LisaWagnerCRS
Member
I've been getting emails asking me what I'm doing at Connections with my Rug Warrior training program with Centrum Force (Greg D. and Tom M.) - and I just wanted to make it clear here, that I am doing NOTHING with them, or any other rug program at the event.
The "Rug Warrior" term was used in the Centrum Force description, which of course made students of my training programs perk up...but apparently, after speaking with Tom, this was a copy oversight, and too late to change the print promotional material. It was an unintended error, and they were NOT trying to imply my involvement, nor any endorsement of their products.
This does not mean they do not have good products...honestly, I don't have enough experience to make a call on it one way of the other. I don't like to speak to anything I have no direct experience with.
Though I have sent requests to my chemist friends on the "nano" conversations taken place on forums, and I do find the claims, so far, without any documented scientific backing - not that "nano-tech" does not have relevancy in the world, I've just seen nothing yet specific to cleaning performance on rugs or carpet, and when you begin cleaning rugs on a back driveway in the beginning like our family did - suddenly making it "complicated" and "super-science based" just seems a little overkill to me.
But...I've been wrong before, and I may be on this, so I will be taking a look, as I do on anything rug related.
On another note, I have used Rug Badger equipment, and have used it in my own rug cleaning clinics when I'm training "rug warriors."
That said, I do not own or use either Centrum Force or Rug Badger equipment in my own plant in San Diego. It just has not been needed.
And...in my training I try to educate as many cleaners as I can that they do not have to invest $100K+ in equipment and space to become a "rug pro" - I've seen several dig a hole like that and never get out of it, and go out of business before they even get a chance to take off.
My family began their cleaning "division" by washing rugs on a back sloped driveway to our antique rug gallery. About $150 in equipment - buckets, ivory soap, vinegar, hand brushes, squeegee, and a wet vac.
Low tech - but great results. The sloped driveway helped a lot in pulling the water out.
I'm like any other "tech" in this business - I think the big machinery is "cool" - and we do have a wringer that gets most of the water out of the rugs in about a minute running it through... which absolutely boosted productivity - but not everyone can plunk down the investment (approx $40K) and that space to install a big machine like this if they are only doing a dozen rugs a week. That makes no sense.
That's where some other tools you already have on your truck, especially if you do restoration, like Airpaths, water claws, wands, and the Rover (which has tested GREAT in extracting water from rugs, and at about $3300 is a good step up from the water claw+wand in extraction production, and not quite making you have to jump to the $40k point... so you can wait, save money, and then buy it outright instead of getting stuck in a lease).
I've laid out some different steps/ideas on setting up a shop at different budgets, and tackle some of the big myths in this business in my Rug Secrets report - it's a free report, just food for thought, nothing being sold in it. Sometimes people want to complicate a craft that really isn't that complex to begin with. So it's my attempt to remove some of the BS out of the rug cleaning craft, at least how I see it. It's on my blog at http://www.RugChick.com or http://www.RugSecrets.com
I will be at Connections, in the Piranha Marketing booth #705, and you can come and "chat" rugs with me there, or CRI stuff, or IICRC stuff, or building up your business stuff. Just like Sybil, I have many sides to me - LOL!
Just wanted to make that clear, that I am not part of ANY rug program at Connections this year, and though I share what I experience with ALL different tools - there is no one line of large equipment that I endorse, though I have used and liked Dusty and Clark's tools in our class and the Cimex and US Product's DriMaster and Dri-eaz's Rover was a big hit at our last workshop, and I have AIrpaths at my plant - no-brainer.
Hope that clears up the "Rug Warrior" confusion...
Thanks, see you in Vegas or in Phoenix (where I WILL be having rug training, and Jim P. and I will be tackling "techniques for the trickiest textiles" in our private training session there...I'm super excited!)
Lisa
The "Rug Warrior" term was used in the Centrum Force description, which of course made students of my training programs perk up...but apparently, after speaking with Tom, this was a copy oversight, and too late to change the print promotional material. It was an unintended error, and they were NOT trying to imply my involvement, nor any endorsement of their products.
This does not mean they do not have good products...honestly, I don't have enough experience to make a call on it one way of the other. I don't like to speak to anything I have no direct experience with.
Though I have sent requests to my chemist friends on the "nano" conversations taken place on forums, and I do find the claims, so far, without any documented scientific backing - not that "nano-tech" does not have relevancy in the world, I've just seen nothing yet specific to cleaning performance on rugs or carpet, and when you begin cleaning rugs on a back driveway in the beginning like our family did - suddenly making it "complicated" and "super-science based" just seems a little overkill to me.
But...I've been wrong before, and I may be on this, so I will be taking a look, as I do on anything rug related.
On another note, I have used Rug Badger equipment, and have used it in my own rug cleaning clinics when I'm training "rug warriors."
That said, I do not own or use either Centrum Force or Rug Badger equipment in my own plant in San Diego. It just has not been needed.
And...in my training I try to educate as many cleaners as I can that they do not have to invest $100K+ in equipment and space to become a "rug pro" - I've seen several dig a hole like that and never get out of it, and go out of business before they even get a chance to take off.
My family began their cleaning "division" by washing rugs on a back sloped driveway to our antique rug gallery. About $150 in equipment - buckets, ivory soap, vinegar, hand brushes, squeegee, and a wet vac.
Low tech - but great results. The sloped driveway helped a lot in pulling the water out.
I'm like any other "tech" in this business - I think the big machinery is "cool" - and we do have a wringer that gets most of the water out of the rugs in about a minute running it through... which absolutely boosted productivity - but not everyone can plunk down the investment (approx $40K) and that space to install a big machine like this if they are only doing a dozen rugs a week. That makes no sense.
That's where some other tools you already have on your truck, especially if you do restoration, like Airpaths, water claws, wands, and the Rover (which has tested GREAT in extracting water from rugs, and at about $3300 is a good step up from the water claw+wand in extraction production, and not quite making you have to jump to the $40k point... so you can wait, save money, and then buy it outright instead of getting stuck in a lease).
I've laid out some different steps/ideas on setting up a shop at different budgets, and tackle some of the big myths in this business in my Rug Secrets report - it's a free report, just food for thought, nothing being sold in it. Sometimes people want to complicate a craft that really isn't that complex to begin with. So it's my attempt to remove some of the BS out of the rug cleaning craft, at least how I see it. It's on my blog at http://www.RugChick.com or http://www.RugSecrets.com
I will be at Connections, in the Piranha Marketing booth #705, and you can come and "chat" rugs with me there, or CRI stuff, or IICRC stuff, or building up your business stuff. Just like Sybil, I have many sides to me - LOL!
Just wanted to make that clear, that I am not part of ANY rug program at Connections this year, and though I share what I experience with ALL different tools - there is no one line of large equipment that I endorse, though I have used and liked Dusty and Clark's tools in our class and the Cimex and US Product's DriMaster and Dri-eaz's Rover was a big hit at our last workshop, and I have AIrpaths at my plant - no-brainer.
Hope that clears up the "Rug Warrior" confusion...
Thanks, see you in Vegas or in Phoenix (where I WILL be having rug training, and Jim P. and I will be tackling "techniques for the trickiest textiles" in our private training session there...I'm super excited!)
Lisa