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Content about Psychometrics

March 28, 2012

CHICAGO — Drop-off service sales also rise in year-to-year comparison

CHICAGO — Self-service laundry sales were up in all four regions for a second straight month in February, according to the most recent AmericanCoinOp.com StatShot unscientific survey.

February sales in the South were up 6.8% (compared to February 2011 sales). Sixty percent of the respondents reported an increase in sales, while 20% reported a decrease. Sales were unchanged for 20% of respondents.

Sales in the Midwest rose 5.6% compared to February 2011 sales. Roughly 64% reported year-to-year sales increases, while 14.3% reported decreases. Sales were unchanged for 21.4% of respondents.

“My customer count is up 15% over last February,” a Midwest operator reported.

In the West, February sales were up 3.6%. Fifty-five percent of respondents reported a bump. “Coin sales very spotty,” reports an operator there. “Have added credit card readers to one-third of the Laundromat, which resulted in better results.”

February sales were up 2.4% in the Northeast, where 57% of respondents reported increases.

Despite the rise in sales overall, many operators offered gloomy comments. Some said their local markets are suffering because of the economy.

  • West — “Not good. Nearby businesses are dropping their rate to 75 cents per top loader!”
  • Midwest — “Maybe fair at best. The national media keeps reporting the economy is in the upswing, but I do not see or believe it.”
  • West — “The economic slowdown did not impact our rural area as quickly as most of the nation but is affecting us now. I had the lowest income in 14 years during November-January.”
  • Northeast — “Too much competition, but I am the best.”

Respondents were also asked about drop-off-service sales for February (compared to February 2011). Every region reported sales were up, but there was quite a bit of difference in two of the regions compared to the others.

In the Midwest, where 71.4% of respondents have offered drop-off service for two years or more, sales were up 7.1%. Twenty-one percent don’t offer drop-off service, and 7.1% didn’t offer drop-off service last year but they do now.

Southern operators saw their drop-off-service sales rise 6% in February from the previous year. Eighty percent of the respondents have offered this extra-profit service for at least two years.

Sales increases were much less in the Northeast (0.5%) and the West (0.4%). Fifty percent of Northeast operators have offered drop-off service for at least two years, while 58.3% of West operators have offered the service during that time.

“Coin laundry flat, but oil drilling clothes for drop-off is great income,” says a Midwest operator.

“We ran a great promo in February that really boosted drop-off,” adds another. “Drop-off is thegrowth segment for our business.”

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

Audience members are invited to participate in these unscientific surveys, which are conducted online via a partner website, on a regular basis. Self-service laundry operators are encouraged to participate, as a greater number of responses will help to better define industry trends.

July 12, 2011

CHICAGO — The Clean Show’s educational sessions were a big draw for the self-service laundry owners and operators who attended the Las Vegas event, based on June’s unscientific Wire survey, as nearly a quarter of respondents said they attended four or more sessions.

Roughly 71% of attendees sat in on at least one session. The breakdown was one session, 11.8%; two, 23.5%; three, 11.8%; and four or more, 23.5%.

Approximately 64% of respondents said they attended Clean ’11, and 63.4% of them reported being “somewhat satisfied” (46.7%) or “fully satisfied” (26.7%) with their experience as a whole. Roughly 27% were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied.

These attendees sought information about a variety of products and services. Among the exhibit categories that respondents sought out during the four-day show, washers, dryers and payment systems were mentioned most often.

Roughly 73% of respondents said they are more likely to do business with a certain manufacturer, distributor or supplier because of their trip to Clean. Twenty percent said they aren’t sure, and 6.7% answered no.

Most respondents attended Clean on Tuesday (72.2%) and Monday (66.7%). Attendance started to drop off on Wednesday (44.4%), and only a small group (11.1%) visited the convention center on Thursday, the final show day.

The 2013 Clean Show in New Orleans will open on a Friday and run through the weekend. Many respondents applauded the show committee’s decision to shorten the biennial event to three days but indicated that they hoped the educational sessions would not suffer. In fact, some respondents lobbied for three or four hours of sessions per day instead of the traditional one or two.

Respondents who didn’t attend Clean in Las Vegas most often cited budgetary constraints or scheduling conflicts as the reasons. One person said they had just opened a brand-new store and didn’t have need of equipment.

While the American Coin-Op Wire survey presents a snapshot of readers’ viewpoints at a particular moment, it should not be considered scientific.

Subscribers to Wire e-mails—distributed twice weekly—are invited to participate in a brief industry survey each month. The survey is conducted online via a partner website. Readers are encouraged to participate, as a greater number of responses will help to better define operator opinions and industry trends.

To sign up for the Wire, click the “Subscribe” button at the top right-hand corner of this page and follow the instructions.

October 20, 2009