Does anyone else wash cars at a car dealers lot? If so, share your stories

Now you have me worried. If you feel your too old to wash cars at 36, I may have a tough time out there in the hot sun at 50 yrs old

Had some back problems for a while. Much better now but fast paced production washing would definitely not help! Lol!
 
In sorry but that will probably not work. Most lot washers charge $1-3 per car and will spray and wipe. Dealers do not care about 'proper' technique or swirl marks.

You will be doing an incredible amount of work for $15 an hour? If you are going to do this just hire a teenager, charge $2.50 per car and do 25 an hour. Its the only way to make work like that profitable and worth the effort.

I washed car lots for 2 years by the way.

Be ready to get undercut also. Most dealers will dump you in a heartbeat to save .25 a car. Just the nature of the business.

Sent from my DROID RAZR using AG Online

This is absolute truth.

You would be working far harder than the "client" expects for peanuts the way you are thinking. If you want to build your business and make a profit you have to market to people who see some value in your skillset or comprimise and take the shortcut the dealer is perfectly fine with and even expecting (even then the profit margin isn't high enough given you aren't getting any loyalty or brand building from it). A dealer doesn't need someone with a skillset just a kid with a pressure washer and drying towel.

Mike has written over and over about designing packages to fit your client, don't do show car level detailing where production detailing is a better fit and so on. This is the same idea, don't provide production level washing when all they want is a spray and wipe. Better yet, focus on people who are looking for actual detailing and will pay for it. One step production detailing will provide most of your business until you can make a name for yourself and each client will help you build that name, this crap will not.

As for nobody willing to do it. if you are, someone else is. I see people trying to sell things door to door, people building roof trusses, cleaning septic tanks and other rather unappealing jobs all the time alot worse than spray and wipe. Someone is willing to work for peanuts but it isn't me.
 
Your not going to get $5-$8 for cars, it's just that simple!
If you want to try by all means, I've worked for dealerships and believe me they don't care! Neither do 99% of the people buying the cars for that matter. If you want to go waste your time for peanuts by all means, but you've been warned.
 
Your not going to get $5-$8 for cars, it's just that simple!
If you want to try by all means, I've worked for dealerships and believe me they don't care! Neither do 99% of the people buying the cars for that matter. If you want to go waste your time for peanuts by all means, but you've been warned.

Are you saying $5 to $8 per car is working for peanuts, or are you saying that the dealer will want to pay peanuts to wash the cars for a spray and wipedown ($1 to $3) ?
 
Are you saying $5 to $8 per car is working for peanuts, or are you saying that the dealer will want to pay peanuts to wash the cars for a spray and wipedown ($1 to $3) ?

He's saying if you think they will pay you $5 a car to do more than they want when they can pay $2 per car to get exactly what they want you will be dissapointed.

Dealers don't see the value in a 2 bucket wash, if they did the industry standard wouldn't be the spray n wipe. They want to keep overhead as low as they can and don't see the 2BW as having a proper ROI.
 
He's saying if you think they will pay you $5 a car to do more than they want when they can pay $2 per car to get exactly what they want you will be dissapointed.

Dealers don't see the value in a 2 bucket wash, if they did the industry standard wouldn't be the spray n wipe. They want to keep overhead as low as they can and don't see the 2BW as having a proper ROI.

Thanks for the info. Yes I agree with you that the two bucket wash is not important to a dealer. What I don't understand is why this dealer is having trouble finding someone to wash the lot. It looks like teens would be lining up to wash the lot for a summer job
 
My wife works for a very well established dealer in our area. She's the right-hand man for the GM of the store.

Well, I keep my cars clean as i can. I go and pick her up sometimes for lunch, and on occasion, i keep her car looking good. Last year, she had the wash people detail her car. Needless to say, when the sun came out, you could see nothing but rotary buffer marks all over her company car.

She was pissed. Went straight to her boss, and asked what kind of clowns they hire for detail.

I looked at it on a friday night, and said, "i'll take care of it."

I corrected all weekend, but when she went to work, her car looked better than the one on the showroom floor. She told her boss what I did, and later in the day, he went to go look at it. She said he was "impressed."

A month goes by, and i drive up to the dealership in my 2003 black camry that looks like liquid carbon. Go inside and wait at her desk so we can go to lunch. When she arrives, her boss is with her. I've met him before, so we say our 'hello's' and 'how ya been?' He then commented on the job i did on her company car. And would i be interested in working in the detail shop for used cars that need to be reconditioned before they hit the lot.

I kindly told him that it took me 2 VERY long days to correct what the wash crew destroyed in 45 minutes. If my wife was a paying customer, i would have charged her about $500 for my labor. Do you honestly think your going to pay ME that kind of money for a car you just took in on a trade?

I do car detailing as a hobby, not a living. And although you CAN afford my services, doesn't mean you WILL. You want/need fast and furious, not slow and perfect. So, thank you, but no thank you.
 
I took a photo of one of the cars I am suppose to watch at the Chevrolet Dealer . They are wanting me to wash the Import lot. The cars are dirty and it looks like some have swirl marks and lines in the paint. It looks like they may be washing the cars with a dirty wash mop. The silver car has dirty streaks in the paint down the door and tire dressing would make this car look much better





 
I've worked at both a Honda and Kia dealer over the past 8 years (same company), and in my experience, neither the dealer nor customers care how you get their car clean just so long as it's "clean." Trust me on this - you could honestly be using oven cleaner and your grandma's underwear to wash their car and they'd probably never know the difference. I'm still amazed at what passes for "acceptable" work on a dealer lot.
 
I'm still amazed at what passes for "acceptable" work on a dealer lot.

Me too...

Fresh out of the dealership "detail" bay:
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In very less time i was go for the dealer to wash the car because i am not satisfy to the wash dealers i just wash the car by himself in the garage of the house and after that i use wax for the car...
 
In very less time i was go for the dealer to wash the car because i am not satisfy to the wash dealers i just wash the car by himself in the garage of the house and after that i use wax for the car...

I don't understand this post, can you write it again in more detail?
 
In very less time i was go for the dealer to wash the car because i am not satisfy to the wash dealers i just wash the car by himself in the garage of the house and after that i use wax for the car...


What?
 
Local GMC / Buick dealer here pays 4$ each once every 3 months to have what's on the lot washed and dried, nothing more. Their own guys rinse them off once a week.

sent while driving recklessly
 
Local GMC / Buick dealer here pays 4$ each once every 3 months to have what's on the lot washed and dried, nothing more. Their own guys rinse them off once a week.

sent while driving recklessly

I would wash and dry only for $4 a car. I think that is fair. Do you wash the cars or do they hire a wash service?
 
I would wash and dry only for $4 a car. I think that is fair. Do you wash the cars or do they hire a wash service?

How many could you do in an hour?

Maybe 10 minutes each?


That's $24 dollars per hour

- overhead of $1 per car

= $18 per hour if you are the one doing it


Does that sound correct?
 
How many could you do in an hour?

Maybe 10 minutes each?


That's $24 dollars per hour

- overhead of $1 per car

= $18 per hour if you are the one doing it


Does that sound correct?

Yes 10 minutes a car wash and dry. I would say it's about $18 an hour and I would be happy with that wage for washing cars
 
Yes 10 minutes a car wash and dry. I would say it's about $18 an hour and I would be happy with that wage for washing cars

You had better bring some help...

Some of the lots have 300 or more cars on them...

That's 50 hours of washing cars at a pace of 6 per hour!

I suspect that they do not want you there during the day while customers are on the lot
 
You had better bring some help...

Some of the lots have 300 or more cars on them...

That's 50 hours of washing cars at a pace of 6 per hour!

I suspect that they do not want you there during the day while customers are on the lot

Yes, the Chevy dealer that wants me to wash their cars has Chevy, Hyundai, VW , used cars and Special Finance. Right now they just want the Import lot washed which includes 140 VW Cars not including the Hyundai cars. The last car washer took 10 days at 8 hours a day to wash just the Import lot
 
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