Do you remember the outrage when the Hanks brothers started selling to the public?

Mikey P

Administrator
I wonder what the origin of this product is...

 
It has always been thus.

In 197...something...maybe 1977 Steamex decided to quit making machines for carpet cleaners only, and made machines that could be rented out.


The carpet cleaning world was aghast. Trade shows were full of cries to sue Steamex for damage to the cleaning trade. Cleaners vowed to boycott them. Steamex didn't care, because they sold so many units into dry cleaning plants, carpet stores, hardware stores etc.

I think it really "hit the fan" when Johnny Carson endorsed renting them.

What it did, of course, was put carpet cleaning in people's minds, and as with Rug Doctor and any other rental system, it built the market far more than it damaged it.
 
I wonder what the origin of this product is...

Looking back ? Rob, Gordon and Dave.

Treated me with the upmost Respect !

I like those guys!

They were good for my Business!
 
It has always been thus.

In 197...something...maybe 1977 Steamex decided to quit making machines for carpet cleaners only, and made machines that could be rented out.


The carpet cleaning world was aghast. Trade shows were full of cries to sue Steamex for damage to the cleaning trade. Cleaners vowed to boycott them. Steamex didn't care, because they sold so many units into dry cleaning plants, carpet stores, hardware stores etc.

I think it really "hit the fan" when Johnny Carson endorsed renting them.

What it did, of course, was put carpet cleaning in people's minds, and as with Rug Doctor and any other rental system, it built the market far more than it damaged it.
Absolutely Jim

Social proof is a powerful marketing tool


Every time Stanley Steemer or Kennedy Carpet ( largest independent carpet cleaner in our area) we benefit


Carpet cleaning became less of a luxury and more accessible to everyone when machine rental gained traction


I’m sure all cleaners benefit from those rug doctor ads and machines at grocery and hardware stores


Keeps our profession on the minds of consumers
 
It has always been thus.

In 197...something...maybe 1977 Steamex decided to quit making machines for carpet cleaners only, and made machines that could be rented out.


The carpet cleaning world was aghast. Trade shows were full of cries to sue Steamex for damage to the cleaning trade. Cleaners vowed to boycott them. Steamex didn't care, because they sold so many units into dry cleaning plants, carpet stores, hardware stores etc.

I think it really "hit the fan" when Johnny Carson endorsed renting them.

What it did, of course, was put carpet cleaning in people's minds, and as with Rug Doctor and any other rental system, it built the market far more than it damaged it.
Hell without them i probably wouldn't be in business! In july of 1977 while on active duty with the Coast guard i started washing windows in my off duty time a customer asked if i cleaned carpets. I thought for a minute and said sure. I rented a rinse n vac from the local hardware store and did it that person told another person and so on and so on . I ended up renting the machine so much that the hardware store sold it to me for 325.00. Now i hear some saying i probably did a lousy job but at 22 and with the attitude that if i can clean a gymnasium floor with a toothbrush, burnish shine a floor with a bottle of wax and a buddy for weight on a wool blanket to polish i truly can and did clean carpets well with a 1970s rental machine, it was electric powered!

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