Something in the world of floating have you stumped?
Show Highlights
How specific do you want to get when walking a customer through a float for the first time? Everyone is gonna have a different answer to this, but it’s important to have consistency when running a business. A lot of places do video walkthroughs, but that runs the risk of losing that personal touch.
Graham and Ashkahn share a little Float On philosophy about how they instruct staff to introduce the practice of floating as well as some helpful tips for making your intro speech grow and evolve over time.
Listen to Just the Audio
Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)
Graham: Today’s question for you is, “Do you require your employees to stick to a script or just bullet points for their new client introductions?”
Ashkahn: For the walk-throughs.
Graham: The old walkity-walk-throughs.
Ashkahn: The old walkity-walk-through speech-aroonies.
Graham: Yeah, so we don’t, I mean, we don’t have a script so much. It’s also just kind of not Float On style to really force people into an exact way of doing things, yeah. So we don’t have a dress code, no script for our walk-throughs.
Ashkahn: We don’t even have regular, we just pull whoever’s off the street that morning and that’s, that’s who runs our shop. Uh, so yeah, we have, like we don’t have an actual like “hey, here’s exactly what you need to say.” But we do have, you know, when we train people we kind of go through the list of things, you know, I guess like you were saying, a bullet point list of everything that we want to say. And we have that person in training like come and be a part of a bunch of walk-throughs that somebody else is doing. So I think naturally they kind of pick up the same sort of, you know, general feel to each other, and probably the content is mostly the same, like I’d say probably over 90 percent similar between all of our employees.
Graham: Yep.
Ashkahn: And then another thing we do is we have our employees kind of do their walk-throughs in front of each other every once in a while. We have these kind of monthly meetings and every once in a while we’ll just do that, we’ll have a couple people like hop in a room and do their walk-through speech and have other people be like, “oh man, that was good, like that one thing you said about the earplugs, I’m totally going to start saying that, that’s useful.” Or, “hey, I mentioned this other thing that you didn’t say.” And that kind of just doing it in front of each other allows for the people to kind of transfer things back and forth and bring a little bit more consistency to our walk-throughs.
Graham: Yeah. Or like things that went horribly, like oh, maybe you shouldn’t make those off-color jokes during your walk-through, you know. You might want to consider removing that from…
And, you know, so one of the benefits of this, which is one of the reasons that we kind of don’t like just passing down a one-size-fits-all kind of script, is I think it’s really important when you’re introducing someone to the float tanks for the first time to be really sensitive to that person and their needs going into it. And a lot of our walk-throughs start initially just by getting a sense of how much people even know about floating, right? Like a person coming in who it’s still their first float but they’ve done a bunch of research, their wife has floated a bunch of times and maybe is a member, is different from someone who’s coming in and it’s their birthday and their wife is surprising them with this weird float thing that neither of them has done and he didn’t even know where he was until he took off the blindfold, right? So, even just the level of knowledge and education, and people’s fears, too, I think can be addressed better when there’s not a very strict script that everyone is sticking to.
Ashkahn: Yeah, and I think people just, when they do things that feel comfortable to them they do it better.
Graham: Yeah.
Ashkahn: And I don’t know if they’re like, man, that’s not how I would say that. Like forcing someone to say something in a way they wouldn’t say it is probably going to make them sound artificial when they actually go to say-
Graham: Hello sir or madam-
Ashkahn: You call like any customer service or big chain company, and like whenever they pick up the phone, like you can hear the script that they had to say, and like they say it three times the normal speed humans usually talk, and it’s like, it’s like way more kind of articulated words than people are used to using in sentences, and it’s just so… it feels very like artificial and forced from above or something. I don’t think, it’s not going to, you know, we don’t have a call center of people working in float centers, I don’t think it’s going to get quite to that level. But I think to a degree that same sort of effect can happen if you’re really forcing someone to do something that they maybe don’t think is the most comfortable way or the best way that they could express it.
Graham: Yeah, and I just think being in tune with how much people are paying attention, as well. You know, some people are just really excited when they’re going in to float and they’re not exactly focusing on everything that you’re saying. And being able to like see that on their face and pay attention to it be like, “no-no-no, look, the earplugs, like you can, they’re optional. You can put them on or not.” You know and they’re like “okay, okay.” Or, you know, like oftentimes we’ll finish a walk-through, and it’s amazing the amount of times you finish and you’ve said exactly that the music’s going to come on at the end of the float and that’s how they’ll be notified, and you kind of finish up and they’re like, “wait, how do I know this is over again?” And you’re just like, oh man, how much have you actually been tuning in, you know?
So, again, like I feel a script encourages people to pay attention to what they’re saying. And having bullet points or all these general things are important to cover but letting them kind of wing it on the fly makes them pay attention to the customer more.
Ashkahn: And, you know, I feel like our walk-throughs have improved as employees are like, “hey, you know, maybe we should really be mentioning this to people,” or something like that. Like having that kind of flexibility for it to-
Graham: Yeah.
Ashkahn: -organically grow and become better as people think of better ways of saying things or information to include is also nice. Not that they couldn’t change the script, I guess. Like that’s, you’d have to, ideally if you had a much more regimented thing you’d want some sort of system in place to allow people to update it.
Graham: Yeah. And that’s kind of more a general philosophy, but any system that you set up that has difficulty changing or can’t be changed at all is eventually going to be a very bad system. So kind of continuous evolution is at least a goal to build into things regardless of what they are, script or anything, what you eat for lunch.
Ashkahn: Um, and, I don’t know, I can see the concern of not having a script being that people won’t say everything you want them to say, and so I think that’s just where the rest of it comes in, having people hear each others’ walk-through speeches, going through information like that. Like it just takes a little bit more effort to make sure everyone’s on the same page and kind of hitting the points that you want to make sure everyone’s hitting.
Graham: Yeah. And everything slips over time, right? So if you only do this once a year expect at the end of that year your walk-through speeches do have some differences between them, right. But if you’re doing it every couple months or every quarter or something like that, having everyone kind of review things, you’d probably be surprised at how consistent they stay, and how much do kind of just improve little by little over time.
Ashkahn: Yeah.
Graham: So I think that’s it.
Ashkahn: Cool, alright. Well, great. If you guys have other questions that you want us to answer you can go to floattanksolutions.com/podcast and send them our way.
Recent Podcast Episodes
Using Ozone in Float Tanks – DSP 340
Ashkahn and Graham talk about Ozone in this episode. Everything from different types of ozonators to the efficacy of it as a water treatment system compared to other systems.
Ozone is very effective, but there are concerns about its use that aren’t present in other types of water treatment, and fortunately the guys give us a lot of information on what to consider when putting together our own systems.
Credit Card Processing – DSP 339
Graham and Ashkahn delve into the wild world of credit card processing. There’s a massive industry of businesses that exist between when your customer swipes their credit card and when it goes into your bank account. The industry seems to be designed to be confusing and some companies only perform certain tasks, making it very difficult to compare services.
The guys give their advice on how to handle finding the right credit card processor for float centers and what to look out for when you’re on the hunt.
Floating While Pregnant – DSP 338
There are tons of anecdotal stories about pregnant people having great experiences with floating, but what are some of the things you should consider if you’re going to encourage floating while pregnant.
Graham and Ashkahn share what they’ve heard about it and how to frame the conversation with an expecting parent while still covering your bases from a liability standpoint.
Giving Shares of Your Company – DSP 337
A lot of small businesses have a romanticized idea of what “shares” in a business actually mean. Float On did, once upon a time. What does it mean to give shares of your company to someone? Is it a good way to reward a valuable and dedicated employee? Are there other, more appropriate rewards that you can offer instead?
Graham and Ashkahn review this question in detail, sharing many questions that any float center owner should consider before offering an employee ownership of your company.
Is a Business Plan Necessary When Buying an Existing Center? – DSP 336
Do you need a business plan if you’re not building a business from the ground up?
Graham and Ashkahn chime in and give a solid “maybe” as a response. It depends on a lot of factors, for sure. Do you already have financing? Are you maintaining the existing business model or revamping it?
Latest Blog Posts
Beginner’s Guides from Everywhere!
If you’re not familiar with the Beginner’s Guide, it’s basically our intro brochure at Float On. About 5 years ago now we made the creation files easily available so folks could edit it as they pleased and sent it out to everyone with an open invitation to do with it as they pleased for their own centers. We know most centers don’t have graphic designers on staff so it seemed like a nice way to help others have reliable, easy to access information for their clients and also serve as a way to save them time and money from having to create their own.
The result of this is that years later, dozens and dozens of centers have a version of these brochures, some of them not even realizing where they originated from. Naturally, we’ve taken a copy from all the centers we’ve visited and we thought we’d share some of them with the rest of you.
The Daily Solutions Podcast – Our Top 5 Episodes from March
Here we go again. Another month, another difficult choice of deciding which episodes will make it into the Top 5. We had some really killer episodes this month, including our 100th episode and a special interview with Justin Feinstein. Here are the episodes that we...
Float Success Story – Float Los Alamos
At the Float Conference every year we hear inspirational stories from float center owners who have carved a piece of the industry out in their salty image. Everyone defines "success" in their own way, and we thought it would be cool to share what that meant to some of...
The Daily Solutions Podcast – Our Top 5 Episodes from February
Well, we’ve done it again. We’ve gone through an entire month listening to Graham and Ashkahn share their floaty knowledge. In any case, here are a few of our favorites from the month of February. We're almost at episode 100 (in which we have something special...