They have to be to surviveTrue but they’re masters at marketing
You left out Sears as one of the big dogs 40 years ago. Nothing important, just thought about that failure of a franchiseThese are/were the biggest carpet cleaning franchises 40 years ago:
Chemdry
Coit
Domesticare
Duraclean
Rainbow
Servicemaster
Servpro
Stanley Steemer
(I know I likely missed some, but I want to get out of here as soon as the fog clears this morning)
Most of them migrated to become restoration organizations, with carpet cleaning having become an afterthought. Some no longer exist, or are now small.
Stanley Steemer, while also now in the restoration business, seems to be the only one who has stood the test of time and who still out markets everyone else.
They promote hard surface and air duct cleaning as much, if not more than carpet cleaning, and look to be entering the in plant rug cleaning industry with strong commitments there too.
Most cleaners find them to be unlikable, but when they run an ad, everyone’s phone rings.
the comma after you is wrong.Darcy!!!
Someone once said, "there's a sucker born every minute".They have to be to survive
You left out Sears as one of the big dogs 40 years ago. Nothing important, just thought about that failure of a franchise
Is Sears still out there? I thought they just closed all their franchises and did away with the nameThank you!
My father worked with their earliest version, which was owned by one individual who had offices in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New England. His name was Bob McCaffery, and the company was RGM Services.
The next phase was a group, name forgotten, who opened in towns and subcontracted to people.
Then a group of ex-Stanley Steemer people created the franchise along their lines. That one still has some offices around, but the Sears name isn't quite what it used to be, and at least in my area, none do very well any longer.