
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.
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.
Host: Matt DeWolf | Guest: Cathy Neilley, Spin Doctors
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