Say that to the owners of failed business see how many agree with you.Who Dares Wins friend!
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Say that to the owners of failed business see how many agree with you.Who Dares Wins friend!
How do you know he made a decent living off of his dive shop and that in recent years he was breaking even or losing money? Did he share his financials with you?The guy who ran the shop were I got certified back in the 1990, closed not long ago. He seemed to make pretty descent living off of it. However, I'd wager the last decade or so it was mostly a "Hobby", giving the guy something to do aside from wasting away watching TV. Probably breaking even or a slow bleed.
SOLID idea! I know I'd have bought a fill and a beer on many an occasion!I'd open a "Fill Truck" dive shop. The truck would have a complete fill station with 30ft long fill whips.
On Weekdays only, they would come to your house while you are at work. With the garage door code, fill your empty tanks, label them and close the garage. Billing, scheduling, rental tanks, trinkettes etc would all be done on a phone app. Then on weekends they would drive around boat ramps, marinas, dive sites playing ice cream truck music over a speaker, but it would be the song "Baby Shark do-do-daa" and all the divers would come running after it to get their tanks filled. Ohh yea, they would sell cans of beer too.
Near by the water for the convenience.If you could open a shop anywhere in the continental US, where would you do it and why?
You would think that, however the 2 most popular dive sites in Rhode Island used to have shops close by, but both have closed within the last 10 years. Now, the closest shops to either is 45 minutes to an hour. For the locals, no, I don’t count Anderson’s.Near by the water for the convenience.