Start Your Own Mobile Locksmithing Service
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Based Business Ideas Part 5
The locks on the doors of most homes keep
the skilled burglar out for about 30 seconds! This is especially
true if the only thing slowing him down is a standard key-in-the-knob
lock.
Statistically, there's about one residential
burglary every 30 seconds in this country. Traditionally, as the
economy falters and times get harder, the number tends to rise.
Quite naturally, people are concerned and
frightened. As a result, locksmithing is not only one of the new
"demand" businesses, it's rapidly becoming one of the
more profitable businesses for entrepreneurs with not too much
capital to invest .
Today's locksmiths are usually well versed
in mathematics and basic electronics. They almost have to be,
what with the new types of locks being introduced. Today's locksmith
is more likely to be known as a "Security Specialist",
than as just ordinary locksmith, as in the past .
Even so, most locksmithing businesses are
still one-man operations. In many instances, it's a husband and
wife family affair, with the husband handling the mechanical end
and the wife the books and financial end of the business. Most
of these small operations concentrate on the repair side of the
business, and deliberately choose to remain small in size. As
we will discuss later, however, this need not be the case; these
small businesses can "grow up."
According to the area in which he is located,
an established, well organized and trained locksmith may gross
between $50,000 and $60,000 per year, using a van as a mobile
"workshop," and space in his home as an office. Remember:
As the economy turns toward recession, burglaries increase and
people become aware of the need for better locks to protect what
they own; thus the locksmith enjoys an increased income during
hard times.
Just because locksmithing is a "personal"
kind of business, and can be started on a shoestring and operated
out of the home, that's not to say that a locksmithing service
cannot be developed into a million dollar business. On the contrary,
there are a number of operations in some of the larger metropolitan
areas that have several mobile locksmith vans on the road, in
addition to retail store locations. These operations are grossing
well into the million dollar figures every year.
It's a matter of desire, determination and
personal fulfillment and satisfaction. Attitude, marketing skills
and general business knowledge are also positive attributes necessary
for real success. Very definitely, the sharp businessman with
determined ambition can dominate any market with a modern locksmithing
service.
The key ingredient to this business is the
utilization of proper marketing and selling skills. It goes without
saying: You can know all there is about the mechanical functioning
of a business, but without innovative marketing and selling skills,
your business will surely flounder.
However, given the marketing know-how, plus
persistent sales efforts, you can succeed in this business with
the knowledge you can acquire of the technical side. The success
of any business is built upon the marketing and sales expertise
of its founder,
because after all, "mechanics" can always be hired,
if you decide to go that route rather than learn the trade and
the business.
Your marketing efforts should stress the
theme that your services will allay the fears of your buyers.
You want to get across to your prospective customers the sense
of security your service will provide. You can make them safe
in their own homes; no longer will they have to worry about being
rudely awakened in the middle of the night by a burglar rustling
around in their house; no longer will they have to worry about
coming home to a house that's been cleaned out or ransacked.
Once you understand that fear is a basic
human instinct, it's easy to see that virtually everyone can be
a prospect for your services as a locksmith. Your potential market
includes everyone in your area, because everyone has possessions.
So every
homeowner, every apartment dweller, every business owner, all
the schools, churches, government institutions, and a wide variety
of other commercial and industrial accounts can be yours.
In this day and age, new homeowners and
apartment dwellers want the locks changed the day they move in,
so that former occupants and other keyholders will not have access
to their place. In addition, there will probably be the need for
additional keys for each member of the new family, now that new,
safer locks have been installed.
Commercial and industrial accounts present
an even more lucrative market. Larger companies tend to want their
keys "departmentalized," so that office workers can
get into the building on weekends, but not into the factory or
shipping areas, and vice
versa. Banks and savings institutions frequently need the safe
deposit locks changed.
Generally speaking, newcomers to this field
should focus their efforts on the commercial and industrial area
as soon as possible. The commercial market is vast, and often
up for grabs in many areas. In addition, the profit margins in
these areas are excellent! With one of these accounts you'll have
work paying about $500 or more per visit, compared with $25 to
$50 per visit for a residential job. With commercial/industrial
accounts, there's also the possibility of ongoing service and
maintenance. Definitely, the commercial/industrial business is
well worth going after, and can put your business in the black
very rapidly. However, it does take aggressiveness, and the determination
to
sell these accounts.
Start small. Consider working out of your
home in the beginning. Most of today's successful locksmiths began
by working out of their homes, with the family car or van outfitted
with the tools and equipment needed. Such an approach will enable
you to
get started for as little as $1,000. You should be aware however,
that this is just a beginning, and not all it's going to take
to really establish your business. With this level of investment,
you're more or less limited in the business you can handle and
the money you can make. Locksmiths who want to make the really
big money should be investing all their early profits into more
equipment and inventory up to a level where they can offer complete
full-service locksmithing. Such a business would require at least
$5,000 in equipment, perhaps even $10,000, depending on how many
different services you want to offer. This estimate for start-up
costs does not include your van or inventory of spare
parts and new locks.
Perhaps a quick word of caution is in order
here. You've no doubt seen or heard some of the advertisements
promising all kinds of big money to be made with your own locksmithing
service; "Just send for the learn-at-home correspondence
course , and you'll be home free." It's true that you can
earn big money in this business, but as we've noted earlier, without
a lot of sharp marketing and selling expertise, plus at least
the essential
equipment to handle the kind of work these courses teach, enrolling
in one of these courses will put you no further ahead than you
are right now. This business requires equipment and knowledge.
You can make excellent money as a locksmith,
so long as you operate your business capably and in a professional
manner. But without a full line of the equipment required to handle
a wide variety of jobs, you will be limiting your total income
potential.
The more you invest in quality equipment, the more different kinds
of jobs you can handle, and thus the more money you'll be capable
of making.
This is definitely a business in which you
decide for yourself exactly how far and how fast you want to go.
As we've said, some operators are perfectly content to work out
of their homes, using a mobile van. They don't want the larger
problems involved in hiring employees, or the expense of maintaining
a retail location.
But to make the really big money in this
business, starting small and working out of your home, you should
plan to put more mobile trucks on the road, and as soon as possible,
open a retail location. Each mobile van will give you another
satellite business, and a retail location will afford you a base
headquarters for your mobile vans.
It is of the utmost importance that you
build and maintain a professional image as a quality locksmithing
operation from the start. Clinging to the craftsman type of image
will be of advantage only if you wish to stay in the "Mom
and Pop" category.
You should endeavor to handle all jobs as
quickly and as efficiently as possible. Outfitting yourself and
your help in sharp looking uniforms will help. Making your calls
in a clean, well-organized van will also play an important part
in the image your customers have of your business. You want your
customers to have confidence in your business, and in the quality
of work you do for them. When they do, you'll find they are more
likely to
pay their bills with fewer reminders.
Think of it like this: A large invoice presented
by a man in a clean uniform who drives up in a good looking truck
and does quality work is going to be paid more readily than one
for $25 presented by a guy in grubby jeans who drove up in a 10-year
old decrepit truck.
With so many technological changes occurring
within this field on an almost monthly basis, it's to your advantage
to stay on top of what's happening within the locksmithing field.
This means subscribing to some of the better trade publications.
You should be attending the various Locksmithing Association promoted
seminars and workshops that offer on-going help in both the technical
and financial side of this business. In other words, you should
plan to keep yourself up to date with a program of continuous
learning.
There are several ways to get started in
this business. You can buy an existing operation from a retiring
craftsman. Ask him to help you with the technical side of the
operation while you spend most of your time actively promoting
and managing the business. Or, you can hire the technical help
you need, and the sales force to build the business while you
do the managing. You can enroll in one of the popular correspondence
courses, become involved in the business as you learn from the
various trade publications, and progress at your own speed. Our
recommendation is that you learn the fiscal and management side
of the business, and hire others to handle the mechanical or technical
side. Thus the purpose of this report is to indoctrinate you on
the business side. To explain the technical details of this business
would take volumes, and probably much of the information contained
would be out-dated by the time it came off the press.
However, we will provide you with an outline
of the most common types of jobs a locksmith should be able to
handle.
RECOMBINATION LOCKS: A customer may want
to change an existing lock to work off a new key - the most common
type of lock being the key-in-the-knob cylinder or pin tumbler
lock. When the proper key is inserted in the keyway, spring-loaded
pins are pushed up and out of the cylinder, allowing the plug
to turn, and opening the lock. When recombinating, you're changing
the depth of these pins so that a new key is the only one that
will work. Most house, auto and padlocks are the pin-tumbler variety.
Different brands of locks use different depths, spaces and keyways.
But with a given brand of lock, up to 50,000 variations exist.
Thus, it's not always necessary to change to a new lock.
COMBINATING ALIKE: Some customers will have
a house or a business with several different locks and keys, none
of them alike or using the same key. Sometimes these people will
want to change to a system that will require the least number
of keys to carry around. Here, you'll be required to change the
key coding so that one key works all the locks. Sometimes this
requires the installation of common door hardware; however, in
most cases, you'll find the same brand of locks are used throughout
the building.
MASTERKEYING: Apartment owners and other
commercial accounts may want dual key access. This is done by
using locks with dual pin tumbler sets. One works with the apartment
key, the other with the master key. Keys are spoken of in terms
of code numbers. These are sets of digits reflecting the depth
of serrations. A given lock in a master key setup might respond,
for example, to keys with code numbers 1-2-3-4-5 and 6-7-6-9.
Mathematical progressions are used in master keying .
LOCKOUTS: Frequently a person finds himself
locked out of his home, office, warehouse, car, etc. Invariably
this happens at odd hours of the day or night. So opening locks
at odd hours of the day and night will be a role you'll definitely
play in the lives
of your customers. A typical pin tumbler lock can generally be
picked open in about 30 seconds, using either picks or a single
piece of spring steel and good wrist work. All locks have tolerances
and variations in manufacture which allow you to push the cylinder
pins up out of the way while exerting a turning pressure on the
cylinder itself.
AUTOMOBILE LOCKOUTS: This problem occurs
frequently and will require a different procedure. A tool called
a "Slim Shim" is often used here, and works on most
domestic and many foreign cars. This is pushed down between the
glass and the weather stripping on the door far enough to reach
the back of the lock cylinder on the door. You simply push down
or pull up . A "button popper" is also used, worked
through the weather stripping on vent windows in the older cars,
and angled back to the latch button.
LOCK INSTALLATION: Much of your time will
be spent installing new locks and door hardware. In many cases,
homeowners and business people will want to upgrade their security
with the latest model hard-ware for older homes, offices and other
buildings. Many locksmiths get involved in new construction of
apartment houses, condominiums, shopping centers, and the like.
Often you'll be adding more security to an existing door, such
as installing a deadbolt lock .
PANIC BARS AND DOOR CLOSERS: Many locksmiths
working the commercial or industrial market get involved in the
repair and in stallation of panic bars in public access areas.
Panic bars are those large metal bars you push on to open the
outside doors of many public buildings. Door closers are those
hydraulic devices mounted at the top of these doors which return
the door to the closed position after it has been opened.
ALARMS, SAFES and VAULTS: The sale and installation
of alarms are a natural adjunct to the locksmith thing business.
Many larger locksmithing operations move into this area, which
is somewhat specialized. Alarms can be the "perimeter"
type, which sound when a door is opened after hours, or "area"
alarms. "Space" or "area" protection is generally
preferred, and involves infrared, ultrasonic or microwave sensors
triggering alarms by detecting movement.
Safe and vault work is another specialty.
Some locksmiths have major banks and savings and loan associations
as clients. They spend a good deal of their time changing safe
deposit box locks and maintaining vaults and the like. Gaining
in popularity is the sale and service of safes for home and business
use. You will be exposed to all these specialties and to new technology
at seminars, conventions and workshops .
HIGH SECURITY work: A typical locksmith
is a "general practitioner," while the high-security
locksmith is a "specialist." High security work is often
done for major corporations, government institutions, large banks,
race tracks, museums and wealthy private individuals who desire
maximum security. Often this work involves access control systems
using card readers or voice print equipment, possibly combined
with electronic push-button locks that work off a combination
of numbers known only to a very few individuals.
In addition to these major areas of activity,
locksmiths the world over do key duplicating and impressioning,
which is the replacing of lost keys with custom made copies, and
a wide variety of other types of sales, repair and service work.
In order to achieve maximum profitability
as a locksmith, you must be able to offer all these services to
your customers. Locks and security are of prime concern to your
customers, and it follows that when a customer wants help in this
area, he wants it taken care of immediately. Thus, you must position
yourself to handle his job immediately, or lose him to a locksmith
who can take care of his needs on the spot.
Do some market research. Analyze your local
market area before you embark upon this business. This can be
done via letters to the local locksmithing association, Chamber
of Commerce, or even by checking through the yellow pages. As
important as
anything else, you'll want to know how many locksmiths are already
operating in your area, and how much of the market you can expect
to attract with your business. Most industry experts agree that
any more than one locksmith for every 30,000 people tends to
saturate the market. However, you should study the operations
of the existing locksmiths to determine if you can capture a good
portion of the existing market by offering more and better service,
especially with a well-planned effort towards the commercial and
industrial accounts. In many areas, the established locksmiths
have been in business for 20 years or more, and are not interested
in expanding their businesses to include the newer and more intricate
types of protection available.
Look your market over. Determine if there's
been any real effort made to "sell" the market on upgraded
protection. Door-to-door sales efforts; direct mail advertising
campaigns; local "hard sell" newspaper advertising;
home protection and business security
seminars, are angles that can be used to launch your business.
These approaches should prove to be especially profitable if the
existing locksmiths have been sitting back and letting the people
come to them when they have a problem. Get to know the building
contractors and start bidding on the installation of locks on
their building projects. You will get your share of the business,
even though at first you may get contracts only from the new builders
who have not had experience with other locksmiths.
For a fast start in this business, we suggest
that you set yourself up with a van and take your business to
your customers. It isn't absolutely necessary to buy a van off
the showroom floor and outfit it with all the equipment you'll
ultimately need for a full service locksmithing business. That
would be nice, but it would probably run you close to $50,000
or more. By shopping around, you should be able to pick up a good,
late model used van for about $3,000. You might be able to work
an even better deal by leasing a new van, and writing off your
payments as a business tax deduction. One thing you'll definitely
want to consider is a van that has a raised roof in order for
you to stand upright in it. After all, you'll be doing most of
your work in it, and to have to stoop all the time would soon
become quite tiring.
Generally, you can run a workbench down
either or both sides of your van, building in adequate storage
shelves and drawers under the workbenches. Above the workbenches,
and on the sides of the van, peg-board works very well for hanging
your tools and key blanks. You'll need 110-volt as well as 12-volt
outlets for power. This is accomplished with either a power converter
or ready-line generator. Definitely something to think about is
the addition of an air conditioning unit.
Whether you do or don't start out with a
van, you'll need a variety of equipment. Your first basic investment
should be a key duplicating machine. This is the machine you'll
be using to take one key and make copies. You'll also need a key-coding
machine
which will allow you to turn keys out to new codes. This machine
will be essential for the combinating work you'll be doing. These
two machines will be the workhorses of your business - the basic
machines you'll need to call yourself a locksmith. So shop around
and be sure you get good quality, dependable machines to do the
work for you.
You'll also need a wide variety of hand
tools such as files, jigs, drills, screwdrivers, micrometer, and
mortising tools. You may also want to check out the additional
profit potential of your owning a hand key-coding machine. You
should also have a pin kit,
plus key blanks, locks, and padlocks. Depending on how aggressively
you intend to pursue the different areas of the locksmithing business,
you should plan to invest at least $1,000 for a beginning operating
inventory of spare parts, locks and key blanks. Before ordering
your inventory, work with your area distributors or suppliers
to determine the most frequently needed locks and keys.
By creating a professional image, turning
out quality work, and having a van that enables you to take your
business to the customer, you'll be able to charge accordingly.
It's just that simple. Because traditionally, locksmiths have
located themselves in "hole-in-the-wall" storefront
shops or more recently in shopping center parking lots, most have
never charged more than a pittance for their work. In other words,
they have been under-
pricing themselves.
The great advantage of being mobile is that
you can take your services to the customer, and should be able
to charge $25 to $35 per hour (or more) for an installation or
repair call. A good way to upgrade your business is to take your
services to the upper
income areas, because they not only have more to protect, but
are more likely to appreciate the value of your services, and
pay promptly.
When pricing the locks you sell, always
mark your procurement cost up by at least 30 percent. Thus, if
you were to buy locks at a wholesale price of $14 you would charge
your customer $18.50 for the lock, plus your installation charge.
If a key blank costs you
$1, your price to the customer would be $1.65 plus whatever portion
of an hour you figure it takes you to turn it out or duplicate
it. What we're saying here is to always consider the base cost
of your supplies, plus a profit margin for yourself, and then
the installation charge. Thus a two-hour job to install a couple
of deadbolt locks, with keys, might run the customer $75 or $80.
The best quality work, and the lowest prices
in town, are of no value whatsoever if you have no customers,
so you must aggressively seek out customers. Don't wait for them
to come to you. Knowledge and concerted efforts in advertising,
promotion, and personal sales will bring you customers. As mentioned
earlier in this report, you can and should use door-to-door circularizing,
direct mail, local newspaper, and seminar type sales efforts.
And don't forget the tremendous advantage of using the telephone.
Run an ad in your local papers calling for
commission sales people. Hire them to call on homeowners door-to-door
and to sell the idea of up-grading their locks. You'll need a
preplanned sales program along with a good breakdown on your costs
versus
expected income.
Direct mail campaigns can be as simple as
making up advertising circulars or flyers and hiring students
to deliver them, or hand them out to shoppers in busy shopping
centers. The best angle here is to offer a free check of their
locks. Show them how easily a burglar could open their doors;
and then propose new locks for all their doors at a special price.
You should feel no reservation about putting a little fear into
the prospect;
remember burglary is real, and frightening!
Local newspaper advertising can be as simple
as a regularly run advertisement announcing your business location
and phone number. However, it's best used to "splash"
a special offer such as the replacement of all key-in-the-knob
front door locks with deadbolt locks for half the regular price.
Whenever you spend money to advertise, really go after new business.
Once you've installed or replaced the lock on one door, it's only
natural to check the adequacy of the locks on the other doors,
and thus you should be able to realize some real profits from
your advertised special offer.
Promoting and selling your services via
Home Protection Seminars could work like this: You rent meeting
space in a church, school, fraternal organization facilities,
or even the meeting room of a popular motel. Run lots of flamboyant
advertising in your local papers announcing your seminar. Have
brochures made up describing your services. Have your materials
arranged so that you will get the name, address and telephone
number of everyone who attends. Put on a short half-hour to 45-minute
presentation first about the increase in the number of burglaries
and the losses sustained, and then follow through with
a presentation describing the proper ways to insure the security
of a home or business. Contact your suppliers, and through them
you may be able to come up with a slide presentation of a complete
program detailing how their line of locks, alarms and other security
devices will burglar-proof a home or business. Make sure that
everyone in attendance gets one of your brochures, and then have
sales people follow up on all who attended.
Via telephone, your sales people can sell
homeowners and business owners on a free survey. Commission sales
people to make the survey appointments. Then have a commission
sales person call on these prospects and make a quick survey,
thens it down with them and make recommendations on how they can
improve the security of their home or business. From there, it's
a natural lead-in to "we call do the job" for (whatever)
amount of money.
The seminar and telemarketing angles can
be very profitable for you, and if promoted properly, will build
your business faster than all other plans put together. The important
thing to keep in mind is that you must be aggressive and go out
after customers.
By all means, take advantage of the direct mail opportunities.
Have a flyer or circular made up elaborating on your services,
specifically the upgrading of current security and burglar-proofing
of a home or business. Hire students to deliver these door-to-door,
and commission sales people to contact and follow up via telephone.
Once you've got your sales efforts to homeowners
and local businesses organized, hire a couple of sharp commission
sales people to call on the government agencies and institutions
such as hospitals and schools. By all means, buy a good-sized
display ad
in the yellow pages of your area telephone directory; and if possible,
display advertising on buses or commuter trains. Use your knowledge
of how easy it is to burglarize most homes and businesses to come
up with angles to get your name, and the name of your business,
written up in local newspapers and other publications. Make yourself
available for interviews by local radio and television talk shows,
civic clubs and fraternal organizations.
Innovation and persistence in marketing
will be the keys to your immediate success. As we've stated in
this report, most locksmiths are craftsmen who do good work, but
just don't understand the merchandising and selling opportunities.
With the business and marketing skills we've touched upon, plus
quality workmanship (which you can hire others to perform for
you) should be able to quickly establish a profitable business
that will continue to grow and prosper.
Associations, schools and publishers:
Associated Locksmiths of America, Inc.
3003 Live Oak St.
Dallas, TX 75204
National Locksmith Suppliers Association
95 E. Valley Stream Blvd.
Valley Stream, NY 11580
Foley-Belsaw Institute
Box 8525
Kansas City, MO 64141
Locksmith Business Management School
6301 Equitable Road
Emeryville, CA 94608
Security Systems Management School
1500 Cardinal Drive
Little Falls, NJ 07424
Locksmith Ledger
1800 Oakton St.
Des Plaines, IL 60018

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