4 Ways to make $40 more per detail.

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You put in a lot of work to fill your calendar with new detailing appointments.

But have you put much effort into making as much as possible with each appointment?

If you could improve profits 10 – 20%, and in many cases not spend extra money, would you be willing to shuffle your service menu?

Here’s 4 tactics I used to increase per-car profits at my Beaverton, OR detail shop.

Method 1: Separate and upsell services from your complete detail.

How many restaurants give you an appetizer, beverage, entrée, and dessert for one price? Almost none. It’s no secret that restaurants lose money on entrees and make money on all the other stuff.

Take a look at your complete detail package. What’s essential, and what would the customer accept as optional?

Here’s steps you can remove from your detailing process and sell as optional services, as well as a price I’ve found customers willing to pay for them:

• Engine detail ($25)
• Longer-lasting paint sealant ($40)
• Leather conditioning ($25)
• Wheel wax ($25)
• Wetsanding and polishing of deep clear coat scratches ($20 – $40)
• Pet hair removal ($25 – $80)

Method 2: Stretch your price boundaries if needed.

First, don’t offer flat rate pricing because someone always loses. If the car is a “cherry,” the customer is overpaying. When the car is a “dog,” you’re selling your work short.

Price your detail packages to have a range of $80 from the low end to the top end (ie, $200 – $280 for a car, inside and out). Customers will try to “pin you down” on a final price over the phone, but I found an $80 “fudge factor” makes them comfortable enough to book an appointment and discover the final price when you meet later.

However…there will always be the occasional “nuclear bomb.” These have dog hair, food stains, mold, paint in the carpets, flaked paint, fire damage, mice, and more.

In my first 2 years in business, I stuck to my pricing menu and charged these “bombs” my max dollar amount. We lost money putting 12+ man hours into these. Very stupid.

Later, I didn’t hesitate to ask $100, $200, or $300 more for “bomb” cars and was delighted with how understanding most customers were about offering exceptional pricing for exceptional jobs.

Method 3: Create an “ultimate” package that groups all your special services, at a discount.

Bundles are appealing to your customers because:

• They get a lot…for less. Their desires to consume, and save, are satisfied simultaneously.
• Bundles make the buying decision simple. Many customers don’t want to put in the effort to differentiate a paste wax vs a paint sealant, or a light detail from a deep cleaning…so they may just choose your “ultimate” offering.

Your “bundle” might look like this:

• Your basic detail.
• Plus your most expensive sealant.
• Plus wheel wax.
• Plus leather reconditioning.
• Plus glass repellant.
• Plus engine detail.
• Plus fabric sealant.

Bought individually, this might cost $385. But as a bundle…$285.

Can you imagine a lot of your customers saying “yes” to that?

And better, just a 25% “yes” rate on the bundle could raise your average “ticket” 15% or more!

Method 4: Offer something more than detailing.

You can do so much more to make your customers’ cars beautiful. Here are some examples of profitable services and the prices you can charge:

1. Paint touch up. Recolor rock chips and small scratches for $40 – $80.
2. Glass chip repair. About $45.
3. Leather dye. Recolor worn seats for about $125.
4. Wheel scuff repair. Grind, sand, and repaint alloy wheels for about $150 each.
5. Headlight reconditioning. Wetsand and polish cloudy lenses for $60 – $80 a pair.
6. Ozone odor removal. Eliminate smoke, mold, and mildew odors with an ozone generator for $50 – $100.

About a third of customers who booked details opted for these “add on” services because they found it convenient to get the whole car freshened up in one appointment. You can buy “add on” systems from many companies online, and learn to use them at home, with DVD training.

The original article from my blog

Comments? What are ways you've improved your per-car profits?
 
I really appreciate the insight. Thanks a bunch!
 
All good points! Add ons or up sell is all part of the service.
 
:iagree: with the others, thanks for the amount of detail and information. Very good points and well thought out.
 
Nice post!

Here's some stuff I do

1)I always attempt to up-sell 1 level up 100% of the time. IE: They want just an outside wash, I say something like "Ok, Sounds good. And for future reference, you can add interior vacuum & windows for just $9 more." To me it's not pushy and by saying the price difference instead of the full package price, its makes the difference seem small and they usually just add it on right there.

2) I usually combine 2-3 tasks that are fast & cheap because I have anywhere from 1-4 helpers with me. 2,3-4 jobs can be done at the same time, making the $per hour made increase while decreasing time customers wait. This way you can sell a big value for lesser price because time is cut short.

3)Go over your package menu with your customers in detail & completely. I noticed that when I explain each package in progression, listing how each one adds onto the previous, I usually get them onto my 3rd or 4th package. The further down my list I get in explaining packages the higher chance they choose something bigger.

4) Sell "Feature/Advantage/Benefit". By selling "Clay Bar" to a customer, you're selling snake oil in their mind. By explaining it in a pattern such as "Feature/Advantage/Benefit", you'll make them feel like they need it more. IE: They choose my basic detail, I ask when the last detail was and no matter what they say, I reply "Oh, ok.. the reason why I asked is, I was wondering if you were maybe interested in a clay bar treatment (*Feature). What is does is decontaminate your paints pores, allowing the wax to cover the paint better (*Advantage). With this option, you'll see a longer lasting wax and huge difference in how smooth and clean your paint stays."

5) Demonstrations!! For the clay, since we use Nano Skin I always offer a demonstration. I clean an area on the hood or roof. Spray the lube on, and give the customer the mitt with instructions. With these clay mitts you instantly feel the contamination and it being removed. Since I started doing this I've sold easily 95% on decontamination.
 
5. Headlight reconditioning. Wetsand and polish cloudy lenses for $60 – $80 a pair

I wish i would get that much for headlights.

I usually charge around $25. Alot of headlights don't turn looking like new because they are hazy from the inside.
 
Awesome info.... I often wondered if "Ala Cart" style was better or a regular menu style. This will def be put to good use.
 
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