Chimney Sweeps Are Cleaning Up!
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The Paul Biskners, of Garden City. Michigan. became chimney sweeps after reading about August West in MOTHER.
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This may be the best start-on-a-shoestring business
that MOTHER has ever featured! What other self-employment
venture do you know of that you can get into for only
$2,500 . . . yet which—right from the
start!—can net you $700 or more a week?
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ARE CHIMNEY SWEEPS STILL CLEANING UP?
January/February 1984
by Jay Hensley
Th...
How would you like to own your own business, set your own
hours, wear a top hat to work, become something of a
mystical figure in your community, perform a necessary and
much-needed service . . . and clear $700 or more a
week? Well, chimney sweeps all over the country are
doing just that, and the ones that MOTHER has talked to
love every minute of it.
MOTHER staffers J. Weiland and Travis Brock, for example,
recently watched Steve Curtis clean chimneys in Connecticut
for four hours . . . and pocket a whopping $140 for his
morning's work (Steve is averaging a gross of $1,000 a week
and he's booked ahead for a month and a half). Another
sweep in Mississippi had already chalked up 1977 earnings
of $14,000 ($3,000 during the first 21 days of that month
alone) when Travis talked to him late in October. Yet a
third sweep in Michigan, who told Brock he "just works at
it part time," is taking home an easy $300 to $400 a week.
In fact, the worst possible case that Travis was
able to track down was a guy who lived in a remote section
of Montana (there are only 11,000 people in his whole
county) who charged less than recommended rates for his
services, only cleaned about 12 to 16 chimneys a month on a
very, very part-time basis . . . and who still was netting
(for less than one full day's work) a respectable $100 a
week. There just doesn't seem to be any way to fail in this
business!
CHIMNEY SWEEPS OF
COURSE,
SWEEP CHIMNEYS
Just what the heck do chimney sweeps do to earn that kind
of money? They clean chimneys. Six to eight a day in the
case of full-time sweeps . . . while part-timers generally
average-two-or-three-an-evening plus a few more on the
weekends. When you figure that most of the sweeps charge
$40 for cleaning the first chimney on a job and $30 more
for each additional one, it's easy to see how those dollars
can add up. (During the four hours that Weiland and Brock
followed Steve Curtis around, for instance, Steve cleaned
one chimney on one house and three on another . . . for a
total billing—$40 plus $40 plus $30 plus $30—of
$140.)
BUT WHY?
And why would anyone fork over forty or more bucks to have
some character in a black suit and top hat clean his or her
chimney? That question can be answered with one word:
SAFETY.
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