if you charge $15.00 to wash a truck and it takes you less than or almost an hour plus chemicals gas and your time and an employee, you need to tell me the formula as to HOW you are making money like that, washing 10 trucks @ about 8.5 hours and you spend all day to make 150.00 sell your business.
Mrsimon181 You’d be surprised at what having something like a PWNA Certification will do for you as obtaining business in a competitive market. Also gives you a little more value in your service to customers, usually allowing you to charge a little more and not be part of the undercut competition. I thinking training is a great idea, especially for new businesses coming in to a competitive market. It’s also not a bad for those who don’t have knowledge on washing. Learning the chemicals and chemical reactions is a must. Sure you can research on the web and do a lot of reading to do so, but either way it needs to be done. I’ve seen some very expensive mistakes, putting people out of business due to the costs of the damages and loss of insurance or even just because of the damaged reputation.
That's bullcrap, your out of your mind. 15.00 a truck, please guy, I'll pay you 15.00 not to wash it. Sounds like someone's trying to get over. To polish, and detail a truck, your in the hundreds range.....
You're missing the point. For a fleet of 500 trucks at $15 a truck it's $7,500 for biweekly service. That's $15,000 a month in revenue! You just have to be upfront with clients that you're two stepping and not polishing and detailing like Steve is mentioning with his client and service type. I average 12 units an hour with my guys, we can pump out 60-80 a day. That's $$$$$
Why don'y you get a actual dirty truck for your demo.
if you charge $15.00 to wash a truck and it takes you less than or almost an hour plus chemicals gas and your time and an employee, you need to tell me the formula as to HOW you are making money like that, washing 10 trucks @ about 8.5 hours and you spend all day to make 150.00 sell your business.
That number maybe was made up. You will be losing money with that
He said he'd was 10 trucks in under an hour
@@constantmaintenance2909 He might be doing a light wash. I heard of some car dealers just wanting a rinse and dry @ 2$ a car
@@constantmaintenance2909 he did say 10 trucks a hour
Only when it's a larger number like 200 or 300 to close the sale. Not 5, so 200× 25 is 5000 and it doest take an hour per 1
I charge 60 a tractor, 100 for tractor and trailer for both. That doesnt include chrome polish.
Where do you impart this training?
Did they just have a subliminal pissing contest 😭😂 .
$15 will only get a quick rinse
i can wash driveway in 30min and make $200......
Wear can I take this trainning
Lol you have to be a real idiot to go to training for washing a truck dumbfuck
Mrsimon181 You’d be surprised at what having something like a PWNA Certification will do for you as obtaining business in a competitive market. Also gives you a little more value in your service to customers, usually allowing you to charge a little more and not be part of the undercut competition. I thinking training is a great idea, especially for new businesses coming in to a competitive market. It’s also not a bad for those who don’t have knowledge on washing. Learning the chemicals and chemical reactions is a must. Sure you can research on the web and do a lot of reading to do so, but either way it needs to be done. I’ve seen some very expensive mistakes, putting people out of business due to the costs of the damages and loss of insurance or even just because of the damaged reputation.
@@erniezamora Training is always a good thing because it gives you knowledge.
TH-cam
Why he’s truck look so bad
That's bullcrap, your out of your mind. 15.00 a truck, please guy, I'll pay you 15.00 not to wash it. Sounds like someone's trying to get over. To polish, and detail a truck, your in the hundreds range.....
You're missing the point. For a fleet of 500 trucks at $15 a truck it's $7,500 for biweekly service. That's $15,000 a month in revenue! You just have to be upfront with clients that you're two stepping and not polishing and detailing like Steve is mentioning with his client and service type. I average 12 units an hour with my guys, we can pump out 60-80 a day. That's $$$$$