Most independent luggage-storage shops fail in the first six months for the same three reasons: the location is wrong, the brand is generic, or the operator runs out of cash before reviews kick in. None of those are technology problems — but they all interact with technology choices.
This is the 30-day plan we walk every new operator through.
Days 1–7: location and lease
The single biggest determinant of success is the walking distance from the nearest tourist anchor (museum, station, port, attraction). Under 6 minutes is excellent; over 10 minutes is a daily fight. Sign a 12-month break clause if you possibly can — the second-most-common failure mode is locking into 3 years on the wrong corner.
Other things to verify before you sign:
- 24/7 street access (or controlled access via a code/keypad)
- A clear shopfront the lockers can be visible from
- Power for 60+ smart locker units
- No restrictive use clauses in the lease
Days 8–14: lockers and physical setup
Order modular smart lockers from a manufacturer your software supports — the major European modular vendors all integrate with LockMe out of the box. Spec a mix: 50% medium, 30% large, 20% XL. Ski/board lockers if you're in the Alps; surfboard lockers if you're on the coast.
Don't over-buy. You can always add modules. You can't easily un-buy them.
Days 15–21: brand and identity
This is where independent operators usually under-invest, and it's where you actually win or lose. Customers comparing your store to a chain on TripAdvisor are evaluating the photo of your shopfront, your logo, your booking site, and your review average. Two of those four are pure design choices.
Get a real designer, even part-time, to do:
- A wordmark and a single icon
- Three colors (one primary, one accent, one ink)
- Photography of the shopfront and the lockers
- Signage that reads from across the street
Days 22–26: software and operations
Sign up for an operator platform (we obviously recommend LockMe) and get the booking site, the locker control, the invoicing and the review automation live in a single onboarding session. Don't try to stitch this together yourself with Wix + Stripe + a notebook — every operator who tries this rebuilds it on a real platform within nine months anyway.
Configure pricing rules: time bands, locker sizes, peaks, weekends, multi-day. Set up the cross-sell module with two or three local partners (a tour, a transfer, a restaurant) — you'll earn 10–20% margin on every conversion.
Days 27–30: soft launch
Open the door for a long weekend with the price set 20% below your eventual rate. Ask every happy customer for a Google review (the platform automates this). Watch the dashboard in real time. Tune the rules based on what actually happens — you'll be wrong about something, and that's fine.
What good looks like in month 6
By month 6 you should be:
- 4.7★+ on Google with 80+ reviews
- 60–75% locker utilisation on weekend peaks
- Zero hours per week on invoicing
- Earning ancillary revenue from cross-sell that covers your software bill three times over
That's the realistic target. Operators who hit it almost always make money. Operators who don't usually have a location problem.
If you're at the "thinking about it" stage, the /pricing page has plan modeling and the /customers page has the real numbers from operators who shipped this exact playbook.
