jsatek said:
Appliedcolors - I think you need to enlighten the crew on the powerful profits in bumper repair.
I remember outsourcing my lot bumper work to a guy with a mobile solution and giving him $120 per bumper. If the work took him 2 hours, it was too long. I'd call him 1x per month and have about 10 bumpers waiting for him. I used to mix the colors as I had 2 mixing systems on site, most of the mobile guys are color blind. I just asked him to prep, spray, and finish the jobs.
I couldn't tie up my booths for a single bumper.
This was the conclusion of the discussion on the PDR forum: detailing profits are thin...reconditioning profits are fat.
You don't even need to provide these services yourself:
Paintless Dent Repair (About $175 per job)
Bumper Repair (About $225 per job)
Windshield Repair (About $35 per job)
Scratch Touchup (About $35 per job)
Vinyl/Leather/Plastic Repair (About $100 per job)
Headlight Repair (About $40 per job)
90% of the cars we detail have one of the above problems. We successfully upsell at least one of these services on 60% of the cars we service. Our shop does all but PDR onsite, but smaller shops can simply refer the customer on to a local company and collect a referral fee of $20 - $40.
Windshield repair can be added for about $600. Scratch repair for $800 - $3000. Headlight repair can be done with wetsanding and compounding (search Autopia for instructions). PDR could take $10k and a year to learn. Bumpers: $10k and a year. Interior: $4k and a year.
Reconditioning has actually kept our shop profitable season after season. We can keep our detailing prices competitive and know that our rarer services will add significant money to each job we accept.
Remember that detailing services are common and competitive. Adding services that your competition doesn't puts you in a less competitive space and allows you more control over your prices and income.