15 Ways to Save Money in Your Cleaning Business
2. If you have full-time employees, consider combining two
15-minute breaks into one half-hour break. Studies show that
this will save approximately 20 minutes of productive time. Why?
The national average for a 15 minute break is actually 27
minutes!
3. Take control of absenteeism. For example, develop a perfect
attendance bonus per pay period, or don't pay sick leave for the
first day of absence. Be sure to check with your state laws on
attendance policies first.
4. Hire "floaters" or "project teams". Floaters will fill in for
absent employees and handle any special projects and detail
cleaning.
5. Only use overtime for emergencies and unplanned events.
6. Avoid lawsuits by documenting disciplinary action and
accurate performance evaluations. Avoid using phrases like "he
has a bad attitude". Bad attitudes are difficult to prove.
Rather, give examples of specific poor performance.
7. Do not hire borderline probationary employees. If you have a
typical 90-day probationary period before hiring an employee as
a regular employee, be sure to give constructive feedback
throughout the probationary period so that if you need to let
them go, it won't be a surprise.
8. Provide the proper tools for the job: wide-path vacuums for
large hallways and open areas; back-pack vacuums with
attachments for detail work; auto-scrubbers for large-area hard
floor care.
9. Use a three and one system for carpet care. Use a surface
brightening system like bonnet cleaning the first three times,
and on the fourth time, extract the carpet.
10. Save chemical costs by using dilution control stations.
11. Save on restroom paper costs by using double-roll tissue
dispensers and roll towel paper dispensers.
12. Remove obsolete products such as ammonia, bleach, scouring
powder, and aerosols.
13. Make it your company policy to dust only cleared desktops,
and include this in your bid.
14. Consider route cleaning for smaller buildings. Have a
supervisor or group leader drive a group of 3 or 4 people to
each building.
15. Provide three types of training: orientation, on-the-job,
and classroom. Hold regular meetings with employees and cover
training and safety topics.
About the author:
Steve Hanson is co-founding member of The Janitorial Store (TM),
an online community for owners and managers of cleaning
companies who want to build a more profitable and successful
cleaning business. Sign up for Trash Talk: Tip of the Week at
http://www.TheJanitorialStore.com and receive a Free Gift!