Full Cycle

CLA

Formerly the PlanetLaundry Podcast, the new Full Cycle podcast brings you the great stories from inside the vended laundry industry and the perspective you need from outside the industry. A media offering from the Coin Laundry Association, Full Cycle aims to elevate the vended laundry industry through celebrating the success of the modern laundry entrepreneur.

  1. Building Culture from the Ground Up with Kate Wolfe

    3d ago ·  Video

    Building Culture from the Ground Up with Kate Wolfe

    Kate Wolfe came to the laundry industry the way many do, by following a thread of curiosity until it became a plan. A TikTok video about passive income sent her down a research rabbit hole, and within a year or two she had identified a laundromat near her home in Pennsylvania, arranged financing, and called the owner before her husband even knew what was happening. That first location, which they renamed Laundry Lane, closed in December 2023. Six months later, they bought the building. Four months after that, they acquired a second location. Wolfe runs both stores with her husband, George, and the division of responsibilities has developed organically. George handles the mechanical side, maintenance, and property management. Kate brings an MBA and a background in people management, process development, and systems design from her years working on a government contract. She wrote SOPs, built training programs, developed flowcharts and job aids, and tracked processing times. That experience translated directly into how she runs Laundry Lane. When they hired their first employee, roughly 18 months in, Kate had already built out a checklist that accounted for daily, weekly, and monthly tasks, with specific days assigned to specific recurring work. The goal was consistency, making sure the store looked the same regardless of who had cleaned it. She traces that standard back to a simple test her husband applies: if his 77-year-old mother can feel comfortable there at night, then the space is doing what it should. In this episode, Kate talks about how the culture she is building at Laundry Lane is the connective tissue between her brand and her customer experience. That includes hiring former customers when possible, backing her staff when a customer crosses a line, and making sure employees understand why the standards matter, not just what they are. The two-way security cameras serve as a customer service tool as much as a safety measure. Magnetic locks let late customers finish their laundry without being rushed out. Small decisions, consistently made, have added up to a customer base that sweeps the floors on their own and drives past closer options to use washer number five. Kate is candid about what she and George did not know when they started and how much they learned after they were already in it. The CLA, the Laundromat Resource Podcast, and other industry resources came later, once they had already stumbled through the early lessons on their own. Her advice for anyone new to the industry is to find those resources before you need them. Her closing thought for the episode is a reframe on productivity: rather than measuring a day against a long to-do list, identify the one thing that matters most that day and do that well. Some days that is a business goal. Some days it is being present for her daughter. Either one counts as a successful day. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    40 min
  2. Building Culture from the Ground Up with Kate Wolfe

    3d ago

    Building Culture from the Ground Up with Kate Wolfe

    Kate Wolfe came to the laundry industry the way many do, by following a thread of curiosity until it became a plan. A TikTok video about passive income sent her down a research rabbit hole, and within a year or two she had identified a laundromat near her home in Pennsylvania, arranged financing, and called the owner before her husband even knew what was happening. That first location, which they renamed Laundry Lane, closed in December 2023. Six months later, they bought the building. Four months after that, they acquired a second location. Wolfe runs both stores with her husband, George, and the division of responsibilities has developed organically. George handles the mechanical side, maintenance, and property management. Kate brings an MBA and a background in people management, process development, and systems design from her years working on a government contract. She wrote SOPs, built training programs, developed flowcharts and job aids, and tracked processing times. That experience translated directly into how she runs Laundry Lane. When they hired their first employee, roughly 18 months in, Kate had already built out a checklist that accounted for daily, weekly, and monthly tasks, with specific days assigned to specific recurring work. The goal was consistency, making sure the store looked the same regardless of who had cleaned it. She traces that standard back to a simple test her husband applies: if his 77-year-old mother can feel comfortable there at night, then the space is doing what it should. In this episode, Kate talks about how the culture she is building at Laundry Lane is the connective tissue between her brand and her customer experience. That includes hiring former customers when possible, backing her staff when a customer crosses a line, and making sure employees understand why the standards matter, not just what they are. The two-way security cameras serve as a customer service tool as much as a safety measure. Magnetic locks let late customers finish their laundry without being rushed out. Small decisions, consistently made, have added up to a customer base that sweeps the floors on their own and drives past closer options to use washer number five. Kate is candid about what she and George did not know when they started and how much they learned after they were already in it. The CLA, the Laundromat Resource Podcast, and other industry resources came later, once they had already stumbled through the early lessons on their own. Her advice for anyone new to the industry is to find those resources before you need them. Her closing thought for the episode is a reframe on productivity: rather than measuring a day against a long to-do list, identify the one thing that matters most that day and do that well. Some days that is a business goal. Some days it is being present for her daughter. Either one counts as a successful day. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    40 min
  3. From Corporate Ladder to Laundromat Franchise: Cathy Neilley on Building Spin Doctor

    Jun 9 ·  Video

    From Corporate Ladder to Laundromat Franchise: Cathy Neilley on Building Spin Doctor

    Cathy Neilley spent years working her way through corporate America, from clinical laboratory work at major New York hospitals to pharmaceutical sales, biotech management, and eventually e-commerce and product management at Johnson & Johnson. The training was excellent and the travel was broad, but the path upward grew uncertain, and she began looking for a way out on her own terms. The idea for a laundromat came from a moment of genuine frustration. Returning from a work trip with a suitcase of dirty clothes, she found the building laundry room occupied and uninviting, then discovered a small neighborhood shop offering wash, dry, and fold service. The result changed her thinking: professional women needed a better laundry option, and she was going to build it. That was the beginning of Spin Doctor, which has now been operating for 13 years. The franchise came later, and somewhat unexpectedly. A family relocation dried up the capital she had set aside for expanding her own store count, and her husband suggested they franchise the concept instead. They worked with a packaging company to build out the legal framework, prepared for a slow road, and then watched COVID pause and paradoxically accelerate everything. People reconsidering their careers after the pandemic were looking for small business opportunities, and Spin Doctor now has 12 franchisees in active build-out phases across New Jersey, New York, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Minnesota. Neilley speaks candidly about what it has meant to build this in an industry that has historically been male-dominated, much like the corporate world she left. Women make up less than five percent of laundromat owners, and she has a stated goal of reaching 30 percent female or female-majority ownership across Spin Doctor franchises. Visibility, she argues, is what moves that number. People need to see that it is possible before they will believe it is possible for them. Her closing advice: admit what you do not know, and stay curious. Learning from industries and situations that have nothing obvious to do with your own work has a way of paying off when you least expect it. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    41 min
  4. Jun 9

    From Corporate Ladder to Laundromat Franchise: Cathy Neilley on Building Spin Doctor

    Cathy Neilley spent years working her way through corporate America, from clinical laboratory work at major New York hospitals to pharmaceutical sales, biotech management, and eventually e-commerce and product management at Johnson & Johnson. The training was excellent and the travel was broad, but the path upward grew uncertain, and she began looking for a way out on her own terms. The idea for a laundromat came from a moment of genuine frustration. Returning from a work trip with a suitcase of dirty clothes, she found the building laundry room occupied and uninviting, then discovered a small neighborhood shop offering wash, dry, and fold service. The result changed her thinking: professional women needed a better laundry option, and she was going to build it. That was the beginning of Spin Doctor, which has now been operating for 13 years. The franchise came later, and somewhat unexpectedly. A family relocation dried up the capital she had set aside for expanding her own store count, and her husband suggested they franchise the concept instead. They worked with a packaging company to build out the legal framework, prepared for a slow road, and then watched COVID pause and paradoxically accelerate everything. People reconsidering their careers after the pandemic were looking for small business opportunities, and Spin Doctor now has 12 franchisees in active build-out phases across New Jersey, New York, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Minnesota. Neilley speaks candidly about what it has meant to build this in an industry that has historically been male-dominated, much like the corporate world she left. Women make up less than five percent of laundromat owners, and she has a stated goal of reaching 30 percent female or female-majority ownership across Spin Doctor franchises. Visibility, she argues, is what moves that number. People need to see that it is possible before they will believe it is possible for them. Her closing advice: admit what you do not know, and stay curious. Learning from industries and situations that have nothing obvious to do with your own work has a way of paying off when you least expect it. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    41 min
  5. May 26

    Curiosity and Mentors Make the Difference for Two Women in Laundry Service

    In this episode of Full Cycle, Matt DeWolf sits down with two women who have built long careers on the service and maintenance side of the laundry industry: Jennifer Gonzalez, Senior Manager of Service at Maytag Commercial Laundry, and Jackie McFeely, National Service Manager for Dependable Laundry Solution in Australia. Both guests trace their comfort with tools and troubleshooting back to childhood. Jennifer recalls disassembling her father's lawn tractor at age six, and Jackie grew up helping in her father's mechanic shop. Neither set out specifically for laundry, but both found their way there through a combination of curiosity, good mentors, and an appreciation for working closely with customers.  The conversation covers what it has been like to work in a field where women remain underrepresented, how both guests have navigated bias with patience and by simply demonstrating their expertise, and why they believe representation matters as much on the customer side as it does within their own organizations. Jennifer and Jackie also talk about their ongoing working relationship across two continents, and what makes the partnership between a manufacturer and a distributor function well over time. On the question of encouraging more people into the trades, both guests point to the same thing: let people try. Jackie's advice is to have a go. Jennifer's is to remember that there is a video for almost everything, and that most mistakes can be undone. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    36 min
  6. May 26 ·  Video

    Curiosity and Mentors Make the Difference for Two Women in Laundry Service

    In this episode of Full Cycle, Matt DeWolf sits down with two women who have built long careers on the service and maintenance side of the laundry industry: Jennifer Gonzalez, Senior Manager of Service at Maytag Commercial Laundry, and Jackie McFeely, National Service Manager for Dependable Laundry Solution in Australia. Both guests trace their comfort with tools and troubleshooting back to childhood. Jennifer recalls disassembling her father's lawn tractor at age six, and Jackie grew up helping in her father's mechanic shop. Neither set out specifically for laundry, but both found their way there through a combination of curiosity, good mentors, and an appreciation for working closely with customers.  The conversation covers what it has been like to work in a field where women remain underrepresented, how both guests have navigated bias with patience and by simply demonstrating their expertise, and why they believe representation matters as much on the customer side as it does within their own organizations. Jennifer and Jackie also talk about their ongoing working relationship across two continents, and what makes the partnership between a manufacturer and a distributor function well over time. On the question of encouraging more people into the trades, both guests point to the same thing: let people try. Jackie's advice is to have a go. Jennifer's is to remember that there is a video for almost everything, and that most mistakes can be undone. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    36 min
  7. May 12 ·  Video

    From Instagram to Open Doors with Catherine Chalpin

    Catherine Chalpin came to laundry the way a lot of people do these days: she saw something on Instagram, thought it looked manageable, and started doing her homework. What followed was about as fast a path from interest to open doors as you are likely to find. In this episode of Full Cycle, Chalpin shares how she went from watching someone unload quarters into a bucket to running Pop In Laundry in Poughkeepsie, New York, all within roughly a year. The location she landed on was a zombie mat, stripped of equipment after a dryer fire, but with its infrastructure largely intact. Chalpin, who has a background in project management through years of renovating rental properties, saw the bones of the space and knew what to do. She managed the buildout herself, skipping a general contractor, and opened in January 2026. Her day job selling indoor athletic flooring for nonprofits and athletic facilities has shaped how she thinks about community relationships, and that shows in how she runs her store. In her first few months, she organized a clothing drive with the Salvation Army, launched a summer reading program in partnership with the local library, secured a deal to flyer cars in her plaza, and began providing laundry cards to clients of Family Services of Poughkeepsie. A pop-up comedy show at the laundromat was also on the list. She credits a background in marketing and promotions for her instinct to keep things fresh and community-facing. Chalpin and host, Matt DeWolf also get into the practical side of running a new store: the lint trap surprise mid-construction, the value of a good automated floor mopper, the importance of a simple pricing reference sheet for staff, and the challenge of managing time across a full-time job and a new business. Her advice to anyone just getting into the industry is straightforward: read, listen, network, and learn the permit process in your municipality before you need it. Her final answer on what one thing you can do today to be better tomorrow: get familiar with AI. She's been using it to build frameworks, manage scheduling, and handle operational work since before the store opened, and considers it an essential part of how she runs things now. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    33 min
  8. May 12

    From Instagram to Open Doors with Catherine Chalpin

    Catherine Chalpin came to laundry the way a lot of people do these days: she saw something on Instagram, thought it looked manageable, and started doing her homework. What followed was about as fast a path from interest to open doors as you are likely to find. In this episode of Full Cycle, Chalpin shares how she went from watching someone unload quarters into a bucket to running Pop In Laundry in Poughkeepsie, New York, all within roughly a year. The location she landed on was a zombie mat, stripped of equipment after a dryer fire, but with its infrastructure largely intact. Chalpin, who has a background in project management through years of renovating rental properties, saw the bones of the space and knew what to do. She managed the buildout herself, skipping a general contractor, and opened in January 2026. Her day job selling indoor athletic flooring for nonprofits and athletic facilities has shaped how she thinks about community relationships, and that shows in how she runs her store. In her first few months, she organized a clothing drive with the Salvation Army, launched a summer reading program in partnership with the local library, secured a deal to flyer cars in her plaza, and began providing laundry cards to clients of Family Services of Poughkeepsie. A pop-up comedy show at the laundromat was also on the list. She credits a background in marketing and promotions for her instinct to keep things fresh and community-facing. Chalpin and host, Matt DeWolf also get into the practical side of running a new store: the lint trap surprise mid-construction, the value of a good automated floor mopper, the importance of a simple pricing reference sheet for staff, and the challenge of managing time across a full-time job and a new business. Her advice to anyone just getting into the industry is straightforward: read, listen, network, and learn the permit process in your municipality before you need it. Her final answer on what one thing you can do today to be better tomorrow: get familiar with AI. She's been using it to build frameworks, manage scheduling, and handle operational work since before the store opened, and considers it an essential part of how she runs things now. Thanks for giving us a turn.

    33 min

About

Formerly the PlanetLaundry Podcast, the new Full Cycle podcast brings you the great stories from inside the vended laundry industry and the perspective you need from outside the industry. A media offering from the Coin Laundry Association, Full Cycle aims to elevate the vended laundry industry through celebrating the success of the modern laundry entrepreneur.

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