How Many Members Are Full-Time Detailers?

SuperGlide

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It seems like most members have another job besides detailing.
I was wondering how many are full time, meaning that's how you pay your house payment, car, food, etc.
No other source of income.
I'm full time :xyxthumbs:
 
I do detailing full time and help my friends company that does corporate jets. I do contract work for another shop and train their guys on paint correction and detailing which pays very well.
 
I detail Monday - Friday and am a test pilot for NASA on the weekends
 
I just like my cars to be clean. Detailing works the complete other way for me. It doesn't make me anything it just costs me!
 
I detail 8 days a week...... sometimes 9 days a week. But I only detail autos, boats, buses, rvs, aircraft, semis, and motorcycles...... never detailed a ufo yet I think Id be the first pick lmao. On a serious note though, I would detail a ufo :buffing:
 
I am full time since 1992-

red8.JPG
 
I detail 8 days a week...... sometimes 9 days a week. But I only detail autos, boats, buses, rvs, aircraft, semis, and motorcycles...... never detailed a ufo yet I think Id be the first pick lmao. On a serious note though, I would detail a ufo :buffing:

hahahaha good one!



you'll only get so many answers.. im sure there are more professional detailers out there that are full time that hardly ever ever ever get on forums
 
I just started out but with this business I believe that with time you can not only become full time but may have to turn work away. Thing is it takes time and dedication and you have to do top work every time. I feel it's the type of field where you really have to pay your dues before you can achieve success.

The one downside I see to this business is that you are limited in growth to what you can do in x amount of time. It's very hard to leverage. I was talking about people a few months ago about hiring people to help and grow and many were very cold to the idea. Since your business is really dépendent on your reputation and the quality of your work it seems people have issues putting that at risk.

Also physical shape is an important factor. Everytime I do long jobs (say more than 3 hours) I am sore all over. I hope that with time it will become easier but I don't see myself doing that at 65... So if you get hurt or sick it will really put a dent in what you can do.

So that's my take on this. As far as how many people here are full time, probably a lot. We don't have a NASA gig during the weekend or more than 7 days in a week you know! :)
 
Do you guys have problems with being 'under cut' by hobbyists?

My wife works in real estate / property management but she also does some photography on the side. Mostly real estate and commercial photography (kinda ties in, see? hehe). That industry is severely harmed by a bunch of stay-at-home moms whose kids are getting older, who got their first 'nice' camera and are now doing a crappy job at a cut-rate price because they aren't factoring in their overhead. Unlike my wife, they are uninsured, don't have backup cameras and lenses, and often times have severely under-rated equipment using the old excuse "It's not the camera, it's the photographer". (Yeah that's fine honey, but you suck anyway!). Couple that with a bunch of cheesy effects in cut-rate editing software and there you have your craigslist special! Makes it difficult for my wife (somewhat; because she is in more the commercial side and has a lot of connections), because with calibrated high end displays for editing, the latest (expensive) software, a high end camera with backups, insurance, she actually PAYS taxes instead of waiting for the IRS to educate her on making money and not telling them about it, etc., there's a lot more overhead.

I just wonder if this industry is plagued in the same way. Do you guys have to compete with a lot of uninsured, under-equipped, skill-lacking people trying to 'get started' by seriously under-cutting their price?

This is just curiosity. Nothing at all I'm interested; very satisfied with my career, detailing is just something I like to do because I like my cars clean and I'm too cheap to pay any of you suckers to do it! :P. But I am curious!
 
Full time here. I work 4 days a week doing my own mobile gig. 3 days a week I'm a polisher for a dealer body shop until I'm busy enough to be completely on my own. Also saves me during winter and covers my medical. Hopefully after this winter I'll be completely on my own.
 
Do you guys have problems with being 'under cut' by hobbyists?

My wife works in real estate / property management but she also does some photography on the side. Mostly real estate and commercial photography (kinda ties in, see? hehe). That industry is severely harmed by a bunch of stay-at-home moms whose kids are getting older, who got their first 'nice' camera and are now doing a crappy job at a cut-rate price because they aren't factoring in their overhead. Unlike my wife, they are uninsured, don't have backup cameras and lenses, and often times have severely under-rated equipment using the old excuse "It's not the camera, it's the photographer". (Yeah that's fine honey, but you suck anyway!). Couple that with a bunch of cheesy effects in cut-rate editing software and there you have your craigslist special! Makes it difficult for my wife (somewhat; because she is in more the commercial side and has a lot of connections), because with calibrated high end displays for editing, the latest (expensive) software, a high end camera with backups, insurance, she actually PAYS taxes instead of waiting for the IRS to educate her on making money and not telling them about it, etc., there's a lot more overhead.

I just wonder if this industry is plagued in the same way. Do you guys have to compete with a lot of uninsured, under-equipped, skill-lacking people trying to 'get started' by seriously under-cutting their price?

This is just curiosity. Nothing at all I'm interested; very satisfied with my career, detailing is just something I like to do because I like my cars clean and I'm too cheap to pay any of you suckers to do it! :P. But I am curious!

I don't really both shops by me are production shops and my work is far above them. I have stole a lot of business from by just doing better work. My prices are my prices if someone is looking for a cheap detail its not me.
 
Im full time. I dont worry about being undercut. I just do what i do and improve every year.
 
No worries on being undercut. Offering unique services/quality work will make you very secure.

Sent from my DROID RAZR using AG Online
 
Glad to see more full-time pro's :xyxthumbs:

If your honest, do quality work, educate and
offer fair pricing you have to turn more work away
then what you can do.
 
Full time as an employee then private correction work or personal stuff on weekends. And most nights I dream about detailing too. It's a sickness
 
I am not a detailer.
Just a hustler here.
Straight grinding with mad skills and wide assortment of tools necessary to get the job done proficiently; and the history to back it up.
Stacking cheddar whenever possible.
:)
 
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