I'm only replying for future members who end up on this page and are caught up on their name.
Your name will make up 0.0001% of your business.
What most in here are saying is stay away from the overused unoriginal names, and not that the names do not matter.
Stevens Detailing
North West Auto Salon
Lucci Elite Detail
High End Detail
Wet Detail
Metropolitan Detail
Superior Shine
Luxe Auto Spa
Impressions Auto Salon
These are top guys around the US.. is there anything unique?
You are also comparing these giants to a local detailer like they have the same business model and points of emphasis.
The reason I pointed out these giants because they have the traffic volume to test and see if changing a few words around makes a difference.
Every local detailer will have less than 1000 unique visits a month.. SaaS or ecommerce businesses can get more than 1,000,000 unique visits per month.
If you change your button color from blue to yellow it will have zeerrooo changes.
If a SaaS site is getting over 1,000,000 visits a month and they change their button color from yellow to red, they may get a 1.5% increase/decrease in conversions.
Doesn't sound like a lot, right? Well 1.5% of 1,000,000 is 150,000.
So now they either will have 150,000 increase/decrease in conversions. Pretty big deal, right?
At a local scale, none of that matters. Colors, logos, names, etc.. do not matter.
I'm not saying choose something crazy and foolish.. just don't get all eaten up over these small things that won't make a difference.
When you are searching online, which I assume is where a large amount of business starting out is, the name is the first thing the potential customer sees, along with ALL the other local competitors. If you have something that stands out, that might mean yours is the first to be clicked on.
Let's start off with "a large amount of business". Most cities in the US will not get more than 3000 searches a month for local detailing related services.
Since people are looking for a local service and also assuming it's a "high volume" keyword, you will either have the local 7-pack or a single top result followed by the local pack.
Now, there's no real solid hardcore numbers on the web, but
Marketing Land said the first 5 results on page one get 67% of the clicks (these numbers will quickly change because of the AdWords being displayed since most local searches have commercial intent).
So now you have ~2000 people clicking on the first 5 results. Then you have to convert those visitors into customers. So for every 100 visitors to your site, 2 people decide to give you a call.
With a conversion rate of 2%, you'll need need 500 visitors to your site to receive 10 phone calls.
(I know the math doesn't make sense here but go along. Let's keep it simple)
From those phone calls, you need to close the deal on as many as you can (which is another world on itself). Let's assume (again) your close rate is 50%.. Out of 10 phone calls, you close 5 people. So now you have 5 customers. Congrats!
Of course, that's in a perfect world where you know what you're doing.
And before any of that, how do you even get on the first page of Google (let alone the first 5 results)? Gaining backlinks, local citations, on-page optimization, targeted keywords, etc..
Then you have to take into consideration the copy you use in the site tile tag (what's displayed in the search results). Since Google only allows ~60 characters, you have to catch their attention through that.
Then let's assume (again) they click on your page and they land on your page. If your copy is self-centric, you're also going to have a large drop off.
Then let's assume (again) that they click around and like what you have but aren't ready to buy so they click away. Whoops, look at that, you didn't collect their email. Guess you'll never see them again.
How about we assume (again) that you collect their email address and send an email every week. Oh crap, your copy sucks, design is horrible, boom.. they unsubscribe and you never see them again.
I can keep on going..
This is why detailers stay a one man shop and don't go for bigger goals. They're stuck on the small things.
Here is what you should obsess over:
- search engine optimization
- copywriting
- facebook ads
- referral system
- google adwords
- sales
- email marketing
- a little bit of conversion rate optimization
- building an email list
- hiring
- retargeting
- autoresponder
- automation
- customer acquisition cost, churn, retention, etc
I'm not trying to sound like a smarty
I just want people to grasp the concept that local level services
suck at marketing.
You guys can dominate your market and make real money if you cared about the things that really moved the needle forward.
/rant