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Show Highlights

In the very first episode of the Daily Solutions Podcast, Graham and Ashkahn introduce themselves, lay out the concept of the project, and share how to submit your float-related questions.

Float Tank Solutions will be releasing a podcast episode every day, with each episode focusing on a question or topic related to starting, running, or growing a float center. They’re created to be easily digestible — short and to the point, and always published along with a full written transcript.

Want to dive into advanced sound-proofing tips? Need to know how to measure your serviceable available market? Curious why your tank water is a weird color (and what to do about it)?

Subscribe now to get daily solutions to your float tank questions.

Get to know some of our companies

Float On – our float tank center.

Float Tank Solutions – resources for starting, running, and growing your float center

Float Conference – the largest gathering of float enthusiasts.

HelmBot – software to run your wellness business.

Coincidence Control Publishing – floatation publications.

Show Resources

Listen to Just the Audio

Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)

Graham: You’re listening to the Daily Solutions podcast. This is our very first episode.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah, welcome, welcome. Glad to have you here starting this journey with us.

 

Graham: Yeah and I guess before we get started in the actual podcast, we just kind of wanted to introduce ourselves a little bit for those of you out there who may not be as familiar with us as we are.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah, so we are two of the owners of Float On. We have a float tank center.

 

Graham: Woo, we have a float tank center.

 

Ashkahn: We did it. We did it. So yeah, Portland, Oregon is where we reside. That’s where our float tank center is, and we opened our doors back in 2010.

 

Graham: Yeah, and back then we just had four tanks when first opened up.

Around 2012 we expanded to six tanks, which is what we have now.

 

Ashkahn: Yes, so it’s been a very exciting journey for us. 2010 was a very different place in the world of floating, and we’ve gotten to see everything kind of expand and grow and explode and all the amazing things that’s happened over the last six to seven years. It’s been really a pleasure to kind of be along on this wild ride.

 

Graham: Yeah and somewhere along the way as well, we started branching out beyond just running our own float tank center and kind of doing some other projects. One of the first of those was Float Tank Solutions, which this podcast is a part of. Float Tank Solutions is our consulting side of things. So once we opened up a float tank center, all of a sudden, which is unexpected, we started getting crazy amounts of emails and phone calls from people who were thinking about opening up their own float tank center and had just a bunch of questions for someone who’d kind of been through the early process so far.

Float Tank Solutions was born out of wanting to actually provide some benefit back to the float world and teach people some of the things that we’ve learned during our time running Float On. We have a lot of free resources on there. They’re definitely worth checking out, from comparison charts for the different float tanks that are on the market to whole intro guides on the basic concept of floating that you can give to your landlord or investors, or anything like that. And a really extensive blog that you can go through. It has at this point hundreds of posts. I think I counted the pages, it’s something like 700 pages at the time of recording, is in our blog.

So kind of a wealth of free info out there that you should definitely avail yourself of. We also have some paid products as well and have been helping centers open since we started Float Tank Solutions in 2012. Things like business plan template and construction plan. We do a three-day training out in Portland every month that usually has about five or six perspective float center owners that come out and learn from us what goes into a center. So a bunch of things very much centered on helping other float tank centers get open.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah.We’ve done a handful of other projects in the years since we’ve been open, as well. We put on the Float Conference that happens every year, which is definitely a ton of fun. We also make The Float Helm software to run your center in terms of scheduling point of sale and a lot of other kind of backend center operations.

 

Graham: I guess the last thing that we do is some book publishing as well. We’ve put out both some books inspired by floating and art work, and a cook book inspired by floating and also some old John Lilly books. That’s Coincidence Control Publishing, is what that one is called.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah, and I guess in addition to that we just do whatever sounds fun for us sometimes too. We recently went on a giant float tour where we took an RV around the United States and Canada and visited 172 float centers over the course of three months while driving around. Mostly just because it sounded like a preposterous amount of fun, and it was. It was a huge amount of fun.

 

Graham: The premise of this podcast is really just to continue that trend of helping out the industry and sharing what information we can. Specifically in this case, we really wanted to hear from other people who are out there either running a float tank center or thinking about getting their toes a little bit salty in the waters. So taking answers from people and actually just answering those questions in a short conversational format.

 

Ashkahn: We have our three-day training apprenticeship program where we get to say a lot of information in structured ways. We have our blog post, which take a lot of work to put into a form that feels like a comprehensive post on a subject. At the end of the day, when we grab beers over the float centers and we’re talking to people at the conference, or just casually hanging out with float people we end up having these really nice valuable casual conversations about all sorts of weird little topics that don’t always come up when you’re going over the grander things you need to be thinking about.

This podcast really seemed like a nice way of getting some of that information out, these bite sized attempts at talking about some of the smaller and more detail-oriented sections of open and running a float center.

 

Graham: I guess so much of the knowledge base out there for float tanks is so wishy-washy. We’re still in the early stages of this industry, even though it’s really popping and growing at this fast rate. So we try to make our blog as comprehensive and thorough on different topics as we can, but so many of the topics out there, you just can’t even do that. There’s almost not enough information, and so the idea of having something that’s just a little more conversational, where we can really quickly go over how we don’t really know what’s going on, and what you can look into a little bit more, and where things might head just sounded appealing to us.

 

Ashkahn: I have a suspicion that you’re going to hear us say we don’t really know, probably a number of times, in many episodes to come.

 

Graham: So thanks for tuning in to listen. That’s the basic premise of the show. We’re planning on releasing one of these every single day, so get ready for a load of Graham and Ash content.

 

Ashkahn: And please send us your questions. This show will all be focused on answering questions that people have so let us know what you want us to talk about.

 

Graham: Yeah, and you can do that online at floattanksolutions.com/podcast. Feel free to also just shoot us an email. Our contact information is up on our website as well.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah, I mean if you want to send us Morse code messages we can accept those, and carrier pigeons.

 

Graham: I’ve heard that if you put stamps on a watermelon and actually send it through the mail, it will arrive at its destination. So if you want to send us a watermelon-based question, you’re free to do that as well.

 

Ashkahn: Yeah, and mail it, made with the seeds inside. I mean that sounds great. Yeah, anyway you send it to us, we’ll try to answer it.

 

Graham: All right, and other than that, thanks for listening. We’ll be talking to you again tomorrow.

Recent Podcast Episodes

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

When shopping around for earplugs for float tanks, there’s only a few that actually work well in the float solution. One of these is the Mack’s wax earplugs, basically the standard for swimmers as well. But why do so many float centers buy the child sized ones when stocking their float center?

Ashkahn “Big Ears” Jahromi let’s all of us know what he thinks is going on and that many people may be using these earplugs incorrectly. Graham “Normal Ears” Talley, backs him up with some facts and important reminders.

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

What Causes that Float Tank Twitch? – DSP 244

Graham and Ashkahn discuss what causes that mysterious twitch people sometimes experience in the float tank, called the hypnic jerk (AKA hypnagogic jerk, sleep start, sleep twitch, myoclonic jerk, or night start ). While the guys offer up some interesting theories, there’s not a lot of research that’s been done on what causes these, so we’re left with theories, more or less.

Ashkahn thinks it has to do with pancakes.

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

Does floating impact the Parasympathetic Nervous System? – DSP 243

The Parasympathetic Nervous System is the part of your body that gets really excited when the rest of your body is winding down. Taking care of the digestive and rest systems are an important part of human health and physiology. How do float tanks affect this system?

Many of the studies on floating have demonstrated an impact on the parasympathetic nervous system. Graham and Ashkahn talk about the information that’s been studied so far.

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

Getting Salty With Speakers – Professor Hu – DSP 242

Dr. Peicheng Hu is a researcher from China that studies floatation therapy over there. He’s speaking at the Float Conference this year so Ashkahn decided to take the opportunity to talk to him about the Chinese float industry and some of the differences in the practice as well as the type of research being done out there. 

Why Do Float Centers use Child Sized Earplugs? – DSP 245

Are Google Ads Important – DSP 241

When looking at online marketing, Google Ads seem like an obvious choice, but are as relevant for Float Centers as they are for other businesses? The most useful thing these ads do is boost search result placement, but if the ads are to boost the ranking of a float center that is the only center in town, it’s not going to affect search results much.

Derek and Graham dissect the platform and really focus in on the uses (or lack thereof) of Google Ads for float centers and provide tools and tips for online marketing and how to make it as effective as possible.

Latest Blog Posts

Fancy Acronyms for your Business Plan: TAM, SAM, and SOM

Fancy Acronyms for your Business Plan: TAM, SAM, and SOM

In this post, we’ll be looking at those enigmatic acronyms: TAM, SAM, and SOM, which are the backbone for the market analysis section of your written plan. We’ve helped a couple hundred float centers to develop their business plans, and we’ve found that this one area generates the most questions, and seems to generally be the most difficult to wrap your head around.

The Float Tour Blog – Issue #9

The Float Tour Blog – Issue #9

The Float Tour makes a stop in Tulsa, OK to visit Dr. Justin Feinstein’s Float Clinic and Research Center at the Laureate Institute of Brain Research (LIBR).

Rather than following the usual path of incremental progress with its research, LIBR is tasked with pursuing alternative treatments that have a chance of “shooting the moon” and making potentially large leaps in medical progress. Float tanks are just the kind of technology they’re looking to explore.

Float Tank Centers for Sale

Float Tank Centers for Sale

On our journey we found at least three owners who are actively looking to sell their float tank centers, and in all three cases the centers are doing well. Life often calls us in different directions than we expect.

In case you’re in the market for a pre-established business, without all the trials and tribulations of starting from scratch, here’s information on two centers that are, for the moment, available to swoop in on…

The Float Tour Blog – Issue #8

The Float Tour Blog – Issue #8

The desert is vast and the sun is harsh, but it doesn’t deter floating. We’re officially off the beaten path. From here, the float centers have become a bit more spread out. Everywhere we go, however, the people continue to be kind and eager to see us.

Everything in between Arizona and Texas is nestled in between some of the major manufacturers in the United States, providing some resources that other areas just don’t have. Areas that might find building out a center prohibitively expensive due to additional shipping costs, not to mention that real estate is cheaper than in major metropolitan areas, can save a bit of money when planning their buildout.