Sunday, April 28, 2013

Easy Money or do you make things difficult?


We all want Easy Money don’t we? Then why do we make it difficult for people to give us money. I went into a Chinese Restaurant in Seattle and since I was on a low carb diet I ordered the beef and asparagus special. Then I said no rice please just add some extra asparagus. The owner told me NO She Couldn’t Do That. What she really meant was that she could not or would not do that at the same price but I never mentioned price. I looked at her and said, “You have food, I have money, so all you have to do is tell me what it costs and then make it.”  The confused look passed from her face and said "Two dollar more". Then she made me a great dinner. Think about it, I walk in as a paying customer and she refuses my order. I understand why but does it really make sense. We all do things that make it more difficult for our customers to give us money.

Don’t Assume I Known What You Do
My friend Stephen Dusty Roberts cleans rugs. His business is called Luv-A-Rug and when you go in it has rugs all over the place. Dusty also cleans Boat Sails but it is a small part of his business. One day one of his long time established Sail customers told Dusty, “I didn't know you did rugs too”. This man made checks out to Luv-A-Rug not Luv-A-Sail but it completely escaped him for years. We may think it was obvious and he should have known but here is a bigger question; how much money did Dusty lose by not telling him “hey, we do rugs too”.

Make It Easy To Call You
One of the things that drives me crazy it hiding your phone number on your website. I am not going to embarrass my friends by naming names but many of you don’t have easy websites. Your phone numbers should be at the top of the main page. It should also be at the bottom of every page with your address. If I have to search for a contact page you probably lost my business. But worst of all is if I get to the Contact page and all I get is a form for on-line response screw it I am going to your competition. Seriously I am not twenty something; I am old enough that I watched prime time in Black and White I have no interest in filling out your online form and no it is not damn likely I want to Chat either. On-Line forms are OK for some customers but offer a phone number and address for the rest of us.

Make Your Website a Good Experience
Tell me your name. I assume that if you do not say who you are you are either stupid or hiding something. Maybe I am a cranky old man but can you really afford to write off all the business from cranky old people.

Make sure it loads fast
Not everyone has a hot cable modem like your web guy has. I do not care about your pictures and graphics if the page is slow. Many of us go to our second choice when  the pages are slow. Keep in mind bargain basement hosting companies can be very slow. Don’t assume, test it yourself and also ask your customers what they think about your website.

Don’t Be a Wiseguy
I regularly run into businesses where the first person (and often the last) is more interested in being a wiseguy then in finding out my problem and making it easy for me to give him money.

Don't Scold Me
I walk into some businesses and instead of welcoming me they scold me. I don’t care if I came in the wrong door or put my rug in the wrong place or that it is closing time or anything else you want to scold me about. You are not my mother.  I am there to give you money. You are there to take my money. That is your job and it should be your goal. When I used to help out at Mark Keshishian & Sons a busy Chevy Chase MD Rug Store and Rug Cleaning company we used to watch the parking lot and as soon as somebody made a move to get something from their trunk or backseat we assumed they had a rug to come in and we went to help them.

If I Call I am Not Taking a Survey
If I call assume it is because I have a problem. If I start by asking the price it is only because I do not know what to say. Your job is to find out why I really called and offer a solution. We deal with this in detail in RugLover Marketing.

I will probably think of more of the stupid business tricks people do and I will let you know about them. Some people completely miss how difficult they make it for people to give them money. I know one west coast rug cleaner who trash talks his customers to anyone who would listen. To hear him talk his customers are stupid eBay pickers who bothered him about rugs. He is argumentative, arrogant and rude. I will grant he has a reputation for great technical skills but I know the rug biz was so rough that he went out and bought a Truck Mount so he could do in home carpet cleaning. Doing great work is not the way to make money in the Rug Washing business; it is just the first step. 

How easy do you make it for people to give you money?

Friday, April 12, 2013

The Value of the Rug Hub


When you need advice on Rug Cleaning the Rug Hub group on FaceBook is a great resource. Just this morning I saw a question and answer:

Victor M. Franco asked: 
How do you clean hemp rugs?

Paul Lucas replied: 
 Hi Victor.  I will give you a quick "how to" list; 
#1 inspect for browning, shrinkage, weak structural integrity, water marks.
 #2 Have release form signed. #3 dust or vacuum. 
#4 apply diluted Rug Soure solution front and back. 
#5 apply Sublime solvent (if heavy soil) from and back. 
#6 Shampoo with Cotton Rug Shampoo, front and back.
 #7 Rinse with Cotton Rug Rinse and cold water. 
#8 Extract or centrifuge to remover all possible water. 
#9 Flat dry face down with air movers blowing across back. 
#10 Optional - After rug is dry, Tea Dye to even out the final look. Hope this helps.

The feeling of brotherhood is very apparent in the Rug Hub. Men and women coming together to help each other, I am glad to be a part of it.










Sunday, April 7, 2013

Rug Lover Tour DC 2013


Barry O’Connell’s Rug Lover Tour DC 2013



Group Shot from the Pittsburgh RugTour


This year we are offering something very special: The RugLover 500% Club with Anthony Belmonte, Jan Sandler, Doug Moerschbacher and the guys from Glyndon Lord Baltimore. All 4 businesses have had explosive success of about 500% or more. All four are fairly recent start-ups and all are off to spectacular results.
Last year GLB did 40 rugs a week in a big week this year 200 is a good week and they are still growing!
Jan will talk about the profit in the add-on sales AND HOW TO SELL THEM. Including 6 rugs in the door this week for cleaning and the ticket price is $7,482 and that is before adding in the padding.  Jan will explain how this is not some up-sell trickery but how it is just serving his customer’s best needs.
Most of you know Doug and Anthony, two years ago they were cleaners who did some rugs and this year they are the dominant go-to rug cleaners in their area.  How they took a little sideline and turned it into the biggest part of their business. Anthony is from Naples Florida where he has tapped the well to do expensive rug crowd but Doug is washing rugs in tiny rural town in North Central Pa. This is your chance to learn the secrets of their success.
They will be doing small group sessions with you to show you how they did it and you can too.
Besides showing you how they did it the guys from Glyndon Lord Baltimore will show you the spa that can handle 200 Rugs a Week with only two techs and a delivery driver. In fact they feel they won’t have to add a part time tech until they are going over 250 rugs a week.
Washington DC 2013 Itinerary
Friday, June 7, 2013
Herat Oriental Rug Warehouse
106 South Early Street Alexandria, VA 22304
(703) 370-3902
A massive wholesale rug warehouse with more rugs than you have ever seen in one place.
9:00 am – Meet in lobby to sign in & pick up badges
9:30 am – Welcome speech with Barry O’Connell in hotel lobby
9:45 am – Carpool to Herat Oriental for hands-on Rug ID with Barry O’Connell, Dusty Roberts, and others (beginner, intermediate, advanced levels)
12:30-1:30 pm – Lunch (on your own)
1:30 pm – Back to Herat Oriental for more hands-on Rug ID (what you should know about an appraiser’s perspective)
4:30 pm – Carpool back to hotel
6:00 pm – After hours FUN & “Cigar Bar”

Saturday, June 8, 2013
Glyndon Lord Baltimore Cleaners
6 Central Avenue Glyndon, MD 21071
(410) 833-5200
8:30 am – Meet in lobby for Day Two events
9:00 am – Board motor-coach for trip to Glyndon Lord Baltimore’s facility
10:30 am – Interlink demonstrations & discussions with Scott Warrington, Doug Heiffermann, and Kim Stain, Q & A
1:00-2:00 pm – Lunch (on your own)
2:00 pm – Rotating Groups: RugLover 500% Club with Anthony Belmonte, Jan Sandler,  Doug Moerschbacher and the guys from Glyndon Lord Baltimore, Plant tour with John from GLB, Taking the Perfect Rug Photo. Plus more…
4:30 pm – Board motor-coach for trip back to hotel
6:30 pm – After hours FUN & Cigars, Bars, and best of all Networking Time with people who have been through what you are going through.
***PRICES***
Same as last time:\
·         1st attendee; $700
·         2nd attendee; $350
·         3rd or more attendee; $175.
Special Alumni Savings:
·         1st attendee; $600
·         2nd attendee; $300
·         3rd or more attendee; $150.

Sunday, June 9, 2013
10:00 am – Meet in the Hotel conference room for Day Three events
10:15 am – Hands-on social media workshop & website critique with Barry O’Connell.
11:00 am – Rug Advocate Software demonstration
11:15 am – Rug Lover Marketing – Foundations Program, Q & A
1:00 pm – End
We are back at the same hotel as last year:
Sheraton Suites Old Town Alexandria
801 North Saint Asaph Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
(703) 836-4700
Group name: Rug Lovers Tour OR copy and paste the following link into a web browser for the RugLovers Tour Page.
https://www.starwoodmeeting.com/StarGroupsWeb/res?id=1303218967&key=26DAA



Friday, April 5, 2013

The Law of Reciprocity


There is a law of human nature that if you understand it the power to change lives will be in your hands;

The Law of Reciprocity

This is as old as the hills and applies to everyone but most people never really think about it. It is so important that God even told us about it in the Bible for does it not say:

“give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.” (Luke 6:38, ESV)

This is one of the most basic building blocks of society. People like people who contribute to the common good. To put it simply people respond positively to people who give before they take. In fact the more you hold off from taking while you continue to give the receiver feels an increasing debt to reciprocate. The receiver feels an increasing need to do something for you. This to put it simply is the law of reciprocity or as God says “give, and it will be given to you”.

In my office building there is a small convenience store in the lobby. The owner is a friendly fellow who never charges tax and never gives pennies in change. Since the store stays open I can only assume he pays the tax out of the money he collects. Also he rounds everything you pay down. If it should be $1.35 for something he says a dollar and a quarter. By discounting his prices on every sale to me I feel like I want to give him all the business that I can. He also does things like alterations and shoe repair so I bring in things that normally I would just have done closer to home. But look carefully at this scenario; he is the owner. He sets the price. If he charges $1.25 for something marked $1.35 + tax then the real price is $1.25 (tax included). So even though I know it is a game I continue to play. He makes concessions and I reciprocate by giving him more business.

We see this in marketing opportunities. The perfect example is my good friend Anthony Belmonte. Anthony offered to clean rugs for a thrift shop that is run by a charity. By giving cleaning to a very worthwhile charity the charity sells more rugs for more money because they look great after being cleaned. Because it is a gift they feel compelled to reciprocate by letting their contributors know what a good man Anthony is. The contributors reciprocate by giving Anthony business. But here is a wonderful twist to the equation; the reciprocity is not even. Anthony actually gets 5 to 10 rug jobs for every free cleaning job he does. As the good book says “Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap.” By being a good and generous man Anthony reaps the harvest of his generosity.

Breaking the Law of Reciprocity at your own Risk

Just as society tends to reward the generous man who gives freely society tends to penalize those who take but do not give back.  Society has various names for this type of person. My favorite is Mooch but also Bum, Freeloader, Leach, Sponge and in Yiddish; Schnorrer.
I was going to illustrate this part with a story about a mooch from Southwest Virginia but I realized it would be unkind and besides he is so damn dumb that the point would be lost on him. So let me close this by saying be the first to give and the last to take and you will gain so much more.