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Car
Wash of the Stars Serves
Non-Celebs With Equal Care
By
Jim and Elaine Norland
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Owner
Marvin Kalin with his management team. Rear, from
the left: Eberardo Gonzales, Kathi Hill, Marvin Kalin, and Glen
Rogers. Front, from the left: Isaac Gonzales and Juan Flores.
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The wash may have the title of "The Car Wash of the Stars,"
but Santa Palm Car Wash, at 8787 Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood,
CA, delivers the same measure of personal care to every vehicle
that enters its 180-foot tunnel. Entertainment industry celebrities
are frequent customers, but less celebrated drivers and cars also
get the "Rolls Royce treatment" at Santa Palm, says general
manager Glen Rogers.
Santa Palm claims to clean more Rolls Royces each month than any
other car wash in the world. It also cleans thousands of other prestige-marque
cars such as Ferraris and Lamborghinis, BMWs, Mercedes, and Jaguars
each month, Rogers reports. The wash has a hallway graced with over
200 autographed pictures of celebrity customers.
Santa Palm was built more than 40 years ago, in the era of iron-and-sheet-metal
car wash construction, and much of its equipment is equally venerable.
Both structure and machinery, as well as the grounds on its half-acre
site, are well maintained to assure a welcoming presence and a smooth-running
wash.
The customer waiting area at Santa Palm is an outdoor patio-like
area furnished with residential-style casual furniture. There's
no vending or sales counter other than a soda-and-water vending
machine. A hamburger stand is on the corner.
All that may sound a little "retro," but Santa Palm keeps
pace with modern needs and changing markets.
It has changed its car washing methods from time to time to evolve
into the present combination of pre-rinse, foaming arch, shaker
curtains, hand washing, reclaim- and then fresh-water rinse before
power drying and finishing touches.
The wash recently took out its gas pumps and thus improved its
contact time between service writer and customers as well as speeding
up the incoming traffic flow. Few customers wanted gas, and regulations
were becoming prohibitive, Rogers says, so removing the pumps made
sense.
The wash does a sizable detail volume, too, accounting for an average
of $40,000 a month in revenue or better. Isaac Gonzales manages
the detail operation.
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| The
"Hand Wash Plus" sign beckons passing traffic. |
Santa Palm's wash prices aren't the cheapest in the neighborhood.
The regular wash is $11.99, "and a little bit farther up the
street, you could probably get a car wash on a special or coupon
for $6.99," says Rogers. At Santa Palm, drivers can choose
wash packages ranging up to $21.99, but whether getting the basic
or "works" package, they'll likely have a $2 coupon that
will reduce their net cost to, say, $9.99 for the regular wash.
The coupons are Santa Palm's main marketing tool, and are handed
out in a nearby Pavilion store. Rogers doesn't use direct mail or
other promotions, and has found that the $2 discount coupon works
well among the wash's customers and preserves profitability far
better than hugely-discounted wash-wax offers of the past.
A lot of washes - "and we used to be among them" - put
out offers for a $6.95 wash and wax, and that created a mindset
among many customers that that should be the price. They came in
figuring that's what they were going to pay, Rogers says. With the
$2 coupons, the service writer gets a chance to upgrade the sale
and the customer is always mindful that he or she is saving $2 on
the deal, he explains.
One can save in other ways at Santa Palm. The wash sells 10-wash
books at substantial savings. For example, 10 regular washes, which
would cost $119.90 if paid one by one, can be bought by the book
at $104.95. Punch cards also reward returning customers. The tenth
punch qualifies the holder for a free 11th wash at whatever level
package was purchased previously.
No matter what the price or deal, steady, caring employees can
make the difference at any service business. Santa Palm's average
labor force of 40 to 50 workers is comprised largely of employees
who've been there for at least five years. "I would say half
of them have probably been with us closer to ten years," says
Rogers. All employees wear uniforms, Santa Palm providing shirts,
hats and aprons to go with the employees' own dark pants.
How does Santa Palm keep such steady employees? "We treat
them like people," says Rogers. "Nobody's yelling and
screaming at them. We pay them when they work, and if they work
overtime, we pay them overtime.
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| An example
of the advertising boards created by Car Wash Ads. |
"They can come to us with any problem or issue they're dealing
with," he adds. We understand they have families and they feel
the same pressures we feel. If they run into a little financial
problem, we can even front them some money."
Rogers feels strongly about the exploitation of car wash workers
by some operators, recently publicized in a "Dateline NBC"
program. But the program "has really helped us," Rogers
says, because it gives him an opportunity to tell customers - particularly
if they complain about prices - that "We're not a part of that.
We pay our help."
Managers at Santa Palm have each been with the wash for an average
of 23 years, Rogers says. He has been at Santa Palm since 1980,
and was named general manager of the year by the Western Car Wash
Association in 1999.
"We have four managers around here, including myself, an assistant
manager, and the detail manager.
There's always somebody here for customers to talk to, and they
seem to appreciate it a lot."
While the Santa Palm structure is old, it gets cleaned and painted
regularly, the wash employees handling all such maintenance and
upkeep as well as that of the equipment. "Most of our equipment
is not new," says Rogers, "it's just well maintained."
A gardener comes in regularly to keep up the landscaping. Where
the gas pumps once stood, small palm trees now add to the inviting
look of the wash.
One factor in Santa Palm's neat appearance is the presence of Car
Wash Ads. The 17-by-44-inch advertising boards, with space for four
advertisers per board, are produced and serviced by Car Wash Ads.
"Many of our customers see this as a way of advertising their
own businesses," Rogers explains. "We have limited ourselves
to four boards because I need to be able to see what's going on
in the wash. If I put too much in the customers' waiting area, I
can't see as well.
"Apart from that, I would love to put in more boards, because
I think the customers really love it. I see them go through those
ads, and sometimes customers will call me on the phone and ask for
the number of a business they've seen there."
Most customers, however, take one of the advertisers' business
cards from the Car Wash Ads displays, says Victor Lanfranco, founder
and president of the company.
His company, established 13 years ago, has advertising boards in
340 car washes in an area from the Mexico/California border to the
Bay Area, including San Francisco and Sacramento. Car wash operators
have absolute approval power for any advertisers that are included
on their boards.
Lanfranco developed the approach after seeing car wash owners -
including one who had spent $5 million on a good-looking wash -
suffering from the clutter of menus, posters and other advertising
they had been pressured to display. Participating wash owners sign
an exclusive agreement with Car Wash Ads that regulates any advertising
on their premises.
The ads are all professionally produced and mounted in plexiglass
and powder-coated metal frames. "The type of ads we have are
mostly professional, but there is nothing to compete with anything
the car wash might be doing, and nothing in bad taste," says
Lanfranco. He turned down a $400,000 check from a tobacco company
that wanted to use the boards to promote their products, advertising
that is prohibited now in many outdoor venues. To see examples of
these ad boards, operators can visit www.carwashads.com
on the web.
Each ad board has business card holders that dispense just one
card at a time, to prevent any littering. Boards are checked for
appearance and needs (such as more business cards) every week by
four full-time drivers. Their vehicles are fitted with GPS systems
to enable management to verify that boards are being serviced as
promised, and that "car wash owners are happy. They don't want
filthy or broken boards," Lanfranco notes.
Car wash owners are paid according to the number of boards they
have in their wash, and those with adequate space often ask Lanfranco
for more boards. Car Wash Ads has paid car wash owners nearly $10
million in the past 13 years. For the car wash owner, "We're
good for one nice family vacation a year," says Lanfranco.
"You can take the family to Hawaii and it's on us."
When vacant space appears on a board, as happens from time to time,
Lanfranco places messages promoting the merits of professional car
washing, pointing out the costs in time, water, and other resources
a car owner spends if he or she washes at home.
Divisions of Car Wash Ads include a full-service graphics shop
and a print shop, so car wash owners and the advertising clients
can, if they wish, get design and printing services at a discount.
At Santa Palm Car Wash, the system works beautifully, and complements
a wash that thrives on giving everyone "star" treatment
in a clean, attractive and well-maintained setting.
Jim and Elaine Norland are regular contributors to Auto Laundry
News.
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