Lee Stockwell
FOJL
My thoughts and feelings about a carpet cleaner dabbling in water damage work would be the same as your feeling about a painter doing carpet cleaning.
Pot Kettle?
My thoughts and feelings about a carpet cleaner dabbling in water damage work would be the same as your feeling about a painter doing carpet cleaning.
I am completely out of the carpet cleaning business. I turn down 10-20 jobs a week from people that I've known for year that are tracking me down.Gregg has has hundreds of dehuS and umpteen hundreds of blowers I don't think he's dabbling, I think he is full submerged!!
I think that was more true 10-years ago. I think you'll find a good many have attended training on WDR and have done some limited drying but just choose not to get involved with the emergency work or pass on larger work.My point was: most carpet cleaners don't have a clue or the training to dry a structure.
Scott, you are a little late in responding to this one. I actually got back in the "carpet cleaning business" shortly after I wrote this. And then sold it.greg, so you dont use carpet cleaning equipment at all to extract water from the water damage jobs you do? and why dont you still clean carpets if you were so good at it?
Check out Reets Academy. They have non certified classes the covers those topics.It's to bad those classes don't teach you how to fill out the paperwork and how to charge. Drying is the easy part.