Danny Strickland said:
i thought it was a pretty straight forward request Bill.
I'll ask Bill and Steve since Chuck doesn't swim at this pool: if you HAD to start a cleaning biz tomorrow because Cole sued
Jon Don and won causing JD to go out of biz (this is hypothetical, so play along please) would you be a marketing company (you say chem who & stanley steemer are in yore course) with Coles model or would you run a model like any of yore other highly successful SFS grads who know their CODB and understand "net profit"???
Geez, Danny, I distinctly recall a time not too long ago when you had "a better way to pass a Sunday afternoon with the missus" than picking on poor Billy. Getting old, are you?
But what the heck, Danny. I'll take a swing at your question. Sooooo ... What would I do "tomorrow" if I started back in cleaning? Honest answer? I DON'T KNOW. Why not? Because it would all depend on many factors I had to work with that I can't foresee "today" including:
1. My current and projected health issues.
2. Just how deep down did Cole drill in his nefarious lawsuit? Just how desperate am I on this bleak "tomorrow"? For example, was Cole able to grab my assets and I am now penniless? Or did Cole leave me a decent cushion to "start over"? (Leave me enough to buy a TM with Greg. Please!) Or maybe I was able to dodge the "lawsuit bullet" and while I would miss working with my Jon-Don buddies I could just kick back and live off my rentals and investments and write that book I've been talking about for way too long. (Actually this last scenario doesn't sound too bad!)
3. What is my "exit strategy" going to be? At a "young 57" I assume the time line is not going to be way down the road.
4. Where is my "starting over" business going to be located? In another small population base like where I was before in Durango, CO? Or maybe in a "prestige area" like Aptos, CA?
5. What does my family want? What do I want?
At 57 and with a decent nest egg AND low overhead (Sioux and I are currently debt and mortgage free, at least till Greg wins the lawsuit) IF I felt like working physically I would probably go the high end, very high priced owner-operator "boutique cleaning business" route, work more in the start-up phase and then cut it to two-three days a week and gross 100K+ per year. Why would I do this instead of coming out swinging like Greg's operation does? Simply because I don't have the "business fire in the belly" I used to have and Sioux and I have other priorities in our lives now than ONLY making money/building a big business. (See #5 above.)
IF I needed more income OR couldn't cut the mustard physically (no cracks please) I would start up my DSM commercial marketing
http://www.strategiesforsuccess.com/755 ... commercial and build a route of commercial accounts mostly using Cimex encapsulation and reliable, highly paid employees who would all work no more than 15 hours or so per week for a lucrative second income.
OR I might ... there are just so many options which brings me to my main point, Danny. As you well KNOW SFS and Jon-Don are neutral in this whole "business model/size" game. For example, I am looking at the class profile from our SFS class last week in Roselle with 50 cleaners attending. There were several brand new to the industry owner-operators including a couple who had never touched a carpet cleaning machine yet and we also had a company that was founded 55 years ago. If my count is right out of the 50 we had 12 single owner-operators. We also had 18 companies with 10 or more employees including one with 144 workers and several with 50 or more. The other companies all wound up somewhere in between. We also had some "coupon cleaners", at least three franchise owners, quite a few mainly janitorial companies and some high end "prestige" carpet cleaners. So what? ALL of these highly motivated individuals were "successful" enough that they could take a week off from work and the historical data says they will become even more successful (some wildly so) after their SFS week with us in Roselle.
Sure, Greg was kind enough to share his business progress with me after putting SFS concepts to work in his company and I put his experience up on our SFS website.
http://www.strategiesforsuccess.com/sec ... ss-stories HOWEVER, on the same page we also have "success stories" from a broad cross section of other companies, including owner-operators who charge a fortune for their services and have a totally different business model than Greg does.
NOTE: I have been following Greg's Tampa expansion odyssey closely simply because I have been publicly negative on the whole two-city route for most carpet cleaners. But I'm ready to be proved wrong by Mr. Cole and if so- GREAT. This individual freedom to win or lose is what makes the game of capitalism so fascinating.
That is the beauty of this industry, Danny. Everyone gets to choose their own business model and their own definition of success. Our mission at
Strategies for Success is to inexpensively share business principles and an industry tailored Business Infrastructure that you can then modify to fit the type of business that you want to run. After we do this in an intensive (some say "brutal") five day program we are going to give you free lifetime no-strings-attached support with absolutely no requirements on buying stuff from Jon-Don. (You are still getting your free TIPS mailings, aren't you?)
I'm not sure how the SFS program got dragged into this dog fight, Danny, but we'd still love to have your smiling face and quick wit livening up a SFS in the near future! Seriously. Maybe we'll invite Mr. Cole and have a real fun time. (I'll make you the referee!)
Respectfully submitted,
Steve "Island Boy" Toburen
http://www.StrategiesForSuccess.com
PS I'm not sure where this thread is going or even why it was started. There is just no need and/or reason to pick apart what the other guy is doing, especially if he is on the other side of the country from you.

The free market system we live under works beautifully at weeding out bad business models and slimy operators. Sure, they crop up again. But Greg Cole has been doing this (if memory serves me) for over 15 years in Atlanta and (while you personally may not care for his marketing and/or business practices) the man is obviously financially successful. So while I haven't put his business under the microscope I don't need to! Why not? Because evidently hundreds of local Atlanta home owners ARE putting Greg Cole's business to the test every week and obviously he is pleasing enough of them that he is still in business and not going broke like Jon-Don is going to be after Greg finishes bankrupting us with his law suit! Now what did I do with that old extractor I kept when I sold my business 18 years ago? Maybe Greg Cole will take on an aging old rug-sucker as a sub-contractor ...