, I received a telephone call from one of my old store managers that purchased a store from me...after three years he has paid off his store and was offered $500K for his business by a local broker that has a buyer.

So please....do your homework....you could easily buy yourself a job....if there is anything I can do to help, please let me know. Avoid all of the advice from the experts that have no experience or success in this field. You can do well, if you make the right decisions.

Regards,

Patrick Kane (www.patrick@peoplepawn.com)
Click to view snowball's profile Authority snowball 10 posts since
Aug 23, 2008
12. Re: Laundromat Business Aug 24, 2008 10:11 PM

Yes, the laundromat and dry cleaning both can make good money. The laundromat use less personnel
as compare to dry cleaning, also the customer is doing all the work whereby dry cleaning, you have to
deal with customer relationship onb a daily basis.

Key ingredients of sucess: Location, Right Size of Store, Equipment Mix and the most important is
how you treat your customers.

Most Recent Forum Posts

Legend

  • Open Question
  • Answered Question
  • New content since your last visit
  • Updated content since your last visit
  • Content you have read