Featured Jobs

This Week's Poll

Who is most to blame for the economic crisis the country is in?

All of the below
Americans who accepted risky loans
Congress
Mortgage companies
President Bush
Wall Street

You must be logged in to vote.

News By You

http://wamu.org/news/08/09/30.php#23142 http:// (Thursday, October 2 2008)
0 Comments // 55 Reads
The secret is out! The finalists for Loudoun Coun (Monday, September 29 2008)
0 Comments // 257 Reads
The Piedmont Environmental Council invites you to (Monday, September 29 2008)
0 Comments // 229 Reads
A free seminar: "Stress & Your Health" is being of (Sunday, September 28 2008)
0 Comments // 226 Reads
Home > Business > Total Pools splashes into season
Justin Bell, right, owner of Total Pools and Service in Purcellville, and Rich Kay, who works in sales, help customers maintain pools like this one in Round Hill. --Staff Photo/Lisa Johnson

Total Pools splashes into season

Justin Bell, a 28-year-old Leesburg entrepreneur, found himself looking around Purcellville not too long ago and realizing there was something lacking – a pool service store.

“There is a demand for a pool store in Purcellville,” Bell said. “There used to be one in Hamilton, but that closed down in 2001. There hasn't been another one since.”

Estimates through county licenses and pool chemical companies show there are about 2,000 licenses for pools in the western part of the county, according to Bell, who says the customer base is there to make his business succeed.

Since opening the doors of Total Pools and Service in mid-March, Bell said he already has 20 clients for pool openings and a couple of clients who have gone with a weekly maintenance plan.

The company offers many services to pool owners -- in either a package or a la carte -- including opening and closing pools for the season, weekly maintenance, parts and repairs. Total Pools and Service also carries parts and products in its retail location at 251 N. 21st St. in Purcellville, including Hayward and Pentair filters, Polaris vacuums, BioGuard and AquaBrite chemicals, and pool toys.

“I want to give customers a choice,” said Bell, regarding the selection of products his store carries. So when it came time to pick brands, he “thought outside of the box and began thinking as a customer.”

Bell said that since the Hamilton pool store shut down, he noticed a lot of people were purchasing chemicals and products for their pools either online, or at Wal-Mart or Costco.

“I want to compete with those stores, and I want people to get out of the habit [of going online to buy],” Bell said. So he has competitively priced his products.

Currently, Total Pools and Service has four employees. Bell calls himself “the brains and finance” behind the business. The rest of the crew has more than 25 years of experience in pool service.

Bell plans on expanding the level of service, with adding more employees, and the product level -- the first stage is bringing in spas and some loungers for the pool area.

Contact the reporter at lwolstenholme@timespapers.com




Del.icio.us




You must be logged in to post a comment.