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.