Boring Money

Boring Money

I Roasted His Car Wash Startup — Then Gave Him a $4M Plan

53 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio I Roasted His Car Wash Startup — Then Gave Him a $4M Plan

Descripción

Paulo is trying to bring Flipwash, a successful Brazilian car wash concept, to the United States. In Brazil, the company has grown to more than 140 locations and roughly $4 million per month in revenue. The model is simple: instead of making customers drive to a traditional car wash, Flipwash sets up inside shopping malls, office buildings, parking garages, and other places where people already park their cars. But the U.S. market is different. Paulo has five locations open, but he is stretched thin, undercapitalized, and trying to scale before proving the model works in one flagship location. In this conversation, David Heacock breaks down the real problem: growth is not the number of locations. Growth is revenue, profit, repeatability, and focus. They discuss: - Why traditional car washes may be vulnerable to a more convenient model - How Flipwash grew in Brazil - Why the U.S. expansion has been harder than expected - The danger of confusing footprint with business growth - Why Paulo may need to stop opening new locations - How to turn one Austin location into a true proof of concept - The math behind a potential $4M+ opportunity - Why investors care about repeatable unit economics - How focus can unlock capital - Why local awareness matters more than national branding - How social media could become a growth engine for the business - When entrepreneurs need to shut down distractions and go all in This is a real-time business breakdown of a founder with a promising concept, but too many plates spinning at once. The lesson is simple: prove it once, build the system, then scale.

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Portada del episodio I Roasted His Car Wash Startup — Then Gave Him a $4M Plan

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Paulo is trying to bring Flipwash, a successful Brazilian car wash concept, to the United States. In Brazil, the company has grown to more than 140 locations and roughly $4 million per month in revenue. The model is simple: instead of making customers drive to a traditional car wash, Flipwash sets up inside shopping malls, office buildings, parking garages, and other places where people already park their cars. But the U.S. market is different. Paulo has five locations open, but he is stretched thin, undercapitalized, and trying to scale before proving the model works in one flagship location. In this conversation, David Heacock breaks down the real problem: growth is not the number of locations. Growth is revenue, profit, repeatability, and focus. They discuss: - Why traditional car washes may be vulnerable to a more convenient model - How Flipwash grew in Brazil - Why the U.S. expansion has been harder than expected - The danger of confusing footprint with business growth - Why Paulo may need to stop opening new locations - How to turn one Austin location into a true proof of concept - The math behind a potential $4M+ opportunity - Why investors care about repeatable unit economics - How focus can unlock capital - Why local awareness matters more than national branding - How social media could become a growth engine for the business - When entrepreneurs need to shut down distractions and go all in This is a real-time business breakdown of a founder with a promising concept, but too many plates spinning at once. The lesson is simple: prove it once, build the system, then scale.

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