The Doctrine is a structured curriculum covering site selection (CLEANBI factors), demographic targeting, equipment selection and brand tradeoffs, financing pathways (SBA 7a, equipment loans, seller financing), legal structure, build-out and permitting, attendant vs. unattended operating models, pricing strategy, marketing and customer retention, wash-dry-fold systems, IoT and payments, exit planning, and valuation. Every chapter includes case studies from real US laundromat operators.
Who Built It
The Doctrine is authored by working laundromat operators in partnership with WashBizHub's editorial team, AAdvantage Laundry Systems' field engineering staff, and SBA-approved laundromat lenders. Material is updated quarterly to reflect current equipment pricing, regulation changes, and market conditions. No fluff, no get-rich-quick — operating reality from people who run stores.
How Progress Works
Each chapter ends with a 5–10 question quiz. Pass with 80%+ to unlock the next chapter. Your progress is tracked across devices and synced to your WashBizHub account. Completing the full Doctrine earns the Doctrine Operator certificate, which is recognized by participating lenders and brokers as a signal of buyer readiness.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Doctrine free?
Chapter 1 (Foundations) is free for all WashBizHub accounts. The full Doctrine (Chapters 2–12 + quizzes + certificate) is included in the WashBizHub Pro at $149/month ($124/mo annual), or available as a one-time purchase of $299 for lifetime access.
How long does it take to complete?
Most operators complete the full Doctrine in 8–14 hours of focused study, typically spread over 4–6 weeks of evening sessions. The material is self-paced — you can move faster on familiar topics and slower where you need depth.
Will this prepare me to buy or build?
Yes. The Doctrine is specifically designed to take a curious entrepreneur from zero industry knowledge to a buyer/builder who can confidently evaluate a deal, secure financing, and operate profitably. It is not a substitute for hands-on store experience — but graduates consistently report avoiding 6-figure mistakes that first-time operators make.