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Content about Natural Disaster

November 3, 2011

WASHINGTON — Businesses everywhere are now operating on limited resources. Yet the survival of your laundry rests—particularly when faced with a disaster such as last weekend’s East Coast snowstorm—on protection of your key assets.

Developing a business continuity plan will not only reduce liabilities, but will ensure employee and customer retention, and may even reduce operational expenses, says the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).

On Nov. 15, Agility Recovery Solutions and the SBA will host an online webinar focusing on how preparedness affects a company’s bottom line. Agility President/CEO Bob Boyd will review the far-reaching financial impact of having a plan in place to recover after a disaster.

Space for the 2-3 p.m. Eastern Standard Time webinar is limited; register here.

SBA has partnered with Agility to offer business continuity strategies via its “Prepare My Business” website. Visit www.preparemybusiness.org to access past webinars and get additional preparedness tips.

November 1, 2011

CHICAGO — Simply put, an outlook is an expectation for the future. But no one has the ability to see the future, so the best you can hope to do is to gather as much pertinent information as possible, prepare yourself for what you think will come, then have the flexibility to adapt your business to what actually comes your way.

As the ocean waves wash away the remnants of 2011, there are reasons to be optimistic that the self-service laundry industry will continue to bounce back in 2012. But that optimism will be tempered by a lagging economy and ever-present high unemployment rates.

In speaking with experts around the industry, it’s clear that an operator’s best course of action in 2012 will be a continued emphasis on running an efficient operation and taking whatever opportunities are available to promote their business.

PAST PERFORMANCE AND FUTURE RESULTS

While past performance is no guarantee of future results, it’s certainly a good indicator. From an operator’s perspective, business in 2010 was better than it was in 2009, according to our 2011 State of the Industry Survey.

Forty-two percent of operators reported an increase in gross dollar volume in 2010 compared to 2009. That was up nearly two percentage points from the previous year. The average 2010 business increase was 10.8%, up from 7.9% in 2009.

But 58% of respondents to our unscientific survey saw their laundry business decrease in 2010. That was two percentage points less than 2009, but a significant portion overall nonetheless. It’s apparent the recession that economic experts say officially ended in summer 2009 was still being felt last year.

There were also reasons for optimism on the supply side. Nearly half of respondents to our 2011 Distributor Survey said their business was better in 2010 than it was in 2009. Better yet, nearly two-thirds predicted in July that 2011 business would be better than 2010. Those whose distributorships thrived saw investors who were inspired by upticks in the economy, or who chose to look into the coin laundry business after losing their jobs.

Distributors whose business suffered in 2010 lamented over changing demographics, tight lending/lack of financing, and potential investors unwilling to spend.

IMPACTS OF 2011

Dick Ruel, national sales manager for Whirlpool and Maytag Commercial Laundry, says the continued sluggish economy and the “exodus of 1 million Hispanics” since the recession began have had the biggest impact on our industry.

People are doing laundry every other week now instead of every week, he adds.

The rising cost of utilities is having a major impact as well, says Setomatic Systems’ Jeff North, who owns the Newport (N.H.) Car Wash and Laundromat.

“While energy-efficient machines and hot water heaters are almost a necessity now, they simply can’t make up for the enormous increases in costs,” he says. “Water and sewage has gotten to the point in many municipalities that it has passed electricity and fossil fuels as the most expensive utility cost.”

His municipality is at approximately $15 per 1,000 gallons and is slated for two more 10% hikes in the next two years, North says.

In the South, where Raymond McMurry owns Pat’s Washtub in Lawton, Okla., the biggest impact on his business came from the weather.

“In 2010, we had bad ice storms and power outages, (and) therefore great sales because we had power. Hard to beat in the first half of 2011 with good weather.”

Second was the shaky economy. “We have seen a major dip in full service (wash/dry/fold, comforters, pressing), and self-service is on the increase. Commercial accounts are increasing somewhat due to outsourcing to cut expenses.”

Larry Larsen has more than 30 years of experience in the ownership, management and construction of Laundromats. “The continued severe recession with high employment and a loss of home-construction jobs has had the biggest impact in Southern California. Our unemployment rate hovers around 14%. If you’re not working, you’re not getting your clothes dirty.”

Another Californian, Andy Wray of ACE Commercial Laundry Equipment, says there are fewer laundry customers to be had because many people have migrated elsewhere to find work and a lower cost of living. And laundry owners there are fearful of losing even more customers by increasing their prices.

“Prices on utilities in the Laundromat have gone up at an alarming rate, and it has come to the point where owners just simply can’t afford to absorb the increases any longer. Capacity and volume have now officially made way for pricing and margins.”

Tomorrow: Attracting business in 2012…

September 8, 2011

COBLESKILL, N.Y. — The Tide Loads of Hope mobile laundry program was in New York last week to provide free laundry services to victims of Hurricane Irene. Tide officials say that, while it may not seem like much, having clean clothes can make a big difference to the people trying to clean up their homes.

Working with the American Red Cross, the Tide Loads of Hope mobile laundry program provided free, full-service laundry to relief workers and residents of New York who were in need of resources and support following the damage caused by the hurricane. These residents and workers were encouraged to drop off their laundry to be washed, dried and folded, free of charge.

The Loads of Hope program was created in 2005 to provide much needed free laundry services to families affected by Hurricane Katrina. Inspired by the resilience and spirit of the people of New Orleans, Tide expanded the Loads of Hope program and has since helped families affected by disaster in California, Texas, North Dakota, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Alabama and Missouri, the company says.

Today, the program includes the Tide Loads of Hope truck outfitted with 32 energy-efficient Frigidaire Affinity washers and dryers. Collectively, Tide has washed over 44,000 loads of laundry for more than 32,000 families impacted by disasters since the program launched.

People across the country can help support Tide Loads of Hope by purchasing a Tide Loads of Hope vintage tee by visiting www.tideloadsofhope.com. All profits from the tees go towards helping families affected by disaster, Tide says.

July 1, 2011

CHICAGO – Operators in three of the four regions reported May sales increases compared to the prior year, led by the Northeast’s 11.8% and South’s 8.8% gains, according to the most recent unscientific AmericanCoinOp.com StatShot survey.

Nationally, operators saw sales rise a robust 8.6% from May 2010.

The West saw sales rise 4.4%, the second straight month of gains there. May-to-May sales in the Midwest were flat, which could be considered good news since the region had seen its sales in the red every month this year.

In the Northeast, where two-thirds of respondents reported gains, a competitor’s store closing benefited the bottom line for at least one operator.

Another storeowner says “June has backed off some, but (is) still ahead of 2010.”

In the South, only one-third of operators reported higher sales, but their gains were significant. One operator says severe storms that displaced families meant more business. “Terrible tornadoes in April have done more to help our economy than any stimulus package could ever hope to do.”

As we near the halfway mark of the year, May is the second straight month and the third this year (January) that sales have increased in three regions.

AmericanCoinOp.com’s StatShot includes information on sales, wages, costs and other financial data based on anonymous survey information provided by industry owners and operators.

Subscribers to AmericanCoinOp.com’s Wire e-mails are invited to participate in these unscientific surveys, which are conducted online via a partner website and only take a few minutes to complete.

February 23, 2011

CHICAGO — Although winter storms hurt business, operators in three out of the four regions reported

September 3, 2010

July 3, 2008

September 4, 2007

February 15, 2007