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How to take a look back on this years business.

Posted by Linda Chambers on Fri, Dec 19, 2014 @ 09:53 AM

I wrote this blog post four years ago but I thought I should bring it out again with a little up dating as well.


Here are ways to look back at the end of the year and set up to do in the new year to focus on the positive and hopefully change any negatives to make your next year even more merry and bright.


1. During the year, monthly, or even weekly if you have time, record your progress for that time period. At the end of the year, you’ll be able to look back and see how much you really have accomplished. If you did not do that this year it is not too late to get out the appointment book or job accounting records, take a look at your email account and take a trip down memory lane. Keep lists of the following:

• all the new contacts you’ve made in person;
• all the one-on-one email, Facebook or similar B2B contacts you’ve made;
• any networking events, lunches, meetings you’ve attended and the benefit you got from them;
• press releases you published or any free publicity you’ve received;
• any classes you’ve taken to further your business, and how they improved your business plan;
• any recognition, award or nomination you’ve received;
• new clients you’ve gotten this year and how much they financially impacted your bottom line;
• volunteer projects you’ve taken on;
• how many referrals did your referral program bring you;
• potential clients who’ve shown an interest in you that you can revisit this next year;
• creation or improvements of your web site, social media, business cards and other marketing materials.


2. Join a Business Success Team. These weekly group meetings with other small business owners are great for sharing ideas and the agenda often requires participants to report what they’ve done the past week and set a new goal for the following week. This is great incentive to do what you said you would. Not all “B&I” groups are the same so find one that fits your marketing style and has members you think you can learn from.


3. Ask clients for feedback on the work you’ve done for them. Get verbal testimonials over the phone, in writing is best and if possible shoot B&A video of jobs with the customer’s reaction after work in finished. Photo B&A will work too.


4. Keep an e-mail folder where you keep testimonials and any positive feedback you’ve received for something you’ve done. Add these monthly to your web site, Pinterest board, or as footnotes to your e-mails.


5. Call up a friend, networking buddy or another entrepreneur and go for coffee. Getting out of the office and sharing similar concerns with a like-minded person is a great morale booster and problem solving activity. Knowing you are not the only one in the same boat or that has faced the same difficulty leaves you feeling better and hopefully with a solution or possitive outlook.


6. Finally make your self a list of how you can use these positive things to promote and make your business better in the next year.


Happy Holiday and Happy New Year to you all.

Tags: analysis, Best Management Practices, business plan, End of Year

PWNA 2014

Posted by Linda Chambers on Tue, Nov 18, 2014 @ 01:56 PM

Although it was a little later in the year for the annual Power Washers of North America convention, so that it could coinside with CETA in Orlando, FL, it was a good event.

PWNA2014Signs

 

We again were a sponsor, an exhibitor and this year a speaker for not one but two breakout classes.

This year on Saturday November 1st was the day for the paid PWNA certification classes to be held. There were seven different classes in all covering many aspects of pressure washing; Wood Restoration, Fleet Washing, Roof Cleaning, House Washing, Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning, Flatwork and even an OSHA Lift Certification.

Held again for the third year at the Embassy Suites Orlando – Lake Buena Vista South hotel, attendees enjoyed, nighty happy hours, good food, great accomidations and of course pleanty of local activities for the families of the attendees.

The two classes I gave were on "Chemical Safety" and "How to set up for OSHA training".

OSHAsign Both of which are often overlooked and interconected topics. I hope to give these classes again next year and at other events. We also had little supprise gifts for the attendees of corded safety ear plugs, and a mini container of bandaids. 

Soap Warehouse gave to the PWNA auction two 10 lb pails of the product of the winners choice to help raise funds for the PWNA general fund. The bidding winners were; Jonathan Fister who chose our Truck Wash Powder and Jay Jenkins who chose our Hard Surface Cleaner Powder.

Our Booth Drawing Prize was a professional 1 minute video valued at $795 that was won by Bill Mahan of Liquid Corp Services.

VideoWinnersPWNA14

 I hope to get to see and meet more Soap Warehouse customers at our next event.

 

 

Tags: convention, chemical safety, Trade Show, PWNA, OSHA training

How To Clean Dryvit coated buildings

Posted by Linda Chambers on Wed, Oct 01, 2014 @ 01:49 PM


I have gotten or seen this question a few times this cleaning season so I wanted to post for you this information I found.


 

Dryvit Dryvit_logo is discribed as a textured acrylic finish and as such is a very sensitve product. It is recommended by the manufacture to have periodic cleanings to keep the surface in good shape following these guidelines.

1. Never use an acid or acidic cleaner for general cleaning. Use an alkaline cleaner. They list four products on their website and after checking the MSDS on all of them we can say that our Citrus X-terior will be just as safe and effective as those listed. Our Mighty Max, Mighty Max Plus, Mighty Green and Natures Green could also be used. How to handle efflorescence with an acid is listed later at number 11.

2. Test clean each Dryvit surface with the proposed cleaner in a small and isolated area before commencing to do the larger scope of work for every job. Each type of Dryvit finish is different.

Dryvit_Freestyle_finish Free Style Dryvit_sandpebble_finish Sand Pebble

3. Do not lean ladders against a Dryvit coated surface as this can cause damage. Think egg shells.

4. Prewet the surface prior to applying cleaner, do not let cleaner dry on surface and rinse thoroughly.

5. Clean from the bottom up so cleaners will not "clean streak" the finish.

6. Use cold water only for cleaning and rinsing, hot water will soften the acrylic finish.

7. Keep pressurized tip angles between 10-45 degrees depending on distance from the Dryvit surface. Ex: 10 degrees when 100 feet above the nozzle to 45 degrees 2-5 feet away. Never use nozzles closer than 24 inches.

8. Use only low pressure, under 600 psi, when using a pressure washer for applying a cleaning solution and rinsing or use a hand pump sprayer for appilcation and a garden hose for rinsing.

9. A soft bristle brush, cloth or mop can be used for agitation to remove contaminants that have been lifted by the chemical cleaning sollution and out of crevices, but not such force that the surface is abraded or removed.

10.If there is evidence of mold and mildew, bleach or similar cleaners should be used so these are killed and removed before any recoating of Dryvit can be applied.

11. If efflorescence has occured due to moisture coming through the dryvit from underlying brick or cement, first determine the sorce of the moisture and stop it, then an atempt at removing the efflorescence can be made. First try a general cleaning with a slightly higher pressure of water to try and remove a light deposit, to using a extremely diluted (1 part to 20) acidic cleaning solution to remove a heavy deposit. As with all cleaning, prewet first, let dwell and a light brushing may be needed prior to rinsing. We would suggest starting with distilled white vinager, or oxalic up to citric acid to be tried.

12. Be sure to thoroghly rinse especially if any acid was used to avoid any adhesion problem for any recoating of dryvit.

13. Surface must be completly dry before refresing the finish or a color change of the Dryvit.

 

I hope this helps anyone that has a job come up with a Dryvit surface to be cleaned. 


 

Tags: How to clean, Dryvit,, Citrus X-terior

Do your services require sales tax?

Posted by Linda Chambers on Thu, Sep 18, 2014 @ 09:00 AM

Sales tax is one of the largest sources of state revenue and with state and local governments struggling to fill cash flow gaps during a down economy they are voting in increases not only on goods but on services that are to be subject to sales tax. There's truly a hodgepodge of laws and taxing authorities: according to the National Retail Federation, 45 states and 7,500 cities, counties, and jurisdictions impose sales taxes.

0511-1010-2403-2232_Uncle_Sam_Taking_Tax_Dollars__clipart_image

Changes are being made across the United States to tax services of the following types of businesses: those selling professional services, constructions contractors, maintenance and janitorial services, of which pressure washing is considered to be a part.

North Carolina recently passed a law requiring taxation of servicing contracts of tangible personal property. It is said to include businesses like construction contractors and maintenance services. 

Many states are adding sales tax to services when they are in conjunction with goods sold (e.g., computer and maintenance, swimming pool and pool cleaning, construction materials and installation, repair and upkeep.) States such as Delaware, Hawaii, New Mexico, Texas, South Dakota and Washington already tax on many services and others, like Minnesota and North Carolina are actively looking to expand service taxability.

In Minnesota, the following services are a sample of taxable services. Source: Minnesota Department of Revenue, Minnesota Department of Revenue publication.

  • Admissions fees to exercise facilities and places of amusement
  • Building cleaning and maintenance
  • Delivery of aggregate material
  • Detective and security services
  • Fabrication labor

So if you work in Minnesota go ahead and check into this now. Failing to know about sales tax, the rates and rules to the correct product and service is a potentially costly error. States regularly change product and service taxability rules, businesses that provide services alone cannot make assumptions about the taxability of services they provide, nor can they assume which rate to charge. This is particularly true for multi-jurisdiction service providers. Given that sales tax isn’t the focus of most service-based companies, the risk is high. Whether a service is taxable or not in your state is hardly an open and shut case. The universe of taxable services continues to expand while the universe of exempt services continues to shrink.

taxesalesuse

The connection that triggers a sales tax collection obligation is called a Nexus. Nexus means sufficient contact with or activity within this state, as determined by state and federal law, to require a person to collect and remit sales and use tax. Yet knowing if your company has nexus can be difficult. And even if you do not have nexus in your state other activities like traveling to another state for business or on line sales of services can could change your nexus.

Determine whether the state in which you work, that you have nexus, defines certain services as taxable. In Texas, for example, janitorial services are taxable. Generally, tax is due on the entire amount charged for a taxable service, including items such as labor, materials and mileage charges, even if separately listed on an invoice. So does janitorial services expand over to exterior cleaning? When I think of janitorial services I think of a maid or crew coming in to clean a home or business. I did find this from the Texas State tax office: http://www.window.state.tx.us/taxinfo/taxpubs/tx96_259.pdf in part states the following:

Taxable Services - Real Property Services 

"Pest control and extermination, garbage and other waste collection or removal, janitorial and custodial services (including parking lot sweeping or cleaning), landscaping and lawn maintenance (including tree surgery and plant leasing) and surveying."

Personal Services

"Services such as laundering, dry cleaning, carpet cleaning .... are taxable personal services."

I spoke with a sales tax rep from Texas and he stated that janitorial services covers any and all cleaning that would include any exterior washing, window washing, etc. So it sounds to me that any of you in Texas should be collecting and submitting sales tax.

North Carolina recently passed a law requiring taxation of contracts servicing tangible personal property. Examples include:

  • In ground pool warranty contracts
  • HVAC service contracts
  • Extended warranties for airplanes
  • Laptop repair contracts

There a service is taxable based on an associated purchase of a product not just on the service itself. Many states call this the True Object test. If the service is not a part of the main purpose of the transaction (purchase of the true object) than it may not be taxable. However, if the main purpose of the transaction (purchase of the true object), and only secondarily the services provided to support those goods, then the entire transaction is subject to sales tax. Example you are paid to clean a pool years after it was built and not as part of a service contract the customer had with the builder you may not have to collect sales tax. But if a company that builds pools has a yearly cleaning built into the contract that has hired you to perform the cleaning then sales tax should be collected. For companies servicing installation contracts, technical support, or other business services, sales tax can become a problem if not understood completely.

statetaxes

I suggest that even if you have never heard of anyone in your line of work having to pay state or local sales tax that you contact your State Revenue office at least once a year to be sure there have been no changes that could effect you. Nothing could be worse than to have the state come and fine you, revoke a state business license or at worst close your business for failure to file and pay taxes. 

We are hosting a local UAMCC event here in town.

Posted by Linda Chambers on Mon, Aug 18, 2014 @ 04:06 PM

This Saturday, August 23, 2014, Soap Warehouse, along with the North American Pressure Wash Outlet of Gainesville, GA, will be hosting a free UAMCC event.describe the image

It will be held in the meeting room of the Olde Town Tavern in Lawrenceville, GA at 835 Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road. This event will have classes running from 10:30 until 5:00 and will include lunch. 

To start the day attendees can go up the street to Panara Bread to grab breakfast and do some Networking and just before the venue opens we will be having an outside wash demo done on the Olde Town Tavern building starting at 9:15.

The venue opens at 10:00 am to check in, get badges and get up to the meeting area. Welcome will start at 10:15 with the first speaker scheduled to start at 10:30. Most talks will run from 30-40 minutes and will cover a wide range of topics: incorporation and taxes, customer retention, cold calling, chemical safety, how to set up OSHA training, pumps and more. 

During lunch the tables will be set up with talking topics to coincide with the speakers to enhance and expand on the information being presented.

At the end of the day there will be a drawing for some items donated by the sponsors as a thank you to the attendees for coming.

If you have not registered yet there is still time, spaces are limited but some are still available, so act fast.

I hope to see many of you there and am looking forward to this intimate learning experience that the UAMCC is bringing to our area. You must have a ticket number to register but the tickets are free, you can contact me 1-800-762-7911 to get yours.

 

Tags: Soap Warehouse, event, UMACC

PWRA and WCRA was a great event.

Posted by Linda Chambers on Mon, Aug 18, 2014 @ 03:13 PM

We just finished the PWRA/WCRA convention in Nashville, TN August 8and 9th held at the Gaylord Opryland Resort.

We had a great turn out at our booth. There were over 300 attendees and 30 vendors that exhibited. 

We sold sample size quarts of many of our favorite exterior products and had a drawing for two $100 product gift cards and one, 60 second professional video, valued at $695.00.

The winners of the gifts cards were: Joe Hiryak of Fayettevile Window Washing from Fayetteville Arkansas and Mike Willard of Dirt Zero from Nixa, MO.

The lucky winner of the free business video was Peggy and Terry Miller of Tegrey Family of Coatings from Canton, OH.

The resort is beautiful and attendees loved the venue. This show will be moving next year to the Washington D.C. area but at this time we are not planing to attend. We will move on to another show and closer to home but know it will again be a quality event, so if you can, make plans to attend.

 

 

 

Tags: convention, PWRA, WCRA, Nashville

UAMCC NCE Cleaning Expo in Orlando

Posted by Linda Chambers on Wed, Aug 06, 2014 @ 03:00 PM

This is the season for cleaning industry trade shows. This past week Soap Warehouse was a sponsor of another of the UAMCC's events. This one was the big National East event that was held Aug 1&2 in Orlando, Florida.

UAMCC2014cutMap resized 600

Even though we could not be there we are a sponsor and we did send two $100 product gift cards that were given away to two local Florida Companies.

The first went to Patrick Anthony of "A Tampa Bay Pressure Washing" from Valrico, FL.

WinnerPatrickAnthony resized 600

 

and the second went to David D'Eramo of "CentraFlo" from Winter Springs, FL.

WinnerUamccOrando2014 resized 600

This coming weekend we will be in Nashville for the PWRA National Convention and then we are right back home to do our own event for the UAMCC for Atlanta, here in Lawrenceville, on Saturday Aug 23rd. We have a great line up in store for the companies that attend.

We will have a CPA to discuss how you should set up your business for taxes, we will have speakers to talk about customer retention, chemical safety, how to trouble shoot pumps, how to set up OSHA training, Social Media, plus more and a quick building wash demo to start the day off at 9:00 prior to the classes starting at 10:00.

Remember as a UAMCC paying member you get to attend one free event each year and anyone can attend their first UAMCC event free with a VIP Pass even if you are not a member yet.

UAMCC VIP pass resized 600

If you missed the event in Orlando and can get to Atlanta for the day in a few weeks be sure to call us for your Free VIP pass. Once you have the pass with your ticket number you just go to the event web page www.uamccevents.com and use it to register for the event that you want to attend. I hope to see you soon.

Tags: UAMCC, VIP Pass, convention, event, Trade Show

Should you answer a customers question about the competition?

Posted by Linda Chambers on Fri, Jul 11, 2014 @ 12:28 PM

I saw this come up in a Travel blog (Disney vs. Universal). Sould employees of one be allowed or banned from answering a question asked about the other? And thought it can easily relate to our business as well since it comes up for us at least a couple of times a week.

Now obviously you are not going to know your competitions actual prices, even if you do, you do not need to answer that one but simple questions should be answered as just good form and quality customer service.

Also you should try very hard not to bad mouth the competition nor give info you do not know as fact, just an easy I do not know would be fine.

For instance I am asked all the time if some other companies specific chemical is as good or better than one of ours or vice versa.

Question I usually answer by finding out and going over the products ingredients, their strengths, weaknesses, and how they work for the job the customer is wanting to get done. If they already have a product on hand that should do the job whether it is ours or not I will tell them. That is just good customer service and normally that caller will appreciate that and think of us again the next time they need a product we have that they need and will make a purchase.

It would do us no good to tell the caller they need our specific product to do the job right, then once they get it find out by the label, MSDS or other ways that they already had an item just as good, so they just wasted time and money waiting for ours. That contractor would most likely never want to buy from us again and would bad mouth us all over the place.

Same with your customer and the competition. If a customer asks if so and so also soft washes? or some one told them that using bleach is bad, or why are you more than so and so? Just honestly answer the question with what you know, educated them on the pro's and con's of a certain method or why your price also comes with added benefits and be ready to list them.

That customer will be much more likely to go ahead and use you and feel good about hiring you, your company and about passing along a great review to their friends and family.

Just like what the writer of the travel blog said. "Guests won't think less of Disney if its cast members answer questions about Universal. Quite the opposite: it reflects well on Disney when its cast members answer questions even when Disney doesn't stand to make buck from the response. Great customer service is work that creates value for a guest. If you're working only to create value for your company, you're not providing great customer service. But smart business managers know that if they and their employees provide great customer service, their business often ends up making more money in the long run than companies that put themselves ahead of their customers."

Be the bigger, better company and answer any question your customer asks, even if it is about the competition.

Tags: competition, added value service, customer service

Mid Year is Here!

Posted by Linda Chambers on Wed, Jun 25, 2014 @ 02:02 PM

Well the Summer Solstice has just come and gone so this means half the year is already pasted us by. What have you accomplished in your business and what is still on your to do list that you haven't even started?

It is not too late to begin even some major business projects that will still add to this years bottom line. And do not let this busy time of year stop you from doing a fast 30 minute evaluation.

Get out our business plan, your business calendar, your to do list and any of the other helpers you have made to use as a method to gauge your progress so far.

Print out a year to date comparison from your accounting software like Quickbooks and see how you are doing. This is something you should already be doing every month. Are you ahead of last year, or the year before, are you where you projected you needed to be?

With these tools go over the positives and negatives and use them to change or update your business plan for the upcoming six months.

Are you doing the necessary social media connections that you should be doing to bring in new organic business? Not enough time, then try to delegate some or all of these tasks.

Is your referral program bringing you the number of jobs you planned so far? If not how can you improve it or expand it?

Are you noticing too many of our quoted jobs are going to your competition?

Is your pricing structure not giving you the profit you need?

If you need to review some of our past blog posts to create the tools you should be using here are some to check out:

What is a business plan. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/102796/What-really-is-a-Business-Plan-and-Why-should-I-make-one

Building Success in 20 min's a day. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/92822/Building-Success-in-Twenty-Minutes-a-Day

How to monitor your Social Media Footprint. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/71888/How-to-monitor-your-Social-Media-Footprint-in-10-minutes-a-day

Referral Programs, why they work. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/63253/Referral-Programs-Why-they-work

How to use and analysis a referral program. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/79408/How-to-use-and-analysis-a-referral-program

Competitor Comparison to see where you stand. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/78895/Competitor-Comparison

How to avoid pricing mistakes. http://info.soapwarehouse.biz/blog-0/bid/60013/How-to-avoid-pricing-mistakes

I hope this year has been a good one for you so far and if not I hope some of these ideas will help you make improvements. Have a great day.

Tags: analysis, referral program, business plan

Are Credit Card charge fees just the price of doing business?

Posted by Linda Chambers on Mon, Jun 02, 2014 @ 10:00 AM

This question came up recently on a contractor Facebook page and I think it is a good one to address since it effects almost all pressure washing contractors.

How do you pass the cost of credit card processing on to customers?

First you must look at how much business you do each year that is paid by credit cards, and what cards are being used. This way you will know if you should even bother with it.

If you are doing say $250,000 dollars a year of business and only about $10,000 of that is charged on cards so is that $300 or .0012% of your total sales worth that much for you to change your whole way of doing business?

Because legally that is what you have to do. Did you know it is illegal (against your signed contract) to charge any customer a credit card processing fee just for them to pay with a credit card? Well it is. Credit Card companies lobbied for this years ago to stop retailers from deterring their card carrying customers into paying via other methods, thus losing them money. It is part of every credit card contract except Discover. You must sign these before you are able to process these companies cards and if you are found to have broken them, it can cost to a lot in fines and loss of excepting them as payment. It is also part of the Truth in Lending Act. The Federal Truth in Lending Act states: 167, (2) “No seller in any sales transaction may impose a surcharge on a cardholder who elects to use a credit card in lieu of payment by cash, check, or similar means.”

The way around this is easy but not always simple. You must offer a cash or check discount instead. In other words you must build in the 3% or what ever your processing fee is going to be, some cards are higher, like AMEX, and then give the majority of your customers the discount off the total when they pay. This can make for added headaches in bookkeeping and with automated bookkeeping systems like QuickBooks. This means you must build a line item for a cash or non-credit card discount for each invoice that is not paid by credit card.

The only other way around this is to build the 3%, as a cost of doing business, into your normal pricing to cover any instances when a card would be used. But if the majority of your customers do not pay by CC, do you want your other customers to shoulder that burden and extra cost? Plus it would not be a fact you would want to advertise to your cash customers.

When I first came to Soap Warehouse this is what was done but it caused so much book keeping trouble and since a large number of our customers already paid by credit card it was not worth trying to do the cash discount route. Last year we spent just over $4,000 in all merchant and banking fees connected with credit card processing. A small amount when figured against sale totals, so this cost is just one of others like product packaging that is worked into total product cost from the beginning so we do not even have to think about it later on. For most 5 gallons of items the amount figures out to be less than 30 cents each. Not an amount I feel would cause a customer not to buy a product. Product packaging far out weighs that small cost usually running $2.50 to $10 per item of added cost. But you can not sell or ship a soap product with out the bottle, jug, pail, box or drum. These costs are just as necessary as the cost of the ingredients to make them, and the labor to produce them.

Here is an article to continue reading about this issue:

http://www.merchantcouncil.org/merchant-account/operation/pass-fee-customer.php

Tags: Credit card fees, Business

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