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Operation Laundry Chapter 2: Community Engagement and Planning for People

We are checking in with Tim Johnson and his progress as he builds Operation Laundry. This is the second conversation and a lot has changed since the first one two months ago. Johnson is building Operation Laundry in Holland, Michigan, and the project is moving closer to the finish line. Johnson joins host Matt DeWolf to talk about the current status.

3 min read

We are checking in with Tim Johnson and his progress as he builds Operation Laundry. This is the second conversation and a lot has changed since the first one two months ago. Johnson is building Operation Laundry in Holland, Michigan, and the project is moving closer to the finish line. Johnson joins host Matt DeWolf to talk about the current status.

The construction is ongoing but the theme of this episode is community engagement. The community response to Operation Laundry has been something Johnson could not have predicted. We discuss a Facebook post asking residents about their experience with local laundromats that drew hundreds of comments and likes. The Holland Sentinel even ran a front-page profile. Local television reached out to cover opening day. People stop by the job site to drop things off. Employees have applied without any job posting ever going up. Johnson shares the story of one morning, a stranger pulled his car up alongside Johnson’s to block him in, just so he could ask about washer sizes and the kids zone.

Johnson talks through what it takes to build a brand before you’ve served a single customer, including lighting upgrades to the strip mall, co-marketing relationships with neighboring businesses, and the concept of making the laundromat a third space, somewhere people can gather rather than just a utility stop. He also talks about where the real pressure lives, and it is not in the marketing. It is in the financial decisions that happen every day on a construction site, where every call has consequences and there is no safety net.

The conversation also goes into what it takes to sustain yourself through a process like this. 

His advice: find something bigger than yourself, whether that is faith, community, or just putting energy into helping someone else. What you give, he says, comes back tenfold.

Thanks for giving us a turn.

Host: Matt DeWolf | Guest: Tim Johnson, Founder, Operation Laundry, Holland, Michigan

This episode is sponsored by Eastern Funding.