![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Opening A Laundry Shop In Pattaya, Preferably In Jomtien |
2009-08-02 19:03:15
Post
#1
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 70 Joined: 2008-11-24 From: Bangkok Member No.: 71,584 |
I want to invest in a Laundry Shop in Pattaya, preferably in Jomtien. Why? I have a Thai friend, who likes to do it and has done it before. For personal reasons (failed love), she had to stop. We want to rent a shop house, where she can live and have the laundry business on the ground floor. (business and living quarters could also be seperate, if that helps to cut the costs) She would run the business, I would not get involved too much. I will run the numbers, before we start, and follow them up, when the business is running. I would consider my investment successful, if the shop is sustainable, can support her and her children and brings in a modest return (At least enough, to grow the business). I don't plan on living of the proceeds :-) 1. How much rent would I pay in a decent, but definitely not A- location for a shop house? Is 10 K Baht a month doable? 2. How about Key Money? How much would I have to pay? Can I avoid it altogether for this kind of business? Ideas on how to minimize it? 3. How to best structure the lease and the lease duration, as to avoid sudden surprises in terms of rental hikes, or the owner booting us out, when we are successful? 4. I personally like Jomtien, but am also open to other locations in Pattaya, or even in a completely different place. Any ideas? Also, if you have other advice, especially related to the laundry business, I would be very grateful to hear it. As far as I am concerned, yes, I am prepared to lose my investment (and will limit it), but I would like to give it as big of a chance as possible. Therefore, I would much rather leave as much survival cash for the business as possible, than give it upfront to the land lord. It certainly will take time to get established and build customer loyalty, but the lady has a few good ideas and a very friendly personality. She has done it before and I have quite a bit of trust in her willingness to work hard to make it work. Now is low season (and a bad one), so it might be a good time to get favorable conditions. Thank you very much for taking the time. This post has been edited by yongli: 2009-08-02 19:11:15 |
|
|
|
2009-08-04 04:51:23
Post
#2
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 70 Joined: 2008-11-24 From: Bangkok Member No.: 71,584 |
Hi,
It seems, the idea of a laundry business is getting everybody running for the exits ;-) Anybody that has done a lease for a commercial property, and has some advices on this key money thing? Any other help or input? As far as lease duration goes, I am thinking of a 3 years lease, with a 3 years option on extending the lease and a limit on a possible rental increase. Any other ideas, i.e., how to get the land lord to agree? Thanks in advance, yongli This post has been edited by yongli: 2009-08-04 04:52:43 |
|
|
|
2009-08-04 04:56:05
Post
#3
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 241 Joined: 2009-03-25 From: thailand Member No.: 79,785 |
Forget it!!!!
Money after bad, there are shops that have been running for years closing there are far too many doing it and worse still sleeping on the shop floor with no living quaters above etc and still canot pay the rent never mind make a small profit, |
|
|
|
2009-08-04 23:14:31
Post
#4
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 70 Joined: 2008-11-24 From: Bangkok Member No.: 71,584 |
Forget it!!!! Money after bad, there are shops that have been running for years closing there are far too many doing it and worse still sleeping on the shop floor with no living quaters above etc and still canot pay the rent never mind make a small profit, Thank you rolypie for taking the time. Serious question: May I know, how do you know, the reason for them closing was lack of customers (Could it be their lease expired?)? And if, could it be they weren't doing such a good job, so they depended too much on new business (versus return customers)? I hope, by doing a good job and having prices in line, customer loyalty can be build in this kind of business (unlike an internet shop). I myself keep using the same shop, as long as the service is good and the clothes are clean. I would also hop, a location where you can get residents as well as tourists can protect a bit against a downturn. |
|
|
|
2009-08-05 01:41:34
Post
#5
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 469 Joined: 2009-04-27 Member No.: 81,959 |
BOOM_LAUNNDRY@hotmail.com its in Pattaya clang. I think she is marrying her boyfriend and going to live in Swizerland |
|
|
|
2009-08-05 19:14:00
Post
#6
|
|
|
Member ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 27 Joined: 2009-06-23 From: ENGLAND / JOMTIEN / PHAYAO chiang rai Member No.: 85,567 |
HI
I OPENED A LAUNDRY SHOP WITH MY THEN GIRLFRIEND IN BANGKOK SHE NOW LIVES WITH ME IN THE UK SHE FOUND A SHOP FOR 6000 BAHT A MONTH NEAR A HOSPITAL WHICH SHE GOT QUIET A LOT OF CUSTOMERS THERE WAS HER AND HER TWO SISTERS SHE PAID THEM 4000 BAHT EACH AND THEY ALL SLEPT IN THE SHOP AT NIGHT WHICH WAS HARSH BUT COULD NOT AFFORD RENT FOR A CONDO OR ROOM MY WIFE USED TO START WORK AT 630 IN THE MORNING AND CLOSE AT 1000 AT NIGHT SOME PEOPLE WOULD STILL KNOCK ON THE DOOR AND DROP THING OF AFTER IT WAS CLOSED WHAT I MEAN IS SHE WORKED VERY HARD AND LONG HOURS FOR JUST ENOUGH TO PAY THE RENT AND TO EAT AS THERE ARE LAUNDRY SHOPS EVERYWERE SO YOU HAVE TO PRICE VERY GOOD |
|
|
|
2009-08-06 21:19:06
Post
#7
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 70 Joined: 2008-11-24 From: Bangkok Member No.: 71,584 |
Thanks for the tip Thongkorn.
Any idea about how much rent she pays? yongli |
|
|
|
2009-08-06 21:20:54
Post
#8
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 70 Joined: 2008-11-24 From: Bangkok Member No.: 71,584 |
HI I OPENED A LAUNDRY SHOP WITH MY THEN GIRLFRIEND IN BANGKOK SHE NOW LIVES WITH ME IN THE UK SHE FOUND A SHOP FOR 6000 BAHT A MONTH NEAR A HOSPITAL WHICH SHE GOT QUIET A LOT OF CUSTOMERS THERE WAS HER AND HER TWO SISTERS SHE PAID THEM 4000 BAHT EACH AND THEY ALL SLEPT IN THE SHOP AT NIGHT WHICH WAS HARSH BUT COULD NOT AFFORD RENT FOR A CONDO OR ROOM MY WIFE USED TO START WORK AT 630 IN THE MORNING AND CLOSE AT 1000 AT NIGHT SOME PEOPLE WOULD STILL KNOCK ON THE DOOR AND DROP THING OF AFTER IT WAS CLOSED WHAT I MEAN IS SHE WORKED VERY HARD AND LONG HOURS FOR JUST ENOUGH TO PAY THE RENT AND TO EAT AS THERE ARE LAUNDRY SHOPS EVERYWERE SO YOU HAVE TO PRICE VERY GOOD Thanks for your report Charlie. May I know about your pricing (i.e. 60 pieces 500 Baht, or per piece?) and who your target customers were? |
|
|
|
2009-08-08 15:20:26
Post
#9
|
|
|
Member ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 27 Joined: 2009-06-23 From: ENGLAND / JOMTIEN / PHAYAO chiang rai Member No.: 85,567 |
YEAH HER CUSTOMERS WERE MAINLY FROM THE HOSPITAL
SO MAINLY THAIS 60 FOR 500 WAS ABOUT RIGHT BUT THEY DONT JUST BRING 60 OF ANYTHING MOST WOULD BRING ALL SHIRTS OR THINGS THAT TAKE A LONG TIME TO IRON SO THEM 60 THINGS COULD TAKE ALL DAY WHICH IS NO GOOD BECAUSE THERE IS NO PROFIT ALL I SAY IS ITS VERY HARD WORK FOR LITTLE MONEY BUT THE THIAS DO NOT SEEM TO MIND AS LONG AS THEY GET SOMETHING WE CLOSED IT DOWN WHEN SHE COME TO LIVE IN ENGLAND AND WE SENT THE WASHING MACHINES AND STUFF TO HER PARENTS UP NORTH SO THEY CAN USE THEM |
|
|
|
2009-08-09 15:08:00
Post
#10
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 46 Joined: 2005-07-24 Member No.: 20,913 |
The reason that these laundries and many other businesses are closing is simple Mai mee Falong, mai mee satong! No tourists, No money! This is the 5th yr of slow tourism caused by tsunami, SARS, bird/swine flu, bad economy and all the bad publicity this country gets. This compiled with new visa laws,many full timers and long timers are leaving, and new tourists are not coming. If you count on just Thais for business then your price has to be low, and you have to survive the way Thais do. You need a good local clientele just to get by during low season, the tourist on season is where you make your net. After the way this country chases away Falong ,short time tourists and long time expats ,there is no Falong customers base only Thai and they have no money, because they can't make any without foreigners here spending it! A viscous cycle! A difficult time to keep a business going let alone start a new business! Save your money ,you're gonna' need it!
|
|
|
|
2009-08-09 21:20:51
Post
#11
|
|
|
Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 76 Joined: 2006-06-22 Member No.: 31,354 |
The reason that these laundries and many other businesses are closing is simple Mai mee Falong, mai mee satong! No tourists, No money! This is the 5th yr of slow tourism caused by tsunami, SARS, bird/swine flu, bad economy and all the bad publicity this country gets. This compiled with new visa laws,many full timers and long timers are leaving, and new tourists are not coming. If you count on just Thais for business then your price has to be low, and you have to survive the way Thais do. You need a good local clientele just to get by during low season, the tourist on season is where you make your net. After the way this country chases away Falong ,short time tourists and long time expats ,there is no Falong customers base only Thai and they have no money, because they can't make any without foreigners here spending it! A viscous cycle! A difficult time to keep a business going let alone start a new business! Save your money ,you're gonna' need it! Spot on! I have had mates here who went down the same road of opening a laundry. They were the ones who were cleaned out, not the clothes. No tourists means no customers for anyone. Save your money, find something original, especially if Thais haven't done it. |
|
|
|
2009-08-09 21:25:59
Post
#12
|
|
|
Least Remembered Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Advanced Members Posts: 2,127 Joined: 2005-11-10 From: Khao Hin Sorn Member No.: 23,920 |
Do you get to keep the odd pair of panties ? Could be a lucrative business opportunity if you can export to Japan.
|
|
|
|
2009-08-17 21:45:56
Post
#13
|
|
|
The quality poster you can trust! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Super Moderators Posts: 5,750 Joined: 2003-12-03 From: Pattaya (where the hel_l is....) Member No.: 6,036 |
YEAH HER CUSTOMERS WERE MAINLY FROM THE HOSPITAL SO MAINLY THAIS 60 FOR 500 WAS ABOUT RIGHT BUT THEY DONT JUST BRING 60 OF ANYTHING MOST WOULD BRING ALL SHIRTS OR THINGS THAT TAKE A LONG TIME TO IRON SO THEM 60 THINGS COULD TAKE ALL DAY WHICH IS NO GOOD BECAUSE THERE IS NO PROFIT ALL I SAY IS ITS VERY HARD WORK FOR LITTLE MONEY BUT THE THIAS DO NOT SEEM TO MIND AS LONG AS THEY GET SOMETHING WE CLOSED IT DOWN WHEN SHE COME TO LIVE IN ENGLAND AND WE SENT THE WASHING MACHINES AND STUFF TO HER PARENTS UP NORTH SO THEY CAN USE THEM is your caps lock jammed? |
|
|
|
2009-08-20 23:06:10
Post
#14
|
|
|
Member ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 27 Joined: 2009-06-23 From: ENGLAND / JOMTIEN / PHAYAO chiang rai Member No.: 85,567 |
YEAH HER CUSTOMERS WERE MAINLY FROM THE HOSPITAL SO MAINLY THAIS 60 FOR 500 WAS ABOUT RIGHT BUT THEY DONT JUST BRING 60 OF ANYTHING MOST WOULD BRING ALL SHIRTS OR THINGS THAT TAKE A LONG TIME TO IRON SO THEM 60 THINGS COULD TAKE ALL DAY WHICH IS NO GOOD BECAUSE THERE IS NO PROFIT ALL I SAY IS ITS VERY HARD WORK FOR LITTLE MONEY BUT THE THIAS DO NOT SEEM TO MIND AS LONG AS THEY GET SOMETHING WE CLOSED IT DOWN WHEN SHE COME TO LIVE IN ENGLAND AND WE SENT THE WASHING MACHINES AND STUFF TO HER PARENTS UP NORTH SO THEY CAN USE THEM is your caps lock jammed? yeah they were |
|
|
|
2009-11-02 22:09:20
Post
#15
|
|
|
Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 2004-08-05 Member No.: 11,902 |
Just an idea...with this Commercial Property in Pattaya
House with 584 Square Meters Land (Width 15 Meter x Length 39 Meter) is available for 6 years rent Address: No. 436/16 Pattaya Beach Road Soi 1 (opposite Sabai Lodge Hotel) FOR Rent = Six Years Contract (No Key Money) First 3 Years = THB 30000.– Monthly Last 3 Years = THB 40000.- Monthly FOR Sale = THB 30M. *For more information please contact owner directly at Tel. 081-8150137 |
|
|
|
2009-11-07 15:43:26
Post
#16
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 124 Joined: 2009-09-21 Member No.: 91,890 |
Just an idea...with this Commercial Property in Pattaya House with 584 Square Meters Land (Width 15 Meter x Length 39 Meter) is available for 6 years rent Address: No. 436/16 Pattaya Beach Road Soi 1 (opposite Sabai Lodge Hotel) FOR Rent = Six Years Contract (No Key Money) First 3 Years = THB 30000.– Monthly Last 3 Years = THB 40000.- Monthly FOR Sale = THB 30M. *For more information please contact owner directly at Tel. 081-8150137 Amigo read the whole post, there is no way a laundry can afford 30,000 a month in rent |
|
|
|
2009-11-07 15:58:29
Post
#17
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 124 Joined: 2009-09-21 Member No.: 91,890 |
Hi Everybody, I want to invest in a Laundry Shop in Pattaya, preferably in Jomtien. Why? I have a Thai friend, who likes to do it and has done it before. For personal reasons (failed love), she had to stop. We want to rent a shop house, where she can live and have the laundry business on the ground floor. (business and living quarters could also be seperate, if that helps to cut the costs) She would run the business, I would not get involved too much. I will run the numbers, before we start, and follow them up, when the business is running. I would consider my investment successful, if the shop is sustainable, can support her and her children and brings in a modest return (At least enough, to grow the business). I don't plan on living of the proceeds :-) 1. How much rent would I pay in a decent, but definitely not A- location for a shop house? Is 10 K Baht a month doable? 2. How about Key Money? How much would I have to pay? Can I avoid it altogether for this kind of business? Ideas on how to minimize it? 3. How to best structure the lease and the lease duration, as to avoid sudden surprises in terms of rental hikes, or the owner booting us out, when we are successful? 4. I personally like Jomtien, but am also open to other locations in Pattaya, or even in a completely different place. Any ideas? Also, if you have other advice, especially related to the laundry business, I would be very grateful to hear it. As far as I am concerned, yes, I am prepared to lose my investment (and will limit it), but I would like to give it as big of a chance as possible. Therefore, I would much rather leave as much survival cash for the business as possible, than give it upfront to the land lord. It certainly will take time to get established and build customer loyalty, but the lady has a few good ideas and a very friendly personality. She has done it before and I have quite a bit of trust in her willingness to work hard to make it work. Now is low season (and a bad one), so it might be a good time to get favorable conditions. Thank you very much for taking the time. Many Thais still wash their clothes by hand and continue to do this when the economy is bad In your favor, you are probably paying rent for her already? So renting a shop house that she can live in and double as a business is probably not a bad idea if the total monthly out lay for rent is close to what you are paying now. Shop houses can be used for laundry, restaurants, beauty salon, nails, and a host of other small businesses depending on what is needed in that particular area First you have to find a location, second you have to survey and see what is needed in that location. Thais with no transportation tend to stay very close to where they live and use business close to their residence |
|
|
|
2009-11-07 17:12:55
Post
#18
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Advanced Members Posts: 768 Joined: 2005-05-28 Member No.: 19,447 |
In your home country you would first do your market research, i.e. location, potential customers = income, competitors, previous failed businesses in that location, overheads etc, these would then be incorporated in a business plan which would show you have done the research, have a budget including potential income, target audience etc etc so whilst you may think a laundry is only a small family business ALL of the above still apply and if done properly will answer many of your questions posed here.
|
|
|
|
2009-11-11 10:56:33
Post
#19
|
|
|
Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 466 Joined: 2007-12-01 Member No.: 54,993 |
Just an idea...with this Commercial Property in Pattaya House with 584 Square Meters Land (Width 15 Meter x Length 39 Meter) is available for 6 years rent Address: No. 436/16 Pattaya Beach Road Soi 1 (opposite Sabai Lodge Hotel) FOR Rent = Six Years Contract (No Key Money) First 3 Years = THB 30000.– Monthly Last 3 Years = THB 40000.- Monthly FOR Sale = THB 30M. *For more information please contact owner directly at Tel. 081-8150137 If someone had 30 Mil, I doubt they would be looking at opening a laundry. |
|
|
|
![]() ![]() |
Similar Topics
| Topic Title | Replies | Topic Starter | Views | Last Action | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
6 | Thaising | 744 | Today, 2009-11-22 05:14:27 Last post by: frenchFARANGbkk |
|||
![]() |
|
86 | benchmark | 2,654 | Yesterday, 2009-11-21 23:34:06 Last post by: benchmark |
||
![]() |
123 | bernie66 | 8,122 | Yesterday, 2009-11-21 22:05:03 Last post by: tangoll |
|||
![]() |
34 | Rimmer | 3,424 | Yesterday, 2009-11-21 18:40:22 Last post by: zigistar |
|||
![]() |
7 | newbepat | 257 | Yesterday, 2009-11-21 11:53:20 Last post by: Jonathanpattaya |
|||
![]() |
6 | Ivonka | 300 | Yesterday, 2009-11-21 10:33:24 Last post by: SurfRider |
|||
|
Time is now: 2009-11-22 07:45:37 |