I started part time in 1992, went full time in April 1994. 2000-2004 were a little tough in the winter because of unusually heavy rains during that time but since late 2004, I have been slammed. Last year, 2006, was my best year yet, up nearly 20% over 2005, which was my previous best year. Having both my kids help in the summer and my older boy through the end of November really helped. This year is starting out really well. A touch slow at first (weather related), I now have most of January booked and it is only the 10th.
I know some focus only on full details but I also have a weekly wash service and maintenance packages. I feel that doing a quality detail only to send them to a tunnel wash for regular cleaning is a losing proposition. Why not get all their vehicle appearance business? To me, not taking care of their regular car care needs is like throwing money away. Seriously, say someone has 3 cars they are willing to pay you $100 a week to wash. Why turn down $5000 a year? Now add another 3-5 customers doing that and you have a nice base income that you can count on. Plus, my weekly regulars ensure I have a minumum amount of money coming in each week, plus they tend to tip weekly and huge during Christmas. My regulars tipped me around $800 in December. Since you have regular contact with your regulars, you can also keep them informed of when their next wax or detail is due. Since you have been keeping their cars up reguarly, they are easy to wax or detail.
I ended up dropping my landline and yellow page listing, too many price shoppers. With a strong internet presence, I have people contacting me ready to make an appointment, no need to sell them. Having a good website with a nice cross-section of vehicles in the gallery, good before and after pics, etc also helps. Detailing is a visual process and the more people can see that you are competent, the more willing they are to pay top dollar.
What Jay said about a strong customer base is right on. A satisfied customer is your best salesman.
