ChatGPT for Car Wash Business Owners: 5 Prompts for Reviews, Promos and Customer Messages | AI Alchemist
ChatGPT for Car Wash Business Owners:
5 Prompts That Handle Your Reviews, Membership Promos and Customer Complaints — Between Washes
A 1-star review comes in saying you scratched someone’s car. A customer complains their wheel arches were missed. You haven’t posted on Facebook in three weeks. You know you should be promoting your monthly membership but never get round to writing it up. These 5 ChatGPT prompts solve all of it — from your phone, in minutes, for free.
Running a car wash means your hardest written moments happen during your busiest times. A customer complaint comes in mid-rush. A bad Google review lands at 7pm after a twelve-hour day. Your Facebook page has been quiet for weeks because nobody has time to write a post between cars. ChatGPT changes all of this. Not by doing the actual washing — but by making the written side of your business take minutes instead of hours.
Prompt 1 — The “You Scratched My Car” Review Reply
It’s the review every car wash owner dreads. A customer posts publicly claiming your staff scratched or damaged their vehicle. Whether the claim is accurate, exaggerated or false, the way you respond is visible to every potential customer who looks you up. A calm, professional, factual reply builds trust. A defensive or dismissive one does permanent damage.
"Help me write a professional, calm reply to this Google review about our car wash: [paste the review]. From our side: [explain briefly — e.g. ‘we carry out a pre-wash inspection on every vehicle and no damage was noted on arrival’ / ‘the customer contacted us and we offered to inspect the vehicle but did not hear back’ / ‘we take all damage claims seriously and investigate each one’]. Write a reply that: (1) thanks them for raising the concern, (2) clearly and calmly states our process for handling damage claims, (3) invites them to contact us directly so we can investigate properly, (4) demonstrates to other readers that we operate professionally. Under 100 words. Composed and dignified — never defensive."
Prompt 2 — The Membership or Package Promotion
Your monthly unlimited wash membership or valet package is your best recurring revenue product. But promoting it consistently — on Facebook, WhatsApp and Google — requires copy you never get round to writing. This prompt creates a full promotion pack in one session: post, broadcast message and Google Business post, all consistent, all done.
"Write a promotion pack for our car wash membership offer. Our package is: [describe — e.g. ‘unlimited exterior washes for £25/month, no contract, cancel any time’ / ‘full valet membership: one full valet per month for £45, includes interior hoover and wipe’]. Create: (1) A Facebook post announcing the membership (under 80 words, ends with a call to action: message us or call us to sign up), (2) A WhatsApp broadcast message to send to existing customers (under 50 words, direct and friendly), (3) A Google Business Profile post (under 70 words, benefit-led). All three: local, warm, drives action — not corporate marketing speak."
Prompt 3 — The Customer Complaint Response
A customer messages to say their car wasn’t cleaned properly — missed wheel arches, streaks on the windows, interior still dusty. How you respond in the next ten minutes determines whether they come back, tell their friends, or leave a review. A fast, genuine, solution-focused reply converts a complaint into loyalty.
"A customer has messaged to say they’re unhappy with their car wash experience: [describe the issue — e.g. ‘they say the wheel arches weren’t cleaned properly’ / ‘they noticed streaks on the windows when they got home’ / ‘the interior vacuum wasn’t done to the standard they expected’]. Write a short, genuine reply that: (1) apologises sincerely — no excuses, (2) offers a clear resolution: [e.g. ‘come back and we’ll redo it free of charge’ / ‘offer a complimentary wash next visit’ — pick your policy], (3) makes it easy to take you up on the offer. Under 60 words. Warm, fast and solution-focused."
Prompt 4 — The Google Review Request After a Full Valet
A customer just collected their car after a full valet — interior and exterior, spotless. They’re delighted. That’s the perfect moment to ask for a Google review, and most car wash owners never do because it feels awkward and there’s always another car waiting. This prompt writes the request in 45 seconds so you never miss the window.
"Write a short, warm WhatsApp or text message I can send to a customer after they’ve collected their vehicle following a [full valet / exterior wash / hand polish — pick one]. The message should: (1) check they’re happy with the result, (2) mention that a Google review makes a real difference to a local independent car wash competing with the chains, (3) make the ask feel natural and unpressured, (4) thank them. Under 55 words. Real and human — not an automated review system. I’ll add my Google review link at the end."
Prompt 5 — The Weekly Facebook Post
You know a consistent Facebook presence drives footfall. You know locals check your page before driving over. But writing a fresh post every week after a full day of washing cars is the last thing on your mind — so your page goes quiet and you lose bookings to the competitor down the road who posts three times a week. This prompt writes three posts in one session. Done until next week.
"Write 3 Facebook posts for my car wash business this week. My business is [name] in [town]. Post 1: An availability post — [e.g. ‘we have slots available this week, walk-ins welcome / no appointment needed / book via message or call’]. Post 2: A quality or trust-building post — why a hand car wash or professional valet is better than a drive-through machine. Post 3: A seasonal or weather-related post — [e.g. ‘summer road trip season — time to get the car properly cleaned inside and out’ / ‘winter salt and mud — your car needs a proper wash’]. Each post: under 70 words. Friendly, local and real — ends with a simple call to action."
The CRAFT Method — Why Specific Prompts Get Specific Results
Every prompt above uses the CRAFT Method — the five elements that tell ChatGPT exactly what you need instead of leaving it to guess. Vague prompts produce vague output. Specific prompts produce something you’d actually post or send.
Also see: ChatGPT for MOT Garages — the same approach applied to automotive service businesses, with 5 prompts for MOT reminders, review requests and booking posts.